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TRENTON P. BAUSCH, Omaha, Nebraska, has traveled to all fifty states with his wife and four children. He started writing songs on an acoustic guitar at age fourteen and has recorded two solo E.P.s and two full-length studio albums with his band, available on all music streaming services. [Well, Trenton says the music is available but Google doesn’t recognize any- thing with “Bausch and music,” and we weren’t curious enough to ask Trenton to tell us the name of the band . . . ]
STEPHANIE BLOOMFIELD, Tacoma, Washington, is conversant if not fluent in Mandarin, Can- tonese and Shanghainese, which came in handy when she was hired by the family of a Taiwanese woman whose former husband claimed her estate despite a handwritten will in Mandarin that dis- inherited him. Stephanie managed to get the will admitted to probate in King County Washington by pulling a Katakana out of a bag.
AUDREY BOCTOR, Montreal, Quebec, began her legal career as a law clerk to Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin of the Supreme Court of Canada, and is undoubtedly the only Canadian Fellow born in Huntsville, Alabama [For that matter, there are only four Fellows currently living in Huntsville, and we have no idea whether any of them were born there. And we have no idea what Audrey’s family was doing fifty years or so ago in Huntsville, which was then known as the Watercress Capitol of the World, until Wernher von Braun moved his rocket scientists there . . . ]
HEATHER LAMMERS BOGARD, Spearfish, South Dakota, is a third-generation lawyer though the first female. She is the current President of the State Bar of South Dakota. She describes herself as the only trial lawyer who doesn’t like to hear herself talk. She loves being outside and has participated in sprint triathlons, half marathons, gravel bike races and fifty-mile mountain bike races, a sport she first took up in her fifties.
YASMIN CADER, Los Angeles, California, is a Deputy Legal Director at the ACLU and the Director of the Trone Center for Justice and Equality, which encompasses the National Prison Project, the Criminal Law Reform Project, the Racial Justice Program, the Capital Punishment Project, as well as the John Adams project. Yasmin is married to Kevin Frazier, host of Enter- tainment Tonight.
JOSEPH CALEB, Washington, D.C., may not know it yet, but the wife of the Editor of the Journal is determined to fix him up with the daughter of a future President of the College.
ROBIN FRAZER CLARK, Atlanta, Georgia, spent six years working to get a Presidential Pardon for a client who was tried and convicted of being gay, when it was illegal to serve in the military if you were gay. As President of the Georgia Bar, Robin created a Suicide Prevention Program, “How To Save a Life” and a video about where to get help, which is shown before every Georgia CLE seminar. As a result, more than 35,000 lawyers have seen the video, which has undoubtedly saved lives.
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