Admitted
1967, U.S. District Court, Western District of Pennsylvania; 1968, Pennsylvania and U.S. District Court, Western District of Pennsylvania; 1973, U.S. District Court, Northern District of Ohio; 1974, U.S. District Court, Eastern District of Pennsylvania; 1
Law School
Yale University, LL.B., 1967
Law School Graduation Year
1967
College
Yale University, B.A., magna cum laude, 1964; Duquesne University
Biographical
Phi Beta Kappa. Author: 'Stool Pigeon' Canons: A Comment on Certain Sections of Canons 28 and 29 of the ABA Code of Ethics, 41 Conn. B.J. 339 (1967); In Defense of Industrial Pluralism, 87 Durham Law Review 783 (1983); The Constant Factor: Judicial Review of the Fact Finding Process in the Circuit Courts of Appeals, 12 Duquesne Law Review 223 (1973); The Forgotten Man on the Welfare Roll: A Study of Public Subsidies for Strikers, Washington Law Quarterly 469 (1973); Robbing Peter to Pay Paul: Providing Seniority for Victims of Past Discrimination, 10 Cumberland Law Review 47 (1979); Wicker at Attica (A Review of A Time To Die), 85 Yale Law Journal 150 (1975); Union Power and the Public Interest, 13 Duquesne Law Review 661 (1975); The Mathematics of Liberalism: The Zero Sum Society, University of Buffalo Law Review, April 1982; Rule 65 and Judicial Abuse of Power: A Modest Proposal for Reform, 19 Am. J. Trial Advoc. 415 (1995). Co-Author with Mark J. Florshein: The Treatment of Refusals to Cross Picket Lines: 'By-Paths and Indirect, Crookt Ways', 55 Cornell Law Review 940 (1970). Co-Author: with W. L. White, Jr., OSHA Comes of Age: The Law of Work Place Environment, 28 Business Lawyer 1309 (1973); with M. Florsheim, Treatment of Refusals to Cross Picket Lines: 'By-paths and Indirect, Crookt Ways,' 55 Corn. L. Rev. 940 (1970). Adjunct Professor, Duquesne University, 1972-1978. Commercial and Employment Arbitrator, American Arbitration Association.