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*** OPENING KEYNOTE SPEAKER ***
Dennis
J. Shields, Esq.
Dean,
Phoenix School of Law (Phoenix,
Arizona)
Dennis J. Shields is
the Dean of Phoenix School of Law. Prior to assuming this
deanship in August 2005, he served in senior administrative posts
at the University of Iowa College of Law, the University of Michigan
Law School and Duke University School of Law.
While Dean Shields was Assistant Dean for Admissions at the University
of Michigan Law School, he was instrumental in drafting the law
school admissions policy and had primary responsibility for its
implementation. This policy was unsuccessfully challenged in Grutter
v. Bollinger, in which the U. S. Supreme Court held that
both the policy and the methods of its implementation are constitutional.
Dean Shields is an expert
on law school admissions and diversity in legal education.
He has written extensively on the subject of diversity in education
and is a frequent speaker/contributor at education conferences
on this subject. He has served in leadership roles with
several national organizations affiliated with legal education.
Dean Shields received his Bachelor's degree
in business administration from Graceland College in Lamoni, Iowa
and his law degree from the University of Iowa College of Law.
* SOCIAL
NETWORKING RECEPTION/
MENTORSHIP
MIXER*
***KEYNOTE SPEAKER***
Latosha
Lewis, Esq.
President,
Houston Lawyers Association
(Houston,
Texas)
Latosha
T. Lewis
is an associate in the Environmental Section of Gardere Wynne
Sewell LLP. Her practice focuses on environmental, toxic
tort, product liability, personal injury, premise liability, and
wrongful death litigation. Ms. Lewis also has experience
with state and federal statutory and regulatory environmental
legal matters.
Ms.
Lewis received her B.A. in Environmental Studies and Political
Science from Tulane University, where she served as President
of the pre-law society, Black American Lawyers of Tomorrow,
and as chair of a mentoring program serving over 100 primary
and secondary school children in New Orleans through the
Live Oak Young Adult League (or Project L.O.Y.A.L.). As
a Thomas J. Watson Fellow, she studied culture and the development
of women's sports in Kenya, Swaziland, Botswana, Ghana and Jamaica.
Ms. Lewis received her J.D. from the University of Texas
School of Law in 2000.
As
a part of her continuing interest in mentoring, Latosha returned
to Houston after law school and served as a mentor in the Communities
in Schools program and the Houston Young Lawyers Assocation's
Leadership 2000 mentoring program. She has also served as
a member of the Board of Directors of Big Brothers Big Sisters
of Greater Houston since 2004.
Ms.
Lewis currently serves as President of the Houston Lawyers Association,
the African American Bar Association of Houston, which represents
the interests and serves the community on behalf of over 1400
African American lawyers in the Houston area. She is a Fellow
with the Houston Bar Foundation and the Houston Young Lawyers
Foundation and a member of the State Bar Legal Services
to the Poor in Civil Matters Committee.
*** LEGACY
BUILDERS AWARDS RECEPTION ***
***KEYNOTE SPEAKER***
Everett
Bellamy, Esq.
Assistant
Dean and Adjunct Professor of Law, Georgetown University School
of Law
(Washington,
DC)
Everett
Bellamy is an Assistant Dean and Adjunct Professor of
Law at Georgetown University Law Center.
Dean
Bellamy has been a dean at Georgetown since 1980. He is
a member of the American Bar Association, Business Law Section
and former Co-Chair of the National Bar Association Law Professors
Division. Since 1990, he has been teaching a small business
law course at Georgetown. In 1998, he taught a course in
international business regulation in Florence, Italy.
His
recent writings include: The Status of African American Law Professors,
NBA National Bar Association Magazine (1992); Academic
Enhancement and Counseling Programs: Counseling Minority Law Students;
St. Louis University Public Law Review (1991); and Law
School Admissions Advisor - Minority Students, Kaplan/Newsweek
(1999). Before joining the Law Center staff, he served
in the Office of Student Affairs at Cleveland State University.
He has also been an instructor for the Council on Legal Education
Opportunity (CLEO) Program and the Charles Hamilton Houston Law
School Preparatory Institute. He has served as the Chairperson
of the D.C. Chapter of the National Conference on Black Lawyers,
and was a member of the Board of Governors of the National Bar
Association.
He
received his B.S. and M.S. degrees from the University of Wisconsin.
He is a graduate of the Cleveland-Marshall College of Law, Cleveland
State University.
*** CLOSING
KEYNOTE SPEAKER ***
Dr.
John H. Jackson, Jr., Esq.
Chief
Policy Officer, NAACP
Chairman,
National Equity Center, Inc.
(Washington,
DC)
Under the leadership of the National Association for the Advancement
of Colored People (NAACP) President and CEO Bruce Gordon, Dr.
John H. Jackson, Esq. was appointed as the NAACP’s Chief
Policy Officer. In this capacity, Dr. Jackson is responsible
for coordinating and implementing the Association’s research,
advocacy and training agenda in education, health, economic empowerment,
criminal justice, civic engagement, voter empowerment, housing,
labor and international affairs.
Prior to being appointed Chief Policy Officer,
for the past five years, Dr. Jackson has diligently served as
the NAACP’s National Director of Education. Before
joining the Association, Dr. Jackson possessed a broad array of
professional experience. In 1999, at age 27, President Clinton
appointed Dr. Jackson to the Office for Civil Rights at the U.S.
Department of Education (OCR). While at OCR, Dr. Jackson
served as Senior Policy Advisor.
Dr. Jackson is one of the few Americans
to have earned five higher education degrees. Dr. Jackson
possesses a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science from Xavier
University of Louisiana; a Master of Education degree in Education
Policy from the University of Illinois' College of Education;
and a Juris Doctorate from the University of Illinois' College
of Law. In addition, Dr. Jackson received a Master of Education
and Doctorate of Education in Administration, Planning, and Social
Policy from the Harvard University Graduate School of Education.
Dr. Jackson is currently an Adjunct Professor
of Race, Gender, and Public Policy at the Georgetown University
School of Public Policy. He is also Chairman of the National
Equity Center Inc., a national non-profit established to promote
diversity and democratic values by providing youth with the needed
leadership, academic, research and advocacy skills to eliminate
existing local and national civil rights and social justice disparities.
Dr. Jackson is a member of the Louisiana
Bar Association, the American Bar Association, Alpha Phi Alpha
Fraternity, Inc., Prince Hall Masonry, and New Psalmist Baptist
Church. He has been identified as one of EBONY
Magazine‘s Thirty Leaders of the Future. He is a native
of Chicago, Illinois, and currently resides in Owings Mills, Maryland.
***
FEATURED SPEAKER ***
Frederick Barrow, Esq.
President, J.L. Turner Legal Association: The African-American Bar Association of Dallas
Vice-Chair, African American Lawyers Section, State Bar of Texas
(Dallas, Texas)
Frederick Barrow is a magna cum laude law graduate of the Southern University
Law Center in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. He earned his Bachelor
of Science in Marketing at Louisiana State University.
He is an associate at Littler
Mendelson, P.C. He advises and represents employers in a
broad range of employment law matters, including claims based
upon Title VII, ADEA, ADA, and numerous state statutes, as well
as litigation avoidance. Attorney Barrow counsels employers
on preparing AAP’s for compliance with OFCCP requirements,
severance agreements, and employment policies. Mr. Barrow
also has extensive experience responding to charges of discrimination
filed with federal and state agencies, and complying with federal,
state and municipal employment laws.
He currently serves as the President
of the J.L. Turner Legal Association: The African-American Bar
Association of Dallas. He is a member of the Texas State
Bar, the Board of Directors of the African American Lawyers Section
of the State Bar, the National Bar Association, and the American
Bar Association. He is also a member of the Dallas Bar Association’s
Board of Directors and serves as Co-Chair of its LegalLines Section.
*** FEATURED SPEAKER ***
Michael Sterling, J.D. Candidate
National Chairperson, National Black Law Students Association (NBLSA)
(Houston, Texas)
Michael Sterling was raised in Beaumont, Texas,
the son of Doretha and Charles Sterling. While a high school student
in Beaumont, Michael interned for three years in the City of Beaumont
Executive Offices for the Mayor, City Manager, and City Council.
Michael, at the Mayor’s request, established the Mayor’s
Youth Council to address growing concerns among youth in Beaumont.
Michael Sterling became known in the community as a young orator,
speaking at churches, community events, and on key issues in the
city of Beaumont. While still a senior in high school, Michael
was featured as a keynote speaker at the Annual Conference for
the Texas Alliance of Black School Educators in the Spring of
2000.
After graduating high school, Michael Sterling attended Morehouse
College in Atlanta, Georgia. While at Morehouse, Michael
served as Captain of the Morehouse Debate Team, Vice Polemarch
Vice President) of Pi Chapter of Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity Inc.
Michael also served as a legislative aide to State Senator Kasim
Reed. Senator Reed was so impressed while Michael assisted
him in the legislature that Senator Reed asked Michael to play
a key role in his bid for re-election. Michael spent his
summer organizing students, rallies, attending fundraisers, and
developing campaign strategies that would assist Senator Reed
in winning re-election with 59% of the vote. Senator Reed
remains Michael’s mentor.
Shortly after that summer ended Michael began law school at the
Texas Southern University Thurgood Marshall School of law in Houston,
Texas. Michael achieved academic excellence remaining in
the top 5% of his class, serving on law review, and becoming the
first ever first-year student elected as Student Bar Vice President.
Michael served as a law clerk to Norm Silverman, a criminal defense
lawyer in Houston, Texas at the completion of his first year and
throughout his second year of law school, where he received a
full offer of employment upon graduation. During the summer
after his second year, he clerked at the prestigious firm of Sidley
Austin in Chicago, Illinois.
Michael was elected as National Chair
of the Black Law Students Association (NBLSA) in the Spring of
2006 at the 38th Annual NBLSA National Convention in Washington,
D.C. NBLSA is the largest student-run organization in the country,
representing over 200 chapters at accredited ABA law schools across
the nation and more than 7,000 members. One of NBLSA’s many
goals is to increase the declining number of blacks attending
law school.
THE FEATURED
PRESENTERS & PANELISTS FOR 2006
Adjoa A. Aiyetoro, Esq.
Adjoa A. Aiyetoro is an Assistant Professor of Law at the UALR William H. Bowen School of Law. She graduated, cum laude, from St. Louis University School of Law where she was inducted into the Jesuit Honor Society, Alpha Sigma Nu. Before joining the faculty she had a career as a human rights attorney.
She began her legal career as a staff attorney with the United States Department of Justice, Civil Rights Division, Special Litigation Section where she litigated cases involving the rights of the institutionalized and developed an expertise in prisoner rights. She joined the ACLU National Prison Project in 1981 where she remained until 1992. Since 1992 she has served as the Executive Director of the National Conference of Black Lawyers, the Director of Administration for the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation, Inc., a consultant to the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law and the Chief Legal Consultant for the National Coalition of Blacks for Reparations in America (N’COBRA).
Ms. Aiyetoro was an Adjunct Professor with the American University, Washington College of Law from 1997 through 2003. She was a Visiting Scholar with the University of California at Santa Barbara, Center for Black Studies, Spring 2003 and a Visiting Professor at West Virginia University College of Law, Fall 2004.
Professor Aiyetoro has extensive experience working domestically and internationally to obtain remedies for historical and present day wrongs to people of color, women and other oppressed groups. She represented the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF) (2000-2001) at the World Conference Against Racism, including attending all the preparatory meetings and serving as a leader of the African and African Descendant Caucus. In 1995 she coordinated the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law’s delegation to the United Nations’ Conference on Women in Beijing and also represented the organization at the 2000 Beijing Plus 5.
Michelle
Allison, Esq.
Michelle Allison is the Assistant Director of
Admissions at Northeastern University School of Law in Boston,
Massachusetts. She received her Bachelor of Arts degree
with honors from Howard University and her Juris Doctor from Northeastern
University.
Ms. Allison serves on a number of law school and university committees
including the Alumni/ae Relations Board of Directors and the Committee
Against Institutional Racism. She also serves as the Alumni/ae
Liaison for the Admissions Office and the Black Law Student Association.
Prior to joining the law school she clerked for a Massachusetts
Superior Court Judge and two Boston law firms. She is a
member of the American Bar Association, the Boston Bar Association
and the Massachusetts Black Lawyers Association.
Jessica Anderson
Jessica Anderson is a native
of Stuart, Florida. The second child born to Charles and
Xenobia Anderson, she has always used her bright personality to
help others. While matriculating through the Martin County School
District Ms. Anderson was constantly involved in school leadership
positions. As an honor student throughout elementary, middle
and high school, she served in student government in various capacities,
lastly as her high school class president all four years.
Ms. Anderson completed her Bachelor of Science
degree in Public Relations with a minor in Agricultural Communications
from the University of Florida. While at Florida, she was selected
to be a member of the distinguished Florida Cicerones, Presidential
Personal Hosts, a member of the University Gospel Choir and elected
Student Senator.
Just turning 21, Ms. Anderson returned to Stuart,
Florida where she became the youngest teacher at Jensen Beach
High School, instructing 9th, 10th and 11th grade students. At
the same time, Jessica became involved in community activities
mentoring middle and high school girls as a Generation X-ample
mentor and producing a community play.
Jessica is a “Double Gator” returning
to University of Florida Levin College of Law in the spring of
2005 and is now a second-year law student. Truly committed
to empowering others, Ms. Anderson has used much of her resources
and time while at Levin to encourage and motivate other Black
students toward the legal profession.
She envisioned and co-created the First Year
101 Program, an introduction to the ends and outs of law
school for incoming Black students, is a member of the UF LAW
Student Recruitment Team, nationally renowned UF Trial Team, case
worker on the Restoration of Civil Rights Empowerment Project,
and is the College Division Coordinator for the George W. Allen
Chapter of BLSA. Jessica is a member of Alpha Kappa Alpha
Sorority, Inc., and has interned at the prestigious law firm of
Gary, Williams, Parenti, Finney, Lewis, Watson and Sperando and
clerked at the law firm of Pressly and Pressly.
Tamara Martinez-Anderson
Tamara Martinez-Anderson is the
Assistant Dean for Admissions and Communications at Oklahoma City
University School of Law. Ms. Martinez-Anderson has
been in the field of law school admissions for nine years at both
private and public institutions, including Gonzaga University
and the University of Idaho.
Ms. Martinez-Anderson serves on the Services and
Programs Committee with the Law School Admission Counsel. She
has created a variety of educational programs and publications
for pre-law students and is committed to assisting and guiding
prospective law students through the law school admissions process.
Ms. Martinez-Anderson earned a Bachelor of Arts
from Utah State University, with a major in American Studies and
attended graduate school at the University of Michigan where she
studied American History focusing on women, labor, and the American
West.
Janice L. Austin
Janice L. Austin has spent her entire adult
life surrounded by lawyers. Currently, she is the Assistant
Dean of Admissions and Financial Aid at Penn State University
Dickinson School of Law. From 1994-2002, Dean Austin was
the Assistant Dean of Admissions and Financial Aid at the University
of Pennsylvania School of Law. She also served as the Director
of Admissions at the University of California Hastings College
of Law from 1990-1994, the Assistant Director of Admissions at
the Columbia University Business School 1988-1990 and as an Admissions
Officer at Columbia University School of Law from 1980-1988.
Dean Austin served on the 2003-2005 term of the Board of Trustees
for the Law School Admissions Council (LSAC); additionally she
is the immediate-past chair of the Minority Affairs Committee. She
also served as a Trustee from 1998-2001, and a trustee liaison
to the Finance and Legal Affairs Committee. Among her numerous
years of service to LSAC, Dean Austin has served as a board appointee
to the LSAC Strategic Planning Work Group, the New Building Committee,
a committee member on Services and Programs, the Alternative Decision-Making
Models Work Group, the Annual Meeting Planning Work Group, and
a member of the Gay and Lesbian Work Group.
During her experiences in higher education administration, Dean
Austin has served as the advisor to student organizations, such
as the Black Law Students Association, OutLaw(Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual,
Transgendered Law Students Association), and other multicultural
organizations. She has made presentations on topics as affirmative
action, disabilities issues, financial aid, and diversity, and
on being out in the workplace.
Her writings appear in Journal of Legal Education, the
Kaplan/Newsweek Law School Admissions Adviser, How to
Get into the Top Law Schools, Law School Confidential: A
Complete Guide to the Law School Experience, and Our
Place on Campus. Recently, she had an essay titled
“LSAT, U.S. News and Minority Admissions" published
in the St. John’s Law Review. Dean Austin
is currently working on two manuscripts, one on law school admissions’
professionals of color and affirmative action, and the other on
her experiences as a kidney donor for her older brother. She
received her Bachelor of Arts. degree in biology from Columbia
University.
Vicki D. Blanton, Esq.
Vicki D. Blanton
is a Senior Attorney practicing employee benefits and executive
compensation for J.C. Penney Corporation, Inc. In that capacity,
she handles the legal issues related to the Company’s 401(k)
plan, the equity and executive compensation plans, and international
benefit plans. Vicki ensures maintenance and compliance
of existing plans and participates in the various ad hoc teams
for the design and implementation of new benefit plans.
For example, Vicki currently serves as legal team leader for implementing
the American Jobs Creation Act of 2004, which requires sweeping
changes to executive compensation. Vicki also sits on the Company’s
Human Resources Compliance Committee.
Prior to
her promotion to the Legal Department, Vicki was the Tax Attorney
and Manager of Benefits & Compensation, in the Federal Audit,
Benefits and Special Projects Group of the Tax Services Department
at JCPenney. Vicki practiced as the benefits tax counsel
providing legal guidance for the tax issues related to the over
50 pension, welfare benefit, and compensation plans and programs
for JCPenney and Eckerd. Vicki worked closely with in-house
ERISA counsel and engaged outside counsel and/or accounting consultants,
as needed. Additionally, Vicki monitored new legislation and regulations
for tax planning opportunities, such as taking advantage of the
ESOP dividend deduction created by EGTRRA resulting in value of
a $27 million tax deduction for the Company in 2002. Another example
of one of Vicki’s tax projects ensured the deductibility
of a $600 million contribution to the Company’s Pension
Plan in 2003.
Vicki began
her legal career in 1991 at Thompson & Knight as an associate
in the Trial Department. In 1995, Vicki became an Assistant City
Attorney for the City of Dallas, Texas, where she changed her
practice to employee benefits. Vicki received
a J.D. from the Southern Methodist University School of Law in
1991, and a Bachelor of Journalism from the University of Texas
at Austin.
Vicki is President-Elect
of the J.L. Turner Legal Association and serves on several non-profit
boards, such as the United Way Central Allocation Committee and
Board chair of Home Health Services of Texas. Vicki’s active
community work with the J.L. Turner Legal Association garnered
the Star of Achievement Award from the State Bar of Texas in 2004.
Vicki was named to D Magazine’s 2005 List of Best Lawyers
in Dallas.
Michael W. Boylen
Michael W. Boylen is assistant dean of admissions at Roger Williams University School of Law in Bristol, Rhode Island. Mr. Boylen began his career in legal education in 1995 at Suffolk University Law School’s Career Services Office. He transitioned into Suffolk’s Office of Admissions, eventually holding the title of associate director of admissions. While at Suffolk, he was involved in the execution of a Council on Legal Education (CLEO) Summer Institute. In 2002, he joined Roger Williams University School of Law as director of admissions, and in 2005 his title was changed to assistant dean of admissions. He has presented at numerous Law School Admission Council (LSAC) forums, as well as the Northeast Association of Pre-Law Advisors (NAPLA) Conference. He holds a B.A. in political science from the University of Notre Dame and a master’s degree in political science from Suffolk University.
Collins Byrd
Collins Byrd is the Assistant Dean for Admissions
at the University of Iowa College of Law, where he has worked
since August of 2005.
Mr. Byrd has been in the field of undergraduate and graduate
school admissions for 20 years. Prior to being employed by the
University of Iowa College of Law, Mr. Byrd was the Director of
Admissions at the University of Minnesota Law School, for 8 1/2
years. Prior to that, Mr. Byrd was the Assistant Dean for Admissions
at William Mitchell College of Law for 6 1/2 years. Mr.
Byrd also worked for Northwestern University' s Kellogg Graduate
School of Management as Associate Director of Admissions, and
for Dartmouth College, where he was Assistant to the Director
of Admissions. Mr. Byrd has additional work experience in
corporate marketing and consulting with General Mills, Inc., The
Pillsbury Company, and Bentz Whaley Flessner, a consulting firm
that caters to not-for-profit organizations.
Mr. Byrd earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from Dartmouth College,
with a major in Psychology; and he earned a Master of Business
Administration from Northwestern University's Kellogg Graduate
School of Management, where he concentrated on marketing, strategic
planning, and public and not-for-profit management.
Lynell Cadray
Lynell
Cadray is Assistant Dean of Emory University School of
Law in Atlanta, Georgia where she serves as Dean of Admission
and Financial Aid. She received her Bachelor of Arts from
Tulane University in New Orleans, Louisiana and her Master of
Arts from Georgia State University.
Dean Cadray has 24 years of university enrollment
experience. Prior to her 12 year career at Emory, Dean Cadray
was the Associate Dean of Undergraduate Admission at Tulane University
and the Director of Undergraduate Admission at Mercer University.
She spent several semesters serving as Vice President of Enrollment
at Wesleyan College in Macon, Georgia. At Emory, Dean Cadray
oversees all admission, enrollment and scholarship issues; works
on various university-wide committees and has served on the President’s
Commission on Race and Ethnicity.
Dean Cadray currently serves on the President’s
Commission on the Status of Women and the Women’s Leadership
Committee. Dean Cadray works with the Law School Admission Council
and has held positions on both the Minority Advisory Committee
and the Services and Program Committee. In her spare time, she
works as a private consultant on issues related to enrollment
and diversity.
Martin
L. Camp, Esq.
Martin
L. Camp
is the current Assistant Dean for Student Affairs at Southern
Methodist University's Dedman School of Law. He is
a summa cum laude graduate of Centenary College of Louisiana
where he received a Bachelor of Arts in Government.
He went on to earn his Juris Doctor cum laude from Southern
Methodist University Dedman School of Law garnering the academic
distinctions of becoming a member of the highly esteemed Order
of the Coif and Law Review.
His
extensive legal experience includes working as an associate at
Hughes & Luce Law Firm and at the Jones Day Law Firm where
he served as Of Counsel, Partner in Charge of the Real Estate
Section of the Austin Office, Partner in Charge of the Kuwait
Office and Partner in the Dallas Office.
In
his practice, he has specialized in the areas of Real Estate,
Land Use and Development, Finance, and Corporate Acquisition and
Disposition. He has especially broad experience in
the restaurant and retail industries where he has acted as principal
outside counsel to major international restaurant and retail companies
in the disposition and refranchising of more than 3,000 restaurant
and retail units and as regional leasing and site acquisition
counsel. His practice has also included the acquisition
and disposition of health care facilities and large medical practices.
He
has extensive experience in the representation of real estate
developers in land acquisition, subdivision, zoning, special district
financings and development matters as well as corporate relocations.
He has represented property owners and developers in the master
planning of thousands of acres as well as major high rise office,
residential and mixed use developments. He has recently
served as real estate counsel to American Electric Power Company
in the disposition of twelve electric power generating plants
involving thousands of acres of property across the State of Texas.
Representative clients that he has performed services for include:
YUM Brands Pizza Hut, KFC, Taco Bell, Long John Silvers, MRG Restaurant
Group, Steak & Ale, Bennigan's, Ponderosa and Bonanza, Tony
Roma's, Ruth's Chris Steakhouses, Dave & Busters, 99 Cents
Only Stores, Barnes & Noble and West Coast Videos.
His corporate real estate representations have also included significant
projects for State Farm Insurance Company, Dell Webb Sun City
Austin, and a consortium which included 3M Corporation.
Dean
Camp has spoken and written extensively on the topics of land
use regulation, representation of foreign investors in U.S. real
estate, commercial leasing and refranchising at Texas State Bar
Continuing Legal Education Programs as well as seminars for organization
such as NACORE, CORENET, and the Center for International Studies.
He currently teaches Land Use Law and Real Estate Transactions
at Southern Methodist University Dedman School of Law. He
has also served as an adjunct professor at the University of Texas
School of Law teaching Land Use Law and Real Estate Transactions.
He has been selected for inclusion in The Best Lawyers in
America and Texas Super Lawyers in Real Estate Law.
For many years he served on the Legal Forms Committee of the Real
Property Section of the State Bar of Texas which was responsible
for drafting the Texas Real Estate Forms Manual.
He
is a Member of the Texas Bar Association, The Texas College of
Real Estate Lawyers, and the Dallas Bar Association where he is
also a Fellow of the Dallas Bar Foundation. He has
served on the board of directors for the Central Dallas Association
and is involved in numerous other civic endeavors. He also
serves on the Editorial Board of The Journal of Leisure and
Retail Property.
He
participated as a Steering Committee Member in the drafting of
the Austin Plan, the Comprehensive Plan for the City of Austin.
He also served on the Downtown Commission for the City of Austin
and participated in the preparation of the Comprehensive Austin
Zoning Ordinance. He assisted in drafting the first transferable
development rights ordinance and state statute in Texas.
Prior
to his current position, while at the Dallas Office of Jones Day,
Dean Camp served as the New Associates Coordinator where he was
responsible for training and assimilating new lawyers in the firm.
During this time, he continued to be a member of the recruiting
committee and actively interviewed and evaluated law students
for possible summer and permanent positions. Dean
Camp chose to serve in his current position because of a strong
desire to give back. As Assistant Dean, he coordinates the
efforts of the student organizations, and the law reviews and
journals. He also coordinates with the Associate Dean
for Administration and the Senior Associate Dean for Academics
on course schedules and ABA compliance, and with the Career Services
Office to assist with career issues. He also helps
deal with any disciplinary actions and academic counseling and
probation issues.
Victoria
Taylor Carter, Esq.
Victoria Taylor Carter joined
Charlotte School of Law as the Assistant Dean of Admissions in
June 2005. Prior to joining CSL, Dean Carter served as the Assistant
Dean of Admissions for the University of North Carolina-Chapel
Hill School of Law. She served as a Legal Writing Professor at
the North Carolina Central University School of Law and was also
a visiting instructor at the North Carolina Central University
School of Business. Dean Carter has been involved in the Southern
Association of Colleges and Schools (SCS) and the American Bar
Association law school re-accreditation review process.
Prior to her academic
career, Dean Carter was an education consultant for Omuteko Gwamaziima
Charter School and an Employment Relations Consultant for Wachovia
Bank, handling EEOC mediations and investigating employee issues.
Dean Carter is very active in the Charlotte Community. She is
a volunteer and mentor of INROADS of Charlotte, a board member
of Child Care Resources, Inc., a Fair Housing Hearing Officer
for the City of Charlotte, a member of the Basic Operating Grants
Committee – Cultural Educational Panel of the Arts and Science
Council, and sits on the Charlotte City Council Community Relations
Committee.
Lynda Cevallos, Esq.
Lynda
Cevallos is an
attorney who serves as pre-law coordinator and undergraduate adviser
for the Council on Legal Education Opportunity (CLEO) of the American
Bar Association and oversees the Thurgood Marshall College Scholars
Program funded by the U.S. Department of Education and the Thurgood
Marshall Legal Education Opportunity Program.
Before
joining CLEO, Ms. Cevallos practiced employment and labor law
for four years with a Washington, D.C. law firm and previously
clerked for the National Labor Relations Board and the U.S. Department
of Labor.
Attorney
Cevallos is a cum laude graduate of Rutgers University
and also received an Associate’s degree in German from Schiller
University in Heidelberg, Germany. She earned her Juris Doctorate
from the Washington College of Law at American University, and
barred in the states of New York and New Jersey.
William B. Churchill
Bio forthcoming.
Carol T. Cochran
Carol T. Cochran is Assistant Dean for Admission
at the Seattle University School of Law. She is a graduate of
Pacific Lutheran University in Tacoma, Washington and recently
completed a Master of Not-for-Profit Leadership at Seattle University.
In her current position she is also the advisor to the Black
Law Student Association. She has worked in higher education since
1991 when she became an admission counselor at her alma mater.
At PLU she chaired the Rieke Minority Scholarship program for
two years. In 1994, she joined the staff of Seattle University
School of Law as the Assistant Director of Admission. She
became the director of admission in 1999 and was appointed Assistant
Dean last summer.
Ms. Cochran has served on numerous information panels at the
LSAC Law School Forums and has presented at the LSAC Annual Meeting
and Educational Conference. She previously served on the Minority
Affairs Committee for 2001-03 and was a member of the 2003 Annual
Meeting and Educational Conference Planning Work Group. In her
community, Carol serves as board member to the Seattle Math, Engineering
and Science Achievement Program (MESA).
Candice Cook, Esq.
Born
in Atlanta, Georgia, Candice S. Cook received her Bachelor of
Arts degree in Government from the University of Virginia in 2000.
While in attendance at the University of Virginia she was the
recipient of several scholarships, served as a facilitator in
the Curry School of Education, and was selected by civil rights
activist Julian Bond to attend the Nobel Peace Prize Laureates
Conference.
In
2003, Ms. Cook received her Juris Doctorate from Vanderbilt Law
School where she served on the Honor Committee, was inducted into
the Phi Delta Phi Honors Fraternity, was the recipient of the
Vanderbilt Law School Academic Excellence Award and the Vanderbilt
Law School Public Interest Award, and advocated on behalf of Domestic
Violence victims in Tennessee. While in law school, Ms. Cook also
studied trial techniques at Oxford University, participated in
the Mock Trial and Moot Court competitions, worked as a Research
Assistant for the Journal of Legal Education, and clerked
for the Honorable John J. Ellington with the Georgia Court of
Appeals.
Currently,
she practices commercial litigation with the law firm Bickel & Brewer and serves on various committees within the Dallas community
including her position as co-chair of the Domestic Violence Committee
of the Dallas Young Lawyers Association.
Tony Credit,
Esq.
Tony
Credit is the Executive Director of Admissions at Valparaiso
Law School. Previous admissions experience includes
serving as Director of Admissions at Valparaiso Law School and
Assistant Director of Admissions at St. Louis University School
of Law. Mr. Credit has also served as in-house counsel
for Nubian LLC. Before practicing law and working in law school
administration, he served in a number of
other positions including working as a Criminal Investigator
for the Missouri Public Defender, in the Securities Division for
the Missouri Secretary of State, as a Branch Manager for the Missouri
State Treasurer, the Administrative Assistant to the Chief of
Staff for the Missouri Governnor, and a Political Consultant for
the Missouri Democratic Party. His experience also includes
serving on the campain staff for the Congressman Alan Wheat and
for President Clinton and Vice-President Gore. He also served
as a Financial Aid Counselor, Tutor and Admissions Representative
for the University of Missouri-Kansas City.
He is a graduate
of the University of Missouri Kansas City where he received his
Bachelor of Arts in Justice Administration and Saint Louis University
where he earned his Juris Doctorate. He is a member
of the American Bar Association Inspection Committee and the Indiana
Pro Bono Commission. His publications include articles entitled
"Elitism, Reverse and Statistical Racism in College Admissions"
and "Who Can Stop Rising Tuition Costs?" published
in the Northeast Association of Pre-Law Advisors Newsletter
Mr. Credit is also
a member of Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, Incorporated. He
is a licensed attorney in the state of Missouri and a member of
the Missouri Bar Association.
Heather A. Creed, Esq.
Heather Creed has been the Director of Student Relations
at Baylor Law School since June of 2002. In that capacity,
she is actively involved in Recruiting, Admissions, Financial
Aid, and Alumni activities.
Ms. Creed is a 2002 graduate
of Baylor Law School where she was a member of the Order of Barristers. Before attending law school, Ms. Creed taught Algebra in Miami,
Florida after earning her B.S. magna cum laude in Elementary
Education from Taylor University in Upland, Indiana.
Ms. Creed currently enjoys serving on the Board
of Directors of the local chapter of the Texas Young Lawyers Association,
coaching the Baylor Undergraduate Mock Trial team, and attending
Redeemer Presbyterian Church.
Andriel M. Dees, Esq.
Andriel M. Dees is the Associate Dean for Multicultural Affairs at William Mitchell
College of Law. Ms. Dees is a 1995 graduate of William Mitchell
College of Law. Prior to her appointment, Ms. Dees worked
as Operations Managing Attorney at the Office of the Monitor in
St. Paul, Minnesota, which was established following class action
lawsuits by African-American Farmers against the U.S. Department
of Agriculture. Before that, she was an Employee Relations
Consultant at U.S. Bancorp in Minneapolis, Minnesota for four
years and an Employment Claims Representative for the League of
Minnesota Cities Insurance Trust in St. Paul. Dees also
has worked as Diversity/Civil Rights Coordinator for the Minnesota
Department of Economic Security and the Minnesota Department of
Employee Relations.
Dees is active in the legal community,
currently serving on the Mnlegaldiversity.org Subcommittee of
the Minnesota State Bar Association Minority Bar Summit Committee.
She is a member of the Minnesota Association of Black Lawyers,
serving as a board member and secretary for two years. She
also was a board member of the Minnesota Board of Private Detectives
and Protective Agents for five years. Dees is admitted to
the bars of the Minnesota Supreme Court and the Federal Circuit
Court of Appeals. Dees has a Bachelor's degree from Hampton
University in Virginia.
Beverly
Caro Duréus, Esq.
Beverly Caro Duréus,
an attorney licensed to practice in Texas, is currently on the
Faculty of the Dedman School of Law at Southern Methodist University
in Dallas, Texas. She currently teaches Legal Research, Writing
and Advocacy. She serves as one of the Faculty Advisors of the
Black Law Students Association and Ex-officio Member of the Judicial
Clerk and Diversity Issues Committees. She served in the past
as a member of the Faculty Review and Investigation Committee
of the Honor Council.
She was also an Associate
Professor at Drake University Law School where she taught Civil
Procedure, Evidence, and Legal Writing, and was a member of the
Admissions & Scholarship Committees, and served as the Faculty
Advisor to the Black Law Students Association.
Her private practice experiences include being
a Clerk Intern for Chief Judge William C. Stuart in the United
States District Court for the Southern District of Iowa; Shareholder
at Chapman & Reese, P.C.; Section Coordinator & Chair
of the Ecclesiastical Section and Senior Counsel of General Civil
Litigation at Adorn Yoss White & Wiggins (Dallas Office),
formerly White & Wiggins, LLP; and an Associate at Gardere
& Wynne.
She also worked at the Iowa Civil Rights Commission;
for the renowned Criminal Law Firm of Alfredo G. Parrish, P.C.;
and as a Summer Associate for Blackwell, Sanders, Mathney, Weary & Lombardi. Beverly Caro Duréus currently also
serves select clients through her own private practice on primarily
ecclesiastical and non-profit matters. She has over 40 hours of
training as a mediator.
For her education following graduating with honors
from the Sumner Academy of Arts and Sciences in Kansas City, Kansas,
she received a Bachelor of Arts in Public Administration from
Drake University; Juris Doctorate from Drake Law School; and Master
of Theology from Dallas Theological Seminary.
Her honors and professional associations include
being a member of State Bar of Texas; National, American and Dallas
Bar Associations; William Mac Taylor American Inn of Court; Dallas
Bar Foundation Fellow; former member and Director-at-Large of
the J.L. Turner Legal Association; former member of the Dallas
Association of Black Women Attorneys, including President, Historian
and Vice-President; Volunteer for North Texas Legal Services;
member of the National Order of Barristers; Who’s Who is
American Law Schools; Who’s Who in American Colleges &
Universities; Dean’s List at Drake Law; Rodney L. Hudson
Senior Advocacy Award Recipient; Moot Court Board Chairman; National
Moot Court Team Member; Midwest Moot Court Team Member; Best Oralist
of the Midwest Region; Phi Alpha Delta, Member and Vice
Justice; Black Law Students Association Member and Vice-President;
and Member of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc., including past
Basileus of the Eta Tau Chapter.
Beverly Caro Duréus is also the Founder
and President of Katallasso Ministries International™ an
expository teaching and proclamation ministry. She is married
to Reverend Edsel Duréus, the Pastor of Thanksgiving Tabernacle
Bible Fellowship in Cedar Hill, Texas. They have one son, Edsel,
II (E.J.). They make their home in Cedar Hill, Texas.
Remeko T.
Edwards, Esq.
Remeko
T. Edwards is a 2005 graduate of Thurgood Marshall School
of Law in Houston, Texas. She was licensed to practice law
in the state of Texas in November 2005. Prior to receiving
her Juris Doctorate, she was a Juvenile Probation Officer with
Dallas County Juvenile Probation Department.
Since obtaining her JD,
she has continued her work in the community with juvenile offenders
and currently serves as an Attorney with the U.S. Government Small
Business Administration Disaster Assistance Program in Fort
Worth, Texas. Attorney Edwards has a Bachelor's degree
from the University of Texas at Arlington.
Arturo Errisuriz, Esq.
Arturo
Errisuriz received his Bachelor of Arts in Government
and Spanish in 1996 from the University of Texas at Austin.
He then enrolled in law school at Ohio Northern University’s
Claude Pettit College of Law and earned his Juris Doctor in 1999.
After
graduating law school, Attorney Errisuriz went to work for the
Galveston County Criminal District Attorney’s Office in
Galveston, Texas where he served as an Assistant Criminal District
Attorney. He joined the Texas Wesleyan University School
of Law administration and adjunct faculty in 2003 and currently
serves as the Assistant Dean for Career Services and teaches trial
advocacy to the law school's mock trial competition teams.
Dean
Errisuriz is licensed to practice law in both Texas and the District
of Columbia.
Marva
Fabien, Esq.
Marva
Fabien joined Willamette
University College of Law in January 2001 as its
first
coordinator of professional development and multicultural affairs.
In this position, Fabien assists with admissions and implementation
of the academic support program. Fabien also is responsible for
multicultural planning, programming and student affairs in the
College of Law.
Most recently, Fabien was assistant
superintendent for the MacLaren Youth Correctional Facility in
Woodburn, Oregon. She was appointed to the Oregon Board
of Parole and Post Prison Supervision in 1993 by Governor Barbara
Roberts, eventually serving as chairperson. In 2003, she was elected
to the Oregon State Bar Board of Governors. Fabien served
as the Academic Support Director for Lewis & Clark Law School
in Portland from 1988 to 1993. She also has been an attorney
in private practice and was a staff attorney for the Multnomah
County Legal Aid Service in Portland. She is a member of
the bar in the states of Oregon and Idaho.
Fabien earned her law degree at
Northwestern School of Law of Lewis and Clark College and her
Bachelor's degree from the University of Oregon. She is a native
of Trinidad.
Dr.
Aaron D. Ford, Esq.
Dr. Aaron D. Ford, Esq. earned
his Bachelor of Science in Interdisciplinary Studies from Texas
A&M University, his Master of Arts in International Education
from The George Washington University, and his Master of Arts
in Educational Administration and Doctor of Philosophy in Educational
Administration from The Ohio State University.
His judicial clerkship experience includes clerking
for District Judge Denise Page Hood of the United States District
Court for the Eastern District of Michigan and Circuit Judge Johnnie
B. Rawlinson of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth
Circuit. His legal work experience includes serving as a
law clerk for Thompson, Hine and Flory, LLP and Jones Vargas.
He also worked as an Adjunct Professor of Education Law at Wayne
State University Law School, and has practiced law as an Associate
Attorney at Bracewell & Guiliani, LLP and currently as an
Associate Litigation Attorney at Weil, Gotshal Manges, LLP.
Dr. Ford’s professional memberships and
associations include serving as a member of the advisory board
for the J. McDonald Williams Institute, Director and Vice President
of the J.L. Turner Legal Association, Chair of the Law Day Committee
and Vice Chair of the Admissions and Membership Committee of the
Dallas Bar Association, and a board member of the Cedar Hill Economic
Development Corporation. He is also a member of the Cedar
Hill Education Foundation, an associate of the Patrick E. Higginbotham
Inn of Court, and a member of Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, Incorporated.
He has received numerous awards and recognition
including American Marshall Memorial Fellow, Dallas Bar Foundation
Fellow, and member of the Pro Bono College of the State Bar of
Texas. He received the Dallas Bar Association Board of Director’s
Award of Excellence and the Dallas Bar Association’s Outstanding
Minority Bar Leader Award. Additionally, he was selected
as a Texas “Rising Star” and one of Dallas’
“Top Lawyers Under 40.”
Furthermore, Dr. Ford, Esq. is fluent in Spanish. He is husband to Berna L. Rhodes-Ford, Esq. and father to Avery,
Aaron II, and Alexander.
Tynan
Grayson
Tynan
Grayson
is a 2005 graduate of Oklahoma City University School of Law.
During the past year, Ms. Grayson has served as a federal clerk
with Judge Miles-LaGrange in the Western District of Oklahoma.
At the conclusion of her judicial clerkship, Grayson has accepted
a position as an associate in litigation position with Crowe and
Dunlevy.
Ms.
Grayson earned a Bachelor of Science in Computer Science and a
Master of Science in Computer Science from Oklahoma State University.
Furthermore, she worked as an Associate Professor of Computer
Science at Langston University for two years. As a
law student, she was selected for the prestigious Hatton Sumner
Scholarship, awarded at only two law schools in the nation.
In addition, she was an officer in the Black Law Student
Association, and the National Women Law Students’ Association
at OCU LAW. She also was member of Phi Delta Phi, the ABA
Law Student Division, Merit Scholars and competed as a member
of the Jessup Moot Court Team.
Ms.
Grayson serves as a great example old-fashioned notions of obtaining
success. As stated by Grayson in a recent newsletter to
incoming minority OCU law students, “I believe now,
more than ever, in personal responsibility, morality, and integrity.
I believe that love and respect for your fellow man are indispensable
characteristics for any person. I still believe that good
will ultimately triumph over evil. Law school has confirmed
the fact that some people have major character flaws. They
determine your value, based on qualities that are ultimately superficial
like class rank, or personal wealth. The truth is that there
will probably always be these kinds of people. My goal is
to never be one of them.”
Donna Davis-Gregory,
Esq.
Donna
Davis-Gregory,
Director of Career Services at Thurgood Marshall School of Law
at Texas Southern University, has thirteen years of experience
in the legal field. She was formerly the Director of Public
Service Programs at The University of Texas School of Law, and
has held various positions in law schools, government agencies,
and other legal organizations around the
country.
Mrs.
Davis-Gregory is a board member of the National Association for
Law Placement, National Advisory Council Member of Equal Justice
Works, and an Executive Board Member of the American Association
for Law Schools Pro Bono Committee. Mrs. Davis-Gregory received
her J.D. from Southern University Law Center, and her B.A. in
Business Administration from Dillard University, where she majored
in Business Management with an emphasis in Marketing.
Mrs.
Gregory is a frequent workshop presenter who speaks extensively
on legal career related issues involving interview techniques,
resume preparation, business etiquette and attire, recruiting
strategies, meeting the expectations of your audience, and networking
tools.
Reginald
Green, J.D.
Reginald Green
has served as Assistant Dean for Career Resources at South Texas
College of Law for nearly a decade, and has counseled hundreds
of law students and graduates on legal career options, networking
strategies, resume development, interview preparation and career
management. In his current position, Dean Green supervises all
aspects of the Law School Career Resources Center (CRC) including:
development of relationships with potential employers, aggressive
searches for information about employment opportunities, and developing
effective working relationships with students, alumni, staff and
other placement professionals throughout the United States.
He has traveled nationally speaking with hiring partners, recruiting
coordinators, and law school administrator on topics ranging from
legal market trends, hiring practices and strategies for recruitment
and retention. Prior to joining career placement, Dean Green
worked in law school admissions, where he recruited nationally
for South Texas as well as served on the law schools admissions
committee.
He is a native of Natchez, Mississippi. He received his
J.D. from South Texas College of Law in Houston, Texas and a B.A.
in English from Tougaloo College in Jackson, Mississippi. Prior
to law school, he worked in a management capacity within large
and small retail companies.
He has been a frequent speaker at NALP’s Annual Education
Conference, and its Newer Professionals Conference. Recent topics
have been “Counseling Students of Color”, “Better
the Second Time Around – Counseling Second Career Students”
and “Army of Two”.
Carol Y. Guess, Esq.
Carol Y. Guess is the Principal of The Guess Firm, P.L.L.C. based in Houston, Texas. The Guess Firm, P.L.L.C.'s clients are located throughout Texas and the United States, and range in variety from independent recording labels, artists, and producers, to music publishers, concert promoters, and independent film producers. Ms. Guess handles major and independent recording label contract negotiation and drafting for The Guess Firm's clients and advises its clients regarding business and career development, and in the areas of copyright and trademark law. In the years since she started her practice, Ms. Guess started a concert promotions company and featured artists signed to major recording labels such as Interscope and Motown. Her largest accomplishment to date is guiding popular Houston, TX music powerhouse SWISHAHOUSE in securing a major label partnership with the Warner Music Group through which they released the artists MIKE JONES and PAUL WALL.
Ms. Guess is a media liaison/expert in Entertainment Law for the Houston Bar Association, and has presented Continuing Legal Education seminars for the Houston Bar Association in Entertainment Law. She holds membership with the Entertainment and Sports Law Section of the Houston Bar Association, of which she is a past board director, and the Entertainment and Sports Law section of the State Bar of Texas. She is an active member of BESLA (Black Entertainment and Sports Lawyers Association), organizing educational and cutting edge legal seminars for its members and interested community supporters, and has launched her own brand of seminars, entitled "The Guess Sessions," for those in the Houston community interested in learning more about the entertainment industry. She is a member of the Texas bar and was admitted to the Southern District of Texas.
Ms. Guess earned her Bachelor of Science from Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee, where she was on the Dean's List, was a Young Alumni Trustee Nominee and an Accolade Award Recipient. She earned her Doctorate of Jurisprudence from Thurgood Marshall School of Law where she earned the distinction of being placed on the Dean's List and was awarded the National Women Law Students' Association Award Winner.
Dr.
Frank Guliuzza
Frank Guliuzza is Chairman of the Department
of Political Science & Philosophy at Weber State University.
Additionally, he serves as the University’s Due Process
Officer; Pre-law Adviser; and coaches Weber State's nationally-ranked
intercollegiate mock trial team.
Dr. Guliuzza received his bachelors and masters degree from the
University of Wyoming. He is the first member of his family to
attend college and was fortunate to receive a full scholarship
for speech and debate having captured the Wyoming state championship
in debate while attending Cheyenne Central High School. At the
University of Wyoming, he was captain of the speech and debate
team and finished second in persuasive speaking at the Delta Sigma
Rho/Tau Kappa Alpha national championship tournament. After he
left Wyoming, he earned a Master of Divinity degree from Southern
Seminary and was awarded his doctorate from the University of
Notre Dame. He came to Weber State after teaching for a year at
Vassar College in Poughkeepsie, New York.
While at Weber State, he has been recognized three times for "Outstanding
Teaching in Political Science" by the American Political Science
Association (2000, 2003, 2004) and was awarded the "Endowed Professor"
in the College of Social & Behavioral Sciences. In 2003-2004,
he was presented with what is perhaps Weber State’s most
prestigious faculty honor * the "John S. Hinckley" award for excellence
in teaching, service, and scholarship. In 2003, he was selected
by the Council for Advancement and Support of Education &
Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching as "Utah Professor
of the Year."
He is the current President of the Western Association of Pre-Law
Advisors and is Chair-Elect of the Pre-Law Advisors’ National
Council. Further, is he on the Executive Board of the American
Collegiate Moot Court Association, and the Board of Directors
of the American Mock Trial Association.
He founded the Weber State mock trial team in 1996 and, under
his direction, Weber State has earned eleven top-ten finishes
at national tournaments in intercollegiate mock trial and moot
court. Furthermore, his students have captured championships at
two regional tournaments and at three invitational tournaments;
the program can boast of 15 All-Americans and 41 All-Regional
competitors. He is the author of a book entitled Over the Wall:
Protecting Religious Expression in the Public Square (SUNY: 2000)
and has published articles and reviews in a number of journals
including The Marquette Law Review, The Drake Law Review, The
Willamette Law Review, The Journal of Politics, The Review of
Politics, PS, American Political Science Review, and Academe.
Angela W.
Harper, CFP(R), RFC
Angela W. Harper is a Registered
Principal with Associated Securities Corp. (ASC) and an Investment
Advisor Representative with Associated Planners Investment Advisory,
Inc (APIA), a Registered Investment Advisor.
Angela is a native of Sulphur Springs, Texas
and a graduate of Texas A&M University in College Station,
Texas. She obtained her B.S. in Economics with a minor in Finance
in 1987. Angela has worked in the Financial Services arena for
8 years of her 20 years of financial experience. For 5 years she
worked as a teller, savings counselor, and accountant at Southwest
Savings and Loan of Dallas, Texas and for 9 years she worked as
accountant, financial analyst and advanced financial analyst at
Electronic Data Systems of Plano, Texas.
Angela joined Associated Securities Corp in 2000.
Angela has held the Assistant Controller and Commission Accounting
Manager positions while at Associated Securities Corp in Los Angeles,
California where she gained experience in commission accounting,
compliance and other back office operations. She also held the
title and position of Vice President/Regional Manager at Associated
Securities Corp. and provided supervisory responsibilities for
approximately 40 branch offices in various states for three years.
She received the Professional Designation in
Personal Financial Planning from UCLA in 2002 and attained the
CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER™ certification in June 2004.
Angela has her General Lines Insurance license in Texas
(License #1195882) and Georgia (License #688352) and holds the
following Securities Licenses: Series 7, Series 24, Series 53,
and Series 66 and is registered with ASC to offer securities in
California, Texas, Georgia, and New Mexico.
Angela is a member of International Association
of Registered Financial Consultants (IARFC) and is on DFW Financial
Planning Association 2006 Board of Directors as the Pro Bono Chairperson.
Angela is also a member of the Texas A&M Alumni Association
and the Texas A&M Black Former Students Network, and an Executive
Member of the Black Sports Agents Association.
Julia Clark-Hayes, Esq.
Originally from Riverside, California, Attorney Julia Clark-Hayes has been licensed by the State Bar of Texas since
2003. Mrs. Clark-Hayes earned her Juris Doctor degree from
Syracuse University, College of Law, in 2001. She attended
the University of California, Davis where she received a Bachelor
of Arts degree in English in 1998.
After graduation from
law school, Mrs. Clark-Hayes clerked with the United States Department
of Education, Office for Civil Rights, where she investigated
allegations of discrimination in federally funded educational
institutions in five states. She also worked at the University
of Texas, Dallas, where she managed the university’s technology
transfer division of the Research and Graduate Education Program.
In January
of 2005, at the young age of 28, Attorney Clark-Hayes started
her own law firm, practicing primarily criminal and family law.
She is a member of the American Bar Association, Dallas Bar Association,
Tarrant County Criminal Defense Lawyers Association, Texas Criminal
Defense Lawyers Association, Texas Young Lawyers Association and
the JL Turner Legal Association.
The
Honorable Carl Hays
Carl Hays is an associate judge
with the City of Dallas and an attorney with Carl Hays and Associates.
He has also worked as an attorney with Barnes, Keck and Law, served
as an Assistant Public Defender and then Director of the Dallas
County Public Defender’s Office, and a solo practitioner
focusing on civil, criminal, family and municipal law.
Judge Hays’ professional activities include
membership in the Dallas Criminal Defense Lawyers Association,
the Dallas County Criminal Justice Management Committee, the Dallas
County Juvenile Justice Committee, the Dallas County Management
Task Force Committee, the state Bar of Texas Grievance Committee,
and the Oak Cliff Bar Association.
In the community, Judge Hays is the Vice President
of Prayer and Patriotism Project, a member of the Dallas County
Mental Health and Retardation Committee, on the Deacon Board of
the Oak Cliff Bible Fellowship Church, and serves on the Board
of Directors of the Mendenhall Ministries and the Greater Dallas
Council on Alcohol and Drug Abuse.
Among his numerous honors are the Community Service
Award, the Defense Attorney of the Year, the Pro Bono Attorney
Award from the North Central Legal Services, the Citizenship Award
from the Community Action Committee, and Outstanding Elected Official
Award.
Judge Hays earned his Bachelor of Science in
Political Science from Bishop College and his law degree from
Texas Southern University’s Thurgood Marshall School of
Law. He is a member of the State Bar of Texas, the Federal
Bar Association, and is a Certified Lecturer for Continuing Legal
Education with the State Bar of Texas.
Erika Hill
Erika
Hill is currently the Associate Director of Admissions
and Recruitment at the Florida State University College of Law.
Before being promoted to her current position 3 years ago she
was hired as Assistant Director of Admissions and Recruitment.
During her 6 year tenure at FSU, she has implemented several new
recruitment programs. Prior to entering the field of law school
admissions, Ms. Hill worked for 2 years at the Florida Department
of Elder Affairs in the Office of the General Counsel and later
served as one of the Communications Liaisons for that same state
agency. She holds a Bachelor of Science in Rehabilitative Services
and a minor in Psychology from Florida State University. She is
currently working towards the Master’s degree in the Higher
Education Administration at FSU.
Rev. Dr.
Judge Vonciel Jones Hill
Vonciel Jones Hill
earned a Bachelor of Arts in History and English at the University
of Texas at Austin, a Master of Library Science from Atlanta University,
a Master of Arts in History from Rice University, a Juris Doctorate
from the University of Texas School of Law and a Master of Divinity
from the Perkins School of Theology at Southern Methodist University. She is also the recipient of an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters
from Paul Quinn College.
Hill is currently an attorney with
her own private practice - Law Office of Vonciel Jones Hill.
It is a general civil practice, with an emphasis on municipal
law, wills, probate, and guardianships. She also has a limited
family law and federal white collar criminal practice. Previously,
her prior legal experience includes serving as an Interim Municipal
Judge in the City of the Colony, a District Court Administrator
with Dallas County, an Assistant City Attorney with the City of
Dallas, a Staff Attorney with the Public Utility Commission of
Texas. She is a certificed mediator and probate attorney
ad litem.
Hill is a member of a number of
professional associations and activitiesincluding the State Bar
of Texas, College of the State Bar of Texas, Dallas Bar Association,
J.L. Turner Legal Association, William "Mac" Taylor
American Inn of Court, Dallas Bar Foundation, University of Texas
Law School Alumni Association Executive Committee, Texas Municipal
Courts Education Center, Texas Municipal Courts Association, and
the Rice University Alumni Association. She has also served
as a guest lecturer at the Queen's Theological College in Birmingham,
England and at the Perkins School of Theology at Southern Methodist
University.
Ms. Hill is active in the community
as well having served on the Board of Trustees for Paul Quinn
College, the National Council of Negro Women, the City of Dallas
Interim Judicial Nominating Commission, the City of Dallas Municipal
Courts Task Force, the SMU Perkins School of Theology Faculty
Search Committee, the Museum of African -American Life & Culture,
Board of Visitors and the NAACP.
In addition to her extensive professional and community service,
Hill is the Senior Paster of the Mt. Zion African Methodist Episcopal
Church for almost seven years. She is also a frequent guest
preacher at various churches locally, statewide, nationally and
internationally.
Monica Ingram,
Esq.
Monica Ingram, a native
of Columbus, Georgia, received her baccalaureate degree in Broadcast
Communications from Grambling State University and her Juris Doctor
degree from The University of Texas School of Law.
After graduating from UT Law in 1998, Ingram
garnered experience (1) as a practitioner in public education,
(2) a licensing agency staff attorney in the Investigations and
Enforcement division of the State Board for Educator Certification
(SBEC), and (3) as a staff attorney at the Texas Association of
School Boards (TASB), a non-profit association that represents
Texas school board members.
In April 2002, Monica Ingram returned to her law school alma
mater as the Assistant Dean for Admissions of The University of
Texas School of Law. Yet, she continues to serve the legal
community in various capacities. Ms. Ingram served as: an
Attorney Ad Litem for Travis County; an executive member of the
Austin Black Lawyers Association (ABLA), and a member of the Austin
Bar Association. Additionally, Ms. Ingram served as an Austin
Children’s Shelter Board Member and a T.A. Brown Elementary
Adopt-A-School Program Mentor. She continues to serve as
a member of the St. James Episcopal School Board.
Darrell
D. Jackson, Esq.
Darrell D. Jackson joined the George Mason
University School of Law staff as an Assistant Dean and Director
of Diversity Services in March 2004. Immediately prior to
joining Mason, Dean Jackson served as an Assistant United States
Attorney in the District of Columbia from 2000 - 2004 and as an
Assistant County Attorney in Fairfax County, Virginia, from 1994
- 2000. Prior to joining the County Attorney's office, he
served as judicial law clerk to The Honorable L.M. Brinkema of
the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia
and to The Honorable Marcus D. Williams of the Nineteenth Judicial
Circuit of Virginia.
Dean Jackson received
his J.D. from George Mason University School of Law in 1990 where
he co-founded the George Mason University Civil Rights Law Journal
in 1989 and co-authored "The Sunset of Affirmative Action?"
City of Richmond v. J. A. Croson Co., 12 Black
L.J. 73 (1990).
In 1987, he received
his Bachelor of Arts in Spanish with a minor in Sociology from
the College of William and Mary, where he was a member of both
the varsity football and varsity track teams.
Dean Jackson is
a member of the Virginia Bar.

Shirley
A. Jefferson, Esq.
Shirley A. Jefferson, a Selma, Alabama native,
received her B.S. in Public Administration from Southeastern University
and a Juris Doctor (J.D.) degree from Vermont Law School.
She is a member of the Vermont Law School Class of 1986 and is
the law school’s Associate Dean for Student Affairs and
Diversity. In this capacity, she provides leadership and guidance
for individual students and student organizations, administers
the VLS Code of Conduct, serves as chair of the Student Services
and Diversity Committee and serves as an advisor to the President
and Dean and other Deans and Directors on student and diversity
issues. She is also an adjunct professor and teaches Race
and the Law and Non-Profit Organizations. Prior to her position
as Associate Dean, Ms. Jefferson was the Director of Alumni Relations
and Admissions Counselor for Vermont Law School.
Upon
graduation from Vermont Law School, Ms. Jefferson served as Legislative
Assistant to Washington, D.C. Councilmember Wilhelmina J. Rolark,
supporting her work on the city’s Judiciary Committee.
In 1988, Ms. Jefferson became an Associate in Mrs. Rolark’s
law office and Associate Counsel to the United Black Fund, Inc.,
a non-profit grant making institution for a community-based organization.
She became full-time General Counsel to the United Black Fund
in 1994. As General Counsel, her duties included establishing
a local, national and international chapter of the United Black
Fund. She assisted over 30 community, health, welfare, education
and human care agencies in obtaining non-profit status.
Ms. Jefferson has been the Commencement speaker for the South
Royalton High School Class of 2000, the Sharon Academy Class of
2003, and the Tunbridge 8th grade class of 2004, Chelsea High
School Class of 2005. Ms. Jefferson is also
known for her motivational speeches on diversity for many different
audiences. She was recently appointed by Governor Jim Douglas
to the Vermont State Police Advisory Commission. She lives
in Tunbridge with her son Jamaal and her granddaughter, Liyah.
Cassandra B. Jeter, Esq.
Cassandra B. Jeter, Esq., is the Assistant Director
of Admission & Financial Aid at Capital University Law School.
Ms. Jeter, a native of Cincinnati, Ohio, received her Bachelor
of Science in Psychology in 2000 from Howard University.
She enrolled at Capital University Law School in Columbus, Ohio
where she received the Dean’s Academic Scholarship and earned
a Juris Doctor with a concentration in Labor & Employment
Law in 2003. Ms. Jeter was subsequently admitted to the
Ohio Bar in November 2003.
During her academic career at Capital University
Law School, she served as a Teaching Assistant in Torts Law, a
Research Assistant in Labor and Employment Law and a member of
the Labor & Employment Law Moot Court Team. She was
elected Vice President and Treasurer of Capital’s BLSA Chapter
and the Midwest Regional Secretary for NBLSA. She
also served as a law clerk for Jones, Day, Reavis & Pogue
and the Ohio Attorney General’s Office.
Ms. Jeter is a member of the American Bar Association,
Ohio Bar Association, and the National Bar Association. Currently, she is pursuing her L.L.M. in Business at Capital University
Law School.
The Honorable Faith Johnson
Faith
Johnson is the first African-American female to be appointed
to the position of State Criminal District Court Judge in the
State of Texas. Judge Johnson was appointed to the bench
by Governor Bill Clements on December 14, 1989.
Judge Johnson is a pioneer.
She is the first African American female to attain the highly
regarded status of Chief Felony Prosecutor in the Dallas County
District Attorney’s Office. Her tenure at the Dallas
County District Attorney’s Office spanned over seven and
a half years.
Judge Johnson is from Atlanta,
Georgia and is the youngest of thirteen children. She received
her Bachelor of Arts degree in Psychology and her Master’s
of Education in Community Counseling from Georgia State University.
She moved to Texas and received her Juris Doctorate from Thurgood
Marshall School of Law, Texas Southern University in 1980.
She was admitted to the State Bar of Texas and U.S. District Court
for the Northern District of Texas in 1980. She has held
positions of psychological counselor, attorney, Assistant District
Attorney, Chief Felony Prosecutor of the Child Abuse Unit and
State Felony Prosecutor of the Child Abuse Unit and State Criminal
District Court Judge.
As a State District Court
Judge, Judge Johnson has handled an average of 1,600 felony cases
annually since her appointment in 1989. She has been instrumental
in reducing crime throughout Dallas County by instituting a Drug
Day Program, incarcerating felons, public speaking, exposing metroplex
school children to courtroom procedures, conducting workshops
to familiarize ministers with legal procedures, and conducting
crime prevention seminars. All of her community service
activities have been done on a volunteer basis.
Judge Johnson is highly
respected in the community and among her peers. She has
broken new ground for women and provided a positive role model
in the community, state and nation. She is to be commended
for her leadership and dedication to law enforcement and community
service to the general public.
Virginia
Keehan, Esq.
Virginia
Keehan
is the Assistant Dean and Director of Admissions at SMU Dedman
School of Law, where she has worked since August 2002. She
is responsible for supervising and implementing a highly competitive
admissions process for the law school's full-time, part-time evening,
and master's of law degree programs. In addition, she organizes
recruitment and outreach activities and administers scholarship
applications and awards.
Prior to joining the Admissions Office at SMU, Ms. Keehan practiced
corporate and securities law at the Dallas office of Thompson
& Knight.
Ms. Keehan graduated magna cum laude with a Bachelor
of Business Administration in Finance from Texas A&M University.
She earned her J.D. with honors from SMU Dedman School of
Law, where she was a Hatton W. Sumners Scholar, a member of the
Order
of the Coif and the Barristers, and an articles editor for the
International Law Review.
Cary L. Lee, Esq.
Cary
L. Lee
is the Assistant Dean for Student Affairs at the University of
Mississippi School of Law. In that capacity, she is involved with
recruiting, admissions, scholarships and student affairs.
Ms.
Lee received her Juris Doctor in 1996 from The University of Mississippi
School of Law where she was an active member of the Moot Court
Board and the Journal of National Security Law. She received
her B.A. in English from The University of Mississippi as well.
Prior to her current position she was a judicial clerk for the
10th Chancery Court District in Mississippi and she also lived
and worked in Washington, D.C.
She
is a member of the Mississippi bar. At The University of Mississippi,
she serves on the Chancellor’s Commission on the Status
of Women. She is also the state treasurer for the American Association
of University Women (AAUW).
The Honorable
Sam A. Lindsay
Sam A.
Lindsay was sworn in as United States District Judge for the Northern
District of Texas on September 1, 1998. He was nominated by President
William J. Clinton on November 8, 1997, to be a federal judge
for the Northern District of Texas, and was unanimously confirmed
by the United States Senate on March 11, 1998. He is the
first African-American to be appointed as a federal district judge
of the Northern District of Texas, which includes 100 counties.
Judge Lindsay received his Bachelor of Arts degree
(magna cum laude) from St. Mary's University, San Antonio,
Texas, in 1974, and his Doctor of Jurisprudence degree in 1977
from the University of Texas School of Law. He was the City
Attorney for the City of Dallas, Texas, from May 1992 until August
1998. He is board certified in civil trial law by the Texas
Board of Legal Specialization, and is licensed by the Texas Supreme
Court, United States District Court for the Northern District
of Texas, United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit,
and United States Supreme Court. Judge Lindsay has been a frequent
speaker at seminars on various topics relating to municipal and
other legal matters, and currently lectures from time to time
at legal conferences and functions.
His past and present professional affiliations
include the State Bar of Texas, Dallas Inn of Court, J.L. Turner
Legal Association, City of Dallas Judicial Nominating Commission,
International Municipal Lawyers Association, the Center for American
and International Law, Leadership Dallas Class of 1992, Federal
Judiciary Advisory Committee for the Northern District of Texas,
Dallas Business Journal Advisory Committee, the Fifth Circuit
Bar Association, and the Dallas Bar Association. Judge Lindsay
tried and successfully defended all the way to the United States
Supreme Court a juvenile curfew ordinance enacted by the City
of Dallas. The ordinance has been, and is currently, used
as a model and an effective tool in fighting juvenile crime across
the nation by the numerous cities that have adopted juvenile curfew
ordinances.
Judge Lindsay is also a speaker on many occasions
at various schools, churches, and civic-related functions.
In 1993, he was awarded the Trailblazers Award for being the first
African-American City Attorney. In 1996, he received the
C.B. Bunkley Award for exceptional service to the community by
the J.L. Turner Legal Association. In 1999, he received
the Man of the Year Award by the South Dallas Business and Professional
Women's Club. In January 2000, he was presented with the Dr. Martin
Luther King, Jr., Justice Award from the Dallas Bar Association
and several minority bar associations of Dallas. In February
2003, Judge Lindsay received the Distinguished Alumnus Award for
Community Service from the University of Texas's Law School Alumni
Association. He also has received numerous other awards
and commendations.
He and his wife Kathleen have three daughters
- Constance, Rachel and Heather.
Margie
L. Martin, Esq.
Margie
L. Martin
graduated from Wesleyan University in Middletown, Connecticut.
She later attended New York Law School and graduated in
2001. While in law school, Ms. Martin was President of the
Black Law Students Association and worked as an intern at the
Mayor’s Office of Labor Relations. After graduating
from New York Law School, she began working in the Office of Admissions.
She is now the Associate Director of Admissions and Financial
Aid. Among the many exciting aspects of Law School Admissions
that she has been a part of, her most special accomplishment was
creating the Minority Recruitment Program at New York Law
School.
Keanan Matthews
Keanan Matthews
attended the University of Texas at Arlington and received her
bachelor’s degree in Political Science in 2001. After
working in the field for a short time, she returned to UTA and
received a master’s degree in Political Science with an
emphasis on Public Policy Administration in 2004.
In the Fall of 2004, Ms. Matthews
began her legal education at Oklahoma City University’s
School of Law. She has excelled academically remaining consistently
in the top 15% of her class and has been named to the Dean’s
List and Faculty Honor Roll for two consecutive semesters. By appointment from the Office of Admissions at OCU LAW, Ms. Matthews
has been appointed to a newly created position of Minority Liaison
Special Ambassador.
She is a member of several student
organizations such as the American Bar Association (ABA), the
Employment and Labor Law Association (ELLA) and the Black Law
Students Association (BLSA). Ms. Matthews was the president
of her local BLSA chapter for the 2005-2006 school year and has
been recently reelected for the 2006-1007 school year.
In addition to those duties, Ms.
Matthews is the 2006-2007 NBLSA Rocky Mountain Regional Director
of Membership. It is through this position that she hopes
to assist in NBLSA’s efforts to not only increase the membership
of the organization but also increase the number of minority students
entering law school throughout the country.
Reginald
McGahee, Esq.
After working in
the business and legal affairs division of GM and for the District
of Columbia Council, Reginald McGahee assumed the Assistant Dean/Dean
of Admissions position at Howard University School of Law.
Dean McGahee supervises the Admissions Office, manages all recruitment
and marketing efforts, is a member of the Admissions Committee,
and awards scholarships to law students. Entering into his
third year as the dean of admissions, Dean McGahee is well known
for his innovative ideas and dedication to help shape the future
of the law school.
A native of Georgia, Dean McGahee received dual degrees in English
and Political Science at South Carolina State University. The
honor graduate was selected to serve as a Washington DC Capitol
Intern and as the Student Director of the South Carolina Legislative
Black Caucus. During his undergraduate years, he was also
chosen was selected as a Ralph Bunche Institute Fellow at the
University of Virginia and helped to manage two state Senatorial
campaigns in South Carolina.
Upon graduating, Dean McGahee enrolled in Howard University School
of Law and studied intellectual property and contract negotiations.
While at Howard, he served on the Board of Trustees, the Huver
I. Brown Trial Advocacy Moot Court Team and as an executive officer
of the Student Bar Association.
To complement his responsibilities as Assistant Dean, Dean McGahee
frequently speaks to diverse audiences about professional and
graduate school development. During the Congressional Black
Caucus on Capitol Hill, Dean McGahee was a featured panelist amongst
many prominent recording artists and civic leaders to discuss
the role of popular culture in the development of personal imagery.
While
this rising star is just beginning to burn bright, he endeavors
to lead by example and has served on various volunteer boards
in the legal and DC metropolitan communities. He is an active
member of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc., the American Bar Association,
the National Bar Association, and serves as a board member of
UPinDC which addresses the civic and professional development
of 21-39 year olds in the District of Columbia. On a personal
level, Dean McGahee firmly believes in the saying, “Our
life is God’s gift to us. What we do with it is our gift
to God.”
Professor
Tracy L. McGaugh
Tracy
L. McGaugh is an Assistant Professor of Law at South
Texas College of Law in Houston. She is a well-known professor
and speaker in the field of legal writing and has gained national
attention for her presentations on generations in legal education.
She has made presentations to numerous law faculties across the
country and at many conferences, including the American Bar Association’s
annual Associate Law Deans Conference, the Legal Writing Institute’s
Biennial Conference, and the Association of American Law School’s
annual meeting. Her first article on the topic, Generation
X in Legal Education: The Dying of the Light or the Dawn of New
Day?, was published in the Journal of the Legal Writing Institute. She is also the primary co-author of the Interactive Citation
Workbook and its related web-based program on the Lexis website;
both are used by approximately 75 law schools across the country. A graduate of Baylor University School of Law, she has practiced
criminal and family law; she began her tenth year of law teaching
in August 2006.
BarbaraKaye
Miller, Esq.
BarbaraKaye Miller started
in the academic arena as Interim Director of Admissions for Phoenix
School of Law, in January of this year. She was given
a wonderful opportunity to work for her mentor and former Dean
of Admissions at the University of Iowa College of Law, Dennis
Shields. In April, she was promoted to Dean of Admissions
at Phoenix School of Law.
She is a 1990 graduate of the University
of Iowa College of Law, where she was Associate Editor of
the Iowa Law Review. Her legal background includes
both the private and public sectors. She was an Associate
with Fuller & Henry in Toledo, Ohio. She became the first
African-American female to serve as an Assistant Prosecutor
in Lucas County, Ohio. From there, she went on to clerk
for the Honorable John W. Potter, U.S. District Court for the
Northern District of Ohio.
She has also been a partner at Wise
People Management, an employment law consulting firm and Ryan,
Wise, Miller & Dorner, LLC. Prior to joining Phoenix
School of Law, she was Vice-President of LegalWATCH, Inc.,
a preventive law training company headquarted in Houston,
Texas. LegalWATCH, Inc. was founded by fellow
law classmate E. Jean Johnson and was named one of Houston's 100
fastest growing businesses.
BarbaraKaye is licensed to practice
law in Ohio. She is a member of the Arizona Women Lawyers
Association, the Hayzel B. Daniels Bar Asssociation and the Los
Abogados Bar Association. She enjoys kickboxing,
resistance training, hiking and playing tennis . She lives
in Fountain Hills, Arizona with her two sons, Julius and Alexander
and her husband Julius.
Tedd Miller,
Esq.
Tedd
Miller is currently the Dean of Students at Phoenix Law
School in Phoenix, Arizona. Dean Miller has had over thirty-one
years of experience in legal education. He was the Assistant
Director of the Council on Legal Education Opportunity (CLEO)
program from 1975- 1980. The CLEO program is a national
affirmative action admissions effort to increase the enrollment
of people of color in ABA approved law schools.
At Georgetown University Law Center he was the
Associate Director of Admissions from 1980-1992. He managed
the daily operations of the law center admissions office.
Georgetown has the largest law student body in the nation.
The law center received over 10,000 applications per year.
The institution enrolled 500 full-time day students, 150 part-time
evening students and approximately 700 LLM graduate students each
academic year.
In 1992 he was appointed Assistant Dean and Director
of Admissions at Howard University School of Law. He significantly
increased the number of African American males at the law school
during his tenure.
Dean Miller became a member of the executive
management team to maintain the accreditation of Central State
University a historical black college in 1997. The university
was in jeopardy of losing its accreditation and public funding
from the Ohio state legislature. He assumed the duties of
Vice President for Enrollment Management. The university achieved
some extraordinary successes under the leadership of the management
team resulting in the maintaining of its accreditation and an
increase in state, federal and private funding.
Darick C. Morton
Darick
C. Morton
is the 2006-2007 Regional Chair for the Rocky Mountain Region
of the National Black Law Students Association (NBLSA).
During
his matriculation at the University of Tulsa College of Law, Mr.
Morton has served in various capacities as an instrumental figure
in bringing diversity and multi-cultural awareness to the university
as a whole. As a 1L, he was appointed to the pivotal taskforce
responsible for creating the Oklahoma Law Student Division (OLSD)
as an official extension of the Oklahoma Bar Association. Mr.
Morton was also appointed to the University of Tulsa’s Equal
Access and Opportunity Committee (EAOC), through which groundbreaking
minority recruitment initiatives have been developed and key minority
professorships have been created. As a founding member of the
law school’s prestigious Law Student Ambassadors Program,
Mr. Morton continues to seek and recruit the best and brightest
for the University of Tulsa – especially students of color.
Mr.
Morton is an expert in leadership and motivation and focuses his
business pursuits through his company, Legacy Enterprises,
LLC. Mr. Morton is also a licensed minister with the Pentecostal
Assemblies of the World and spends a great deal of his time mentoring
and ministering to youth across America. He currently serves as
Chaplain for the Christian Legal Society and is a member of Phi
Alpha Delta Legal Fraternity at the University of Tulsa College
of Law.
Mr.
Morton is a summa cum laude graduate of the Whitney M.
Young, Jr. Honors College of Leadership Studies at Kentucky State
University, with Bachelor of Arts degrees in both Liberal Studies
(Pre-Law Option) and English. He resides in Tulsa, Oklahoma with
his beautiful wife of eleven years (a second-year medical student
at the Oklahoma State University College of Osteopathic Medicine)
and three gorgeous children, Mikaila, DaSha, and Solomon, ages
ten, eight, and one respectively.
Jill Nikirk,
Esq.
Jill Nikirk is the
Associate Director of Admissions at SMU Dedman School of Law,
where she has worked since January 2005, assisting in the implementation
of a highly competitive admissions process for the law school's
full-time, part-time evening, and master's of law degree programs.
In addition, she assists in the organization of recruitment
and outreach activities and the administration of scholarship
applications and awards. Prior to joining the Admissions
Office at SMU, Ms. Nikirk practiced education law at the Dallas
office of Walsh, Anderson, Brown, Schulze & Aldridge, where
she defended Texas public school districts in special education
and disabilities litigation, and was a frequent speaker across
the state of Texas.
Ms. Nikirk graduated the University of Houston in 1995, with a
degree in Communication Disorders. Following that, Ms. Nikirk
worked as a speech-language pathologist in both the Texas public
schools and in various clinical settings for four years.
She then earned her J.D. from SMU Dedman School of Law, where
she was awarded the John E. Kennedy Memorial Scholarship, was
the executive director for the Jackson Walker Moot Court Board,
the Student Bar Association Programs Director, managing editor
for the International Law Review, and was a member of
the Barristers.
Currently, Ms. Nikirk is active with the
Dallas Association of Young Lawyers, heading two committees in
2006. She was also a member of the DAYL’s 2004 Leadership
Class.
Kathy Northern, Esq.
Kathy
Northern
is the Associate Dean for Admissions at The Ohio State University
Moritz College of Law. She has served in this capacity since
1999. Dean Northern has also served as Associate Dean for
Academic and Student Affairs. Dean Northern received her
B.A/B.S from Williams College and her J.D. from Harvard Law School.
She served as a law clerk to the Honorable Robert M. Duncan, Southern
District of Ohio, following graduation from law school, and then
became an associate with the law firm of Porter, Wright, Morris,
& Arthur in Columbus where she was a member of the Litigation
Group.
In 1990, she joined the law faculty of Ohio Northern University,
moving to Ohio State in 1991. She has served as chair of the Ohio
Supreme Court Commission on Professionalism and was a member of
the Civil Justice Reform Act Advisory Group for the U.S. District
Court for the Southern District of Ohio.
Her research areas include the use of tort law in social policy
formation, the application of traditional tort principles to mitigate
the effects of environmental racism, and products liability.
She teaches Advanced Topics in Tort Law, Environmental Justice,
and Torts.
Tonya Parker, Esq.
Tonya
Parker is a 1998 graduate of Southern Methodist University
Dedman School of Law. She is a partner at the law firm of
Adorno Yoss White & Wiggins, LLP where she primarily defends
companies in suits involving negligence, premises liability, products
liability, business torts, and contract disputes. Tonya
is an incredible advocate for her clients. She has successfully
handled bench and jury trials, as well as mediated and settled
more than 100 cases.
Tonya was selected for the 2005/2006 Dallas Association
of Young Lawyers (DAYL) Outstanding Young Lawyers Award not just
because of her demonstrated proficiency as a practitioner but
because of her passion and continuous drive to help others. Tonya
Parker is committed to the legal profession. She has served
on various committees within many of the local bar associations,
including DAYL, J.L. Turner Legal Association, and the Dallas
Bar Association. Tonya served two terms as a Director for
the J. L. Turner Legal Association and is currently an At-Large
Director for the Dallas Bar Association.
In 2004, Tonya’s involvement with the Dallas
Bar Association’s 50th Anniversary Commemoration Committee
of Brown v. Board of Education undoubtedly made
a significant impact on the students and people that participated
in the program. Tonya helped oversee the art, essay, and photography
contests for grade school students and also helped create a wide
scale re-enactment of the Brown v. Board of Education
argument before the United States Supreme Court.
In 2005, Tonya was selected as an American Marshall Memorial
Fellow by the German Marshall Fund of the United States.
As a Fellow, she traveled to five European countries in October
2005 to explore their social, political, and economic systems
and to promote Transatlantic relations. During her tour,
she participated in high-level briefings at NATO, the European
Union, German Bundestadt, and Slovakian parliament.
More recently in 2006, as Co-Chair of the DAYL Lawyers Promoting
Diversity Committee, Tonya helped organize An Evening of Dinner
and Dialogue. The focus of the program was to encourage dialogue
between attorneys of all backgrounds on pressing social and political
issues.
Tonya is a leader in the community as well.
She is selfless with her time and works hard to make a difference
in our community. She frequently speaks to students at her
alma mater about the practice of law, volunteers with DVAP, serves
on the North Dallas High School Partners in Education Board of
Directors, and as a mentor and big sister for Big Brothers and
Big Sisters of North Texas Education is Freedom Program.
Tonya’s drive and passion is evident and she imparts that
drive and passion to anyone who comes in contact with her.
Aubrey "Nick"
Pittman, Esq.
Aubrey
“Nick” Pittman
of the Pittman Law Firm, P.C. focuses his practice on counseling
and litigation in a variety of legal matters involving business
disputes, patent infringement, copyright infringement, misappropriation
of trade secrets, antitrust, Sports and Entertainment, and numerous
other commercial litigation matters. He has represented clients
in state courts and in federal trial courts in Texas, California,
Colorado, New York, Mississippi and Utah. Pittman has served
as trial and appeals counsel in landmark decisions in Texas, the
Fifth Circuit and the Federal Circuit Court of Appeals.
Mr.
Pittman received
Master’s of Business Administration from Southern Methodist
University and his Juris Doctor degree from the University of
Texas School of Law.
He
is licensed
to practice before the Fifth and Ninth Circuit Courts of Appeals,
the Federal Circuit Court of Appeals and all state and federal
courts in Texas. He is also a Certified Public Accountant.
Among
his many distinctions, Attorney Pittman was selected as a Super
Lawyer for 2003 and 2004 by Texas Monthly and nationally
acclaimed in Law & Politics Magazine. He has
also been recognized for his contributions to the profession when
he was named by Texas Young Lawyers Association in 1998 as the
Outstanding Young Lawyer of the Year for the entire State of Texas.
The Dallas Young Lawyers Association also named him the Outstanding
Young Lawyer of the Year. Pittman serves on the Advisory Committee
for the United States District Court for the Northern District
of Texas and has served on both the Magistrate Selection and the
Reappointment Committee for the Northern District of Texas.
Pittman
is a member
of the State Bar of Texas, the Dallas, National and American Bar
Associations, and a former member of the Board of Directors of
the Dallas Bar Association. He is Chair of the Business
Litigation Section and has also served on bar association committees
including, but not limited to, the Business Litigation, Antitrust,
and Intellectual Property Committees.
He
serves as a member of the Board of Directors for the Dallas Symphony
Association, Chair of the J. L. Turner Legal Association Foundation,
and the CAAPCO Foundation. He is also a member of the Dallas
Inn of Court and the International Order of Barristers.
Professor Carla D. Pratt
Carla D. Pratt is an Associate Professor of
Law at Penn State University, Dickinson School of Law where she
teaches courses in Race, Racism and American Law, Equal Protection
and Civil Rights, Professional Responsibility and Contracts. Professor
Pratt's scholarly interests center on Race and the Law with particular
interest in effectuating social and legal advancement for people
of color. Professor Pratt has published articles on various
topics including, Racism as an Ethical Barrier to the Legal Profession,
Affirmative Action in Education, Reparations for African Americans,
and Federal Indian Law’s role in perpetuating the rule of
hypo-descent. Prior to joining the faculty at Penn State,
Professor Pratt engaged in the private practice of law with the
Philadelphia law firm of Drinker Biddle & Reath, LLP where
she practiced commercial litigation and she served as a Deputy
Attorney General for the State of New Jersey.
Lynn
Pride Richardson, Esq.
Lynn Pride Richardson has been practicing law since
1987. She is licensed in both Florida and Texas. Lynn is a third
generation graduate of Spelman College in Atlanta, Georgia and
received her J.D. degree from the University of Florida College
Law.
She is the First Assistant Chief Public Defender
for Dallas County where she is responsible for the day to day
operation of the office including the supervision of over sixty
attorneys. Attorney Richardson has been employed by Dallas
County for over ten years and has served in the capacity of misdemeanor
supervisor and Interim Chief Public. Lynn has had over one hundred
trials during her career and has represented individuals who have
been charged with serious offenses like murder and aggravated
sexual assault. Although she has a passion for criminal
law she has also handled family law cases, personal injury and
civil litigation.
Ms. Richardson is a part-time actress, director
and drama coach and has hosted radio talk shows in West Palm Beach
Florida, Gainesville, Florida and Atlanta, Georgia. She
is married to Elvenn J. A. Richardson, retired Assistant City
Manager for the City of Plano, Texas and they have three daughters,
India, Kymberly and Kisha.
Louie Rodriguez, Esq.
Louie
Rodriguez is a native Texan, born and raised in El Paso.
He is a graduate of Baylor University in Waco, Texas, holding
a Bachelor’s of Business Administration, with an emphasis
in Human Resources Management. He is also a graduate of
Columbia Law School in New York City, where he was active with
Legal Outreach, a Harlem-based education and mentoring organization,
as well as the Domestic Violence Project in the Bronx.
Upon
graduating from Columbia, Louie joined the ranks of the international
law firm Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker in New York as
an associate, where his practice focused on intellectual property
law. He now serves as Senior Program Manager at SEO, where
he manages the Corporate Law internship program, and remains an
active member of the New York Bar Association, Hispanic National
Bar Association, National Hispanic Business Association and the
Association of Latino Professionals in Finance and Accounting.
Michael Santana, Esq.
Michael Santana is the creator
of Legal Writing Prep. Legal Writing Prep is an online law
school preparatory course for entering law students interested
in developing the most important skill for law school success:
legal writing. Professor Santana has five years law school teaching
experience, clerked for the Washington Supreme Court, and practiced
law for five years in New York City. Visit his website
at http://www.legalwritingprep.com.
Paul
A. Shanklin, Esq.
Paul A. Shanklin earned a Bachelor of Science
in Psychology from the University of Houston and a Doctorate of
Jurisprudence from the University of Houston Law Center. He manages
his own law practice, The Shanklin Law Firm, where he provides
business client services in general civil law, specifically working
in the areas of Collections, Family Law and Probate. Prior to
starting his own firm, he was an attorney for Winstead, Secrest,
and Minnic, LLP.
In addition to practicing law, he is
an adjunct professor in the Government Department at the Houston
Community College Southeast Campus where he teaches American and
Texas Government. He is also an adjunct professor in Urban Education
at the University of Houston - Downtown where he teaches Critical
Pedagogy and Multicultural Education.
Mr. Shanklin has extensive public service
experience. He serves as an Executive Board Member for the Center
for the Professional Development of Teachers (CPDT) at the University
of Houston-Downtown. He is a member of the Houston Bar Association's
Speakers Bureau where he discusses social and legal trends in
schools and civic organizations. He is on the Board of Directors
for Dress Up Houston which provides clothing for the needy.
Mr. Shanklin serves on the Board of Directors for the Guardian
Angels Academy, a charter school. He is also a member and office
holder for the North Houston Frontiers, a non-profit civic organization.
Mr. Shanklin is certified by the National
Institute of Trial Advocacy, a Commissioner for the Harris County
Courts, and a Certified Ad Litem for the Family and Probate Courts
of Harris County. He has received certificates of appreciation
from the Dayton, Aldine, Houston and Spring Branch Independent
School Districts. He is a life member of the Houston Tennis
Association and the United States Tennis Association.
Additionally, Mr. Shanklin is a member
of a number of lawyer organizations including the Houston Bar
Association, the National Bar Association, the Young Lawyers Association,
the American Bar Association, the American Immigration Lawyers
Society and the Pro Bono College. He is admitted to practice in
both State and Federal Courts.
Tiffany
R. Simmons, Esq.
Tiffany R. Simmons has been the Assistant Director of Admissions
and Financial Aid at Texas Southern University – Thurgood
Marshall School of Law (TMSL) since 2004. Prior to law school,
she earned her Bachelor of Arts degree in Political Science from
Johnson C. Smith University in June of 1999. She earned
her Juris Doctorate from Texas Southern University – Thurgood
Marshall School of Law in 2004. Ms. Simmons is licensed
to practice law in Texas and she does pro bono work for individuals
who seek to start nonprofit organizations and small businesses.
Tracy
L. Simmons, Esq.
Tracy L. Simmons is the Assistant Dean for Admissions
and Financial Aid at Chapman University School of Law. After earning
the Bachelor of Arts degree in Psychology and the Master of Arts
degree in Education (with emphasis in Multicultural Counseling)
from San Diego State University, she was awarded a Kathryn Ringgold
Endowed Scholarship to attend the Golden Gate University School
of Law. Her excellence as a law student was recognized by two
important awards: the Outstanding Achievement Award in Criminal
Litigation and the Justice Rose Elizabeth Bird Award for Professionalism
and Integrity.
Dean Simmons earned the Juris Doctor degree in 1999, and promptly
was named Assistant Director for Admissions and Financial Aid
at the Golden Gate Law School. Two years later, she was promoted
to Assistant Dean of Admissions and Financial Aid. During the
succeeding four years, Dean Simmons increased the pool of applicants
to the law school by 49%, and enhanced selectivity of admittees
by 22%. While managing the recruiting and admissions function
at Golden Gate, she also engaged productively in regional and
national organizations, serving on the Advisory Board (Admit-M)
of the Law School Admission Council (LSAC), and on the Advisory
Board of the Access Group, Inc. Currently, she chairs the Advisory
Board of the Law Access Group.
Jennifer Sims, J.D.
Jennifer Sims is the Assistant Director of Admissions
and Recruitment at Cumberland School of Law at Samford University
in Birmingham, Alabama and Advisor to its Black Law Students Association
chapter. She earned her Doctorate of Jurisprudence from
Cumberland School of Law before joining the Admissions Office
in 2004. Prior to attending Cumberland, she graduated with
undergraduate degrees in Environmental Design and Philosophy from
Texas A&M University at College Station.
Suzanne
St. Pierre, Esq.
Suzanne
St. Pierre is a partner with the New York Office of LeBoeuf,
Lamb, Greene & MacRae LLP. Her practice is transactional
in nature, with an emphasis in the area of real estate.
Ms. St. Pierre has broad experience in the structuring of partnerships,
limited liability companies, and other joint venture vehicles.
Her practice encompasses virtually all areas of transactional
real estate: development of cultural and mixed-use projects; transactional
construction practice, including construction agreements, architect’s
agreements, and dispute resolution; lending transactions, including
securitized loans, mezzanine financing, and loan workouts; acquisitions
and sales of office, industrial, and hotel properties and related
options, rights of first offer, and rights of first refusal; leasing
transactions; and condominium transactions.
Attorney St. Pierre received her Bachelor of
Arts cum laude from Duke University and her Juris Doctor
from UCLA School of Law. She is admitted to practice in
New York.
She is a member (owner’s representative)
of the New York City Loft Board, the City agency responsible for
legalizing residential loft buildings, and a member of the LeBeouf
Lamb Recruiting Committee.
Michael
J. States, J.D.
Dean
States
has been the Assistant Dean for Admissions at the University of
North Carolina School of Law since August 2004. He was the Assistant
Dean for Enrollment Management at the Stuart Graduate School of
Business in Chicago and from August 1999 to January 2004 was the
Director of Admissions at The Hamline University School of Law
in St. Paul, Minnesota. He has served as the President of
the Midwest Alliance of Law School Admissions (MALSA), and is
currently the Chair-Elect of the American Association of Law Schools
Subcommittee on Pre-Legal Education and Law School Admissions.
Prior to joining Hamline, he was the Associate Director of Admissions
and Financial Aid at The John Marshall Law School in Chicago,
Illinois. Dean States also spent five years after law school working
for State Farm Insurance Company in St. Louis, Missouri.
He
has served on the planning group for the Law School Admissions
Council (LSAC) Annual Meeting and the LSAC Newcomers to Law Admissions
Workshop. He also has been a presenter for the Minority
Admission Panel at LSAC Law Forums since 1997.
Dean
States earned a Bachelor of Arts at the University of Kansas and
his Juris Doctor from Saint Louis University School of Law.
Aaron
N. Taylor, Esq.
Aaron N. Taylor earned his Bachelor of Arts degree
in Political Science from North Carolina A&T State University
and his Doctorate of Jurisprudence from the Howard University
School of Law. He is the founder and president of Recruit
For Law School, Inc., a consortium of undergraduate schools seeking
to increase the level of law school opportunity available to its
students. In addition, Mr. Taylor is editor of the consortium's
pre-law magazine, The Advisor by Recruit For Law School, Inc.
Mr. Taylor recently
served as Assistant Director of Admission at the University of
the District of Columbia School of Law where he performed functions
at all stages of the admission process, including strategic planning,
statistical analysis, advising, recruitment and outreach.
Prior to working
at UDC School of Law, Mr. Taylor served as a law clerk at the
D.C. Office of Bar Counsel. Mr. Taylor is currently completing
an administrative fellowship at Harvard University.
Lisa Sonia
Taylor, Esq.
Lisa Sonia Taylor is the Associate Director of Law Admissions for Ohio Northern
University Petit College of Law. Ms. Taylor received her J.D.
from Howard University School of Law and graduated with a B.A.
in Political Science and History from the University of Toronto. She is a member of the Florida Bar.
Prior to her career in higher education administration,
Ms. Taylor served as a Staff Attorney for the Election Administrator
for the International Brotherhood of Teamsters where she assisted
in the adjudication of disputes arising out of the union’s
2001 international election process. During this period
she also served as Campaign Finance Coordinator charged with
developing the processes for reporting campaign finances and monitoring
contributions.
Ms. Taylor began her career in higher education
as the Research Assistant for the Dean of Admissions and Financial
Aid at Howard University School of Law. In this role, she developed
programs that helped streamline and improve the admissions and recruitment
processes.
Ms.
Taylor continues this work at Ohio Northern with a special interest
in minority recruitment. She has also been instrumental
in the development of the admissions procedures for Ohio Northern’s
new L.L.M program in Democratic Governance and the Rule of Law.
Lillie
V. Wiley-Upshaw
Lillie V. Wiley-Upshaw is currently the Associate Dean and Director
of Admissions and Financial Aid at University at Buffalo Law School,
State University of New York in Buffalo, New York. Prior
to serving in this position, she was the Associate Director of
Admissions and Director of Recruitment at University at Buffalo
Law School. Dean Wiley-Upshaw has extensive higher education
administration experience at The Pennsylvania State University
in University Park, Pennsylvania including working as a Senior
Diversity Planning Analyst at the Office of the Vice-Provost for
Educational Equity, a Diversity Specialist at the Diversity Support
and Education Center within the Affirmative Action Office, a Graduate
Assistant in the Graduate Awards and Fellowship Office, an Assistant
Program Coordinator in the Office of the Vice-Provost for Educational
Edquity, a Residence Life Coordinator, and a Student Services
Assistant.
Dean Wiley-Upshaw earned a Bachelor of
Arts in Communication from Canisius College in Buffalo, New York
and a Master of Education in Counselor Education with a focus
in Student Leadership from the Pennsylvania State University.
She has served as a board member of the
YWCA of Niagara County, the Niagara Education Board, and a subcommittee
member of the Law School Admission Council (LSAC).
Daryl Washington,
Esq.
Daryl Washington is a graduate
of Grambling State University where he received a Bachelor of
Science in Accounting. He went on to earn his J.D. cum
laude from Southern University Law Center where he was a
member of the Southern University Law Review and the
Moot Court Board.
Attorney Washington brings with
him a wealth of diverse experience as a result of working in both
the private and public accounting sectors prior to becoming an
attorney. This diverse experience has given him the ability to
work more efficiently with his business clients. Daryl's practice
consists of representing clients in a variety of simple and complex
commercial and securities litigation matters. Additionally,
he represents corporate clients in transactions ranging from contractual
and procedural issues to business formations and reorganization. He is also a certified contract advisor with the National Football
League in which he represents athletes in contract negotiations.
In addition to his practice, Daryl
remains active in his community and is involved with various legal
organizations. Currently, he serves as a trustee of St.
Phillips School and Community Center. Daryl is also the
former (2004) President of J.L. Turner Legal Association and served
two years (2003 and 2004) on the Board of the Dallas Bar Association.
Daryl is active with the National Bar Association in which he
is currently the Assistant Director for Region V. In 2005,
Daryl was admitted as a Fellow of the Dallas Bar Association.
Ward White IV
Ward White IV, Esq. has been practicing law for almost 15 years and is currently in private practice specializing in entertainment law. His clients have included actors, producers, and artists, including 4 time Grammy Award winner Erykah Badu, Prophetess Dr. Juanita Bynum, hip hop legend Biz Markie, and former NFL wide receiver Rocket Ismail. Mr. White is also the CEO of ESQmedia, Inc., a management and consulting firm, and sits on the Board of Directors for Beautiful Love Productions, Inc., a non-profit organization which promotes the arts and community causes, and the Juneteenth Film Festival Foundation, which produces the annual Juneteenth Film Festival in Dallas. He recently co-founded the University of Dallas Music Business Academy and taught the inaugural music business course, Principles of the Music Business. He is also the creator of the Carper Institute, a training and lecture company which produces music business seminars and educational materials.
Ward White IV received his B.A. from the University of Texas at Austin in 1987 where he was in the Plan II Honors program, majoring in liberal arts with a concentration in African American studies. While at the University of Texas, Mr. White and a partner formed Hot Wax Promotions, a pioneering record promotion company which promoted and introduced many seminal hip hop and R&B artists such as Public Enemy, Ice T, and Sir Mix-A-Lot, to the southwest region. In 1991, Ward White IV received his J.D. from Howard Law School. While attending Howard, Mr. White founded the Entertainment Law Students Association and was a member of the Howard Law Journal.
After graduation from Howard Law School, Mr. White went to work in the heart of the music business, as National Manager of Rap Promotions for Warner Bros Records in Los Angeles. In 1992, he was promoted to Co-National Director of Rap Promotions. During his time there he had the opportunity to work with many notable artists including Prince. From 1992-1995, In Los Angeles, Mr. White held the position of Vice President of Business Affairs for Black Rain Communications., an independent record label. It was also during this period that his law practice brought him face to face at the negotiation table with the one and only Madonna as he negotiated the deal for the first rap group signed to Madonna’s Maverick Records.
After moving back to Texas in the fall of 1995, from 1996-1998, Ward White IV served as Assistant City Attorney for the City of Ft. Worth where he had a successful tenure as a prosecutor and gained a reputation for successfully representing the citizens of the city in numerous jury trials.
Ward White IV’s music business journey officially began in high school as a member of the O. D. Wyatt High School band in Ft. Worth. He played the saxophone, served as drum major, and received awards in jazz band and symphonic wind ensemble competitions. He also launched his first of many entrepreneurial enterprises when he and 3 classmates formed a disc jockey service company playing parties, halls, and clubs. He was born in New Haven, Connecticut and lives in Ft. Worth, Texas.
Suntrease
Williams
Suntrease
Williams
is a native of Farmville, Virginia and currently a law student
at North Carolina Central University School of Law in Durham,
North Carolina. She is a magna cum laude graduate
of Shaw University where she graduated with a Bachelor of Arts
in Sociology and Criminal Justice and a minor in Psychology.
Suntrease overcame many obstacles to achieve her goals including
a difficult childhood and family life. During her undergraduate
years, she worked 60+ hours a week all four years and at the same
time was able to remain actively involved in the community.
She served in leadership capacities for Alpha Kappa Alpha
Sorority, Inc., the Criminal Justice Club, and the Student Government
Association. In addition, she founded and chartered the Social
Sciences Club which combined all social sciences disciplines to
determine different mechanisms for the success of the Black community.
She also served as a mentor to a number of students and
hosted seminars for Black young women. She was selected
as a Tom Joyner Scholarship recipient and received the Student
of the Year Award in 2004 for having attained the highest GPA
in her discipline.
In
May 2005, Suntrease entered law school. Throughout her first year,
she participated in the Black Law Students Association (1L Delegate),
Phi Delta Phi Legal Fraternity, Inc., the Women's Caucus (publicist),
the Public Interest Law Organization (Director of Membership),
the Sports & Entertainment Law Society, the North Carolina
Bar Association (Young Lawyer's Division), and the Association
for Trial Lawyers of America (Richard D. Hailey Scholar). She
was awarded the Best Member Award for the Black Law Students Association,
in addition to receiving many other recognitions from other student
organizations. She remained committed and active within
the law school community and was still able to complete her first
year in the top 25% of her class. Furthermore, she was selected
as the 1L Speaker for the Faculty Brunch.
This
past summer, Suntrease received a stipend to clerk at Legal Aid
of North Carolina and became very knowledgeable about different
aspects of family law. She currently serves as the National
Chair for the National Black Law Students Association’s
College Student Division.
Professor Patricia A. Wilson, Esq.
Before joining the Baylor Law School faculty in 1993, Professor Wilson practiced law for seven years, including four years with American Airlines, Inc. and as a Litigation Associate in two prominent Texas law firms. Professor Wilson's primary teaching responsibilities include Employment Discrimination, Employment Relations, and Family Law. In the past, she has taught the Client Counseling and Interviewing course, which she developed. She also has taught Property, Antitrust, Consumer Sales and Protection, Intellectual Property, and Legal Writing. Professor Wilson coaches the Baylor Client Counseling team. She is a trained mediator and is also actively involved in the Waco community serving on the boards of a number of local nonprofit organizations. Professor Wilson earned her Bachelor of Arts degree in Sociology from Purdue University where she graduated "With Distinction." She continued her education at Northwestern University School of Law, where she gwas named a Wigmore Scholar. Professor Wilson was also a member of the Board of Editors of the Journal of International Law and Business.
Professor
Lauren E. Winters
Lauren Winters is a visiting
professor at Gonzaga University School of Law. From 1991
to 2002, Ms. Winters specialized in federal and state business
and commercial litigation. Her bankruptcy practice focused
on analyzing problems for financially distressed companies and
their creditors, including representing creditors in contested
matters and Chapter 11 adversary proceedings. Ms. Winters
has briefed and argued appeals before the Oregon Court of Appeals,
the Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit, and the
Ninth Circuit. In addition to her bankruptcy practice, Ms.
Winters has advised and represented clients on employment-related
issues, including compliance with local, state, and federal fair
employment laws. Her article on protecting law firm partners
from discrimination appeared in the University of San Francisco
Law Review.
Ms Winters has been a guest lecturer on mental
health issues and the law for Medical Education Services and on
persuasive writing techniques for Eastern Washington Women Lawyers. Before joining the faculty at Gonzaga University School of Law,
Ms. Winters was in private practice for 11 years at two large
Portland, Oregon law firms.
She graduated from Gonzaga University School
of Law, cum laude, and received her undergraduate degree
from Willamette University. Ms. Winters is licensed to practice
in Oregon and Washington. She teaches Legal Research and
Writing and Civil Rights at Gonzaga.
The Honorable
Carolyn Wright
Justice Carolyn
Wright has served in the judiciary for more than 20 years.
Many of the positions held by her have been historical firsts
for women and minorities serving in the Texas judiciary.
She is currently one of thirteen justices on the Fifth District
Court of Appeals, where she has served since becoming the first
of Governor George Bush’s judicial appointees. She sits
on a rotating panel of three justices who decide criminal
and civil matters appealed from trial courts in the six
North Texas counties from which she is elected. Her prior judicial
service includes three elections as a State District Judge and
an appointment as an Associate Judge in the Family District Courts.
Prior to her
judicial service, she was in the private practice of law engaged
in business litigation as well as family and juvenile matters.
Prior to and during law school she worked for the federal government
in a law-related juvenile delinquency field. She graduated
from the Howard University School of Law, Washington, D.C.
Her professional
memberships include: Past Chair and Life Fellow of the Texas Bar
Foundation, a multi-million dollar lawyers’charity;
Fellow of the College of the State Bar of Texas, Dallas Young
Lawyers and Dallas Bar Foundations; the National and American
Bar Associations; JL Turner Legal Association; service for many
years as a Faculty Member of the Texas Center for the Judiciary
and the National Judicial College, Reno, Nevada.; and appointed
by the Chief Justice of the Texas Supreme Court to: a National
Task Force at the State Justice Institute to set national standards
for mediation practice; the Judicial Ethics Committee; and an
Appellate Tribunal to hear the appeal of a determination to remove
a judge from office for ethical misconduct.
She is the recipient
of numerous awards for community service, including the Dallas
Women Lawyer’s “Louise Raggio Award” for contributions
to women and proficiency in law.
Tiffinni A. Young
Tiffinni A. Young is the eldest daughter
born to Gerald and Paula Young of Dallas, Texas. She matriculated
through the Dallas Independent School District and realizing early
on in life her strong calling for the area of the law she began
her high school studies at the Government, Law and Law Enforcement
Magnet. After a year and a half of studying at the Law Magnet,
she gained a new love in the area of radio/television, going on
to graduate from the acclaimed Lincoln Humanities and Communications
Magnet High School. Ms. Young began working at the number one
radio station in Dallas/ Ft. Worth, K104/KKDA-FM, her sophomore
year of high school and continued working there throughout college.
She continued her studies of higher education attaining her Bachelors
degree in Political Science from Florida A & M University
in Tallahassee, Florida. During her tenure at Florida A &
M, she touched many lives through her participation in the National
Council of Negro Women, Bethel Baptist Collegiate Ministry, Presidential
Scholars Association and as head coach of the Tallahassee YMCA
cheerleading program. She also left her mark on the North Florida
community through her service as a local on air personality and
assistant program director of WANM-FM.
Upon completing her undergraduate studies, she relocated back
to Dallas, Texas to gain experience in the legal field and the
ever changing and dynamic world of politics. Ms. Young worked
as a paralegal and in many capacities on political campaigns ranging
from volunteer coordinator to campaign manager. This desire to
be involved in both the legal field and political arena, led her
to a current pursuit of a Doctor of Jurisprudence at the University
of Arkansas Leflar Law Center in Fayetteville, Arkansas. While
at the University of Arkansas-Fayetteville, she was actively involved
in the Black Law Students Association while serving on the Community
Service Committee and The Christian Legal Society, again serving
on the Community Service Committee.
She has served as the Vice-President of the Media, Entertainment
and Sports Law Association. She was recently bestowed the grand
honor of being named by the American Bar Association as the Lieutenant
Governor of Diversity for the 10th Circuit, comprised of law schools
in the Arkansas, Kansas and Oklahoma region. She was also a participant
in the Client Counseling Competition. She is a 2005 recipient
of the J. L. Turner Legal Association Foundation scholarship.
She has been a law clerk in Fayetteville, Arkansas for the Law
Firm Hodson, Woods & Snively.
Ms. Young is currently working as a trading analyst intern at
First American Corporation. Her life’s motto is “Finish
the journey!” She believes that it is not where you begin,
but how you end that makes the distinction in one’s life.
***
AFRICAN AMERICAN LEADERSHIP
TRAINING
INSTITUTE ***
Guest Speaker
Timothy
E. Sams
Assistant
Dean and Director of the Black Cultural Center, Swarthmore College
(Swarthmore,
Pennsylvania)
Timothy E. Sams became committed to transforming
higher education through effective leadership, at both the student
and administrative level, as a student leader at Union College
located in Schenectady, New York. He believed that through
an effective and coordinated effort between well trained student
leaders and highly trained administrators and faculty, multicultural
leadership could transform, not only the student experience, but
higher education itself. Two things have always seemed clear
to Sams 1) engaged student activism remains the
most effective catalyst for the pursuit of educational justice
and 2) the foot soldiers of change during the
1960’s and 1970’s are now the post-modernist vanguard
of today’s colleges and universities. These two givens
lead Mr. Sams to conclude that all that was needed was an administrative
and student leadership approach characterized by idealism, commitment,
excellence and a hint of audacity.
Mr. Sams graduated
with a Bachelor of Arts from Union College in 1990, where he doubled
majored in History and Sociology. He earned his Master of
Arts in Africana Studies from the State University of New York
at Albany, with a focus on Black family and community. He
spent three years learning and advancing the philosophy and strategy
of Kingian Nonviolence through his work at the New York State
Martin Luther King, Jr. Institute for Nonviolent Social Change.
Presently, he is working on his Doctorate of Philosophy
(Ph.D.) in Africology/African American Studies at Temple University.
Over the past 12 years,
Mr. Sams honed his perspective on both critical multiculturalism
and radical nonviolence. A master of the workshop and training
dynamic, and a sought after lecturer and educator, he has presented
at over 100 high schools, colleges and universities, prisons and
community organizations advancing his perspective of critical
multiculturalism, Black nationalism and the imperative of progressive
student leadership. Sams remains committed to empowering students
and administrators with the requisite knowledge, skills and audacity
for effective and measurable change making.
Timothy has been the Assistant Dean of the College
and Director of the Black Cultural Center at Swarthmore College
since 1997. His interests include camping, home-making,
rearing his three year old Nyla Alise, and his two month old Ajani
Massai, and playing basketball. A critical multiculturalist,
radical nonviolent practitioner, and Afrocentrist, Dean Sams continues
his work moving across the country - moving people to have the
audacity to change to world.
***
IMAGE ENHANCEMENT & SELF-MARKETING
INSTITUTE
***
Guest Speaker
April
Yvonne Garrett, M.A., M.T.S.
President
and CEO, April & Associates
Chair,
Civic Frame
(Baltimore,
Maryland)
April Yvonne Garrett is a thoughtful
organic intellectual, burgeoning cultural critic, activist, and
strategist. Earning degrees in Islamic studies from Kenyon
College in 1992, Higher and Adult Education from Teachers College
Columbia University in 1993, and African American Religious History
from Harvard Divinity School in 1997, provided her with a broad
platform of knowledge to apply in her work. April has served
as the Resident Program Assistant of the Intercultural Resource
Center at Columbia University from 1992 until 1993, as Director
of New Student Orientation and Assistant Director of Student Activities
at Emory University from 1993 until 1995, and from 1997 until
1999 as the Fellows Officer of the W.E.B. DuBois Institute for
African and African American Research, a Freshman Proctor for
the Freshmen Dean's Office, as the Visiting Scholars Coordinator
for the Institute on the Arts and Civic Dialogue of the W.E.B.
Du Bois Institute and the American Repertory Theatre, and as a
Teaching Fellow in the Department of African and African American
Studies at Harvard University. In 2000, she briefly joined
the senior staff of the national NAACP as the first Director of
Administration and Strategic Planning
She has provided administrative,
editorial, and research assistance on such notable publications
as the Encarta Africana, The Harvard Guide to African American
History, Transition Magazine, and the Microsoft/Black Entertainment
Television 19th century online African American art exhibit. April was also the special guest editor of the first Afro
Chronicles of the Afro-American Newspapers Commemorative
Edition of the NAACP 91st Annual Convention, which earned
her the National Newspapers Publishers Association's Leon H. Washington
Award for Best Special Edition in 2001. She is a contributing
essayist in the anthology, Naked: Black Women Bare All About
Skin, Hair, Hips, Lips & Other Parts, edited by Ayana
Byrd and Akiba Solomon and is the guest editor for a year-long
series on race and ethnicity entitled, “DiverCity,” that will appear in Baltimore Magazine in 2006. Currently, April
is working on her first book, Letters Along the Lineage: An
Illumination of Life Lessons Through Intimate Letters.
Recently, The Daily Record named her
one of Maryland’s Top 100 Women for 2005. With her
symbiotic blend of common sense and powerful intellect, she has
inspired people ranging from college professors and students,
politicians and activists to star athletes and entertainers who
are among the clients she guides in making alignments with the
means to expand, preserve, and better utilize their talents and
resources in all of their endeavors.
Armed with those qualities, April serves as the
President and CEO of April & Associates, a private consulting
firm that specializes in intellectual consulting, strategic planning,
political consulting and print and web design, and is the founder
and executive director of Civic Frame, Inc., a 501©3 nonprofit
organization that uses media arts and intellectual work to stimulate
conversation, community, and action among filmmakers, scholars,
decision makers, activists, and the general public about social
issues such as affirmative action, the death penalty, child protective
services, domestic violence, immigration, offender reentry, poverty,
and mental health.
With the same enthusiasm and drive that she applies
to her lifework, April shares her gift of inspiring others through
speaking. Drawing on the trials she faced establishing herself
in the educational, non-profit, and freelance consulting arenas,
she created, Flourish™, an eight-step personal strategic
plan through which she shares the motivational role that obstacles
played in her life and how she managed to stay in alignment with
her own personal values. As an impassioned voice on the role of
women in society, contemporary religious movements, civil rights
activism, personal empowerment and altruism, April discusses balancing
all aspects of one's life with one's personal beliefs.
*** PRE-LAW ADMISSIONS ADVISEMENT
INSTITUTE ***
Guest Speaker
Lewis
Hutchison, J.D.
Director
of Admissions, Sandra Day O'Connor School of Law Arizona State
University (Tempe, Arizona)
Lewis Hutchison holds
a Bachelor of Accountancy from New Mexico State University and
earned his Doctorate of Jurisprudence from the University of Texas
at Austin School of Law in Austin, Texas.
He will soon serve as the Director
of Admissions at the Sandra Day O'Connor School of Law at Arizona
State University. Prior to accepting this position, Mr.
Hutchison has held the position of Director of Admissions at the
University of Florida Levin College of Law since 2002.
Previous admissions experience also
includes serving as the Chair of the Student Recruitment and Orientation
Committee, Office Coordinator and member of the Admissions Committee
at the University of Texas School of Law.
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