BC Law Magazine
fall/winter 2006

>>FEATURE STORIES
Defending Moussaoui
Gerald Zerkin '76 reveals what it was like taking on a federal public defender's worst nightmare
By Chad Konecky
Payback with Interest
What the Law School is doing to cultivate lawyers in public service
By Jeri Zeder
A Woman with Altitude
Whether scaling a difficult case or climbing Mount Kilimanjaro, the intrepid Joan Lukey '74 keeps her eye on the summit
By Jane Whitehead
Where There is a Will, Is There a Way? Despite gains, the legal profession still struggles to get the "minor" out of minority
By Diane Lewis
Seventy-fifth Anniversary Celebration Events
The Law School ushers in its seventy-fifth year by honoring individuals whose careers exemplify the institution's mission
TABLE OF CONTENTSFall/Winter 2006 | Volume 15, Number 1
>>DEPARTMENTS
In LimineEditor Vicki Sanders discusses the high achievements of a number of BC Law's alumni and faculty
Behind the Columns
Dean John H. Garvey explains the importance of endowded chairs
In Brief
Campus news & events of note
Legal Currents
Trends and timely issues
Scholar's Forum
Professor Mary Bilder discusses the origins of judicial review
Faculty
Profile: George Brown
Esquire
Alumni news from around the globe
Class Notes
See what your classmates have been up to lately
In ClosingBC Law student Natalie Langlois '07 explains why legally sanctioning a pharmacist's refusal to dispense contraceptives is unacceptable