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14 N.H. L. Wkly. 1 (1987-1988)

handle is hein.barjournals/nhlw0014 and id is 1 raw text is: -. 14 Now. 1 , Page.1                                                          Ju.y.1, 1987

Trial Advocacy CLE Offers Unique Hon. Paul Lawrence
Opportunity To Recent Admittees Elected To Head
District Court Judges

As it has done in the
preceding seven years,
the New Hampshire
Bar Association again
this summer will offer
an intensive Trial Ad-
vocacy CLE geared
specifically for recent
admittees. Designed
as a hands on, expe- N
riential learning ven-
ture, the program will
provide 16 participants
with a unique oppor-
tunity to interact with
approximately 40 expe-
rienced trial judges
and attorneys who make
up the 1987 Trial Ad-

vocacy teaching team.
Chaired this year by  Mark A. Larson
Marilyn B. McNamara and Mark A. Larsen
of McNamara, Larsen and Schuster in
Lebanon, the five-day program is scheduled
for August 3, 4, 10, 11 and 15.- After four full
days of performing the various roles of trial
counsel and receiving individualized critique
on their performance, students will spend
the fifth day in the full trial of.a case. At the
conclusion of the trial, students also will

have the opportunity, via videotape, to view
the.jury's deliberations and reactions to
their performance as trial counsel
It's a great opportunity, said 1986 Trial
Advocacy Program participant Ruth Green-
berg of the New Hampshire Public Defender
Program in Manchester. It was a pleasure
It's an excellent program. TI,&
individual attention from a large
number of experienced faculty
and the videotaped critiques
were superb tools for improving
advocacy skills.
- James AIlmendinger
1986 Trial Advocacy
Program participant
to work in front of and with outstanding
members of the Bench and Bar. Greenburg
also noted that the video critiques by
experienced practitioners were particularly
helpful.
The Trial Advocacy Program, which is
modeled after the teaching program of the
national Institute for Trial Advocacy
Trial Ad                        page 2

-  -    -  -                            I

Paul H. Lawre-ce
Goffstown District Court Special Justice
Paul H. Lawrence was installed as President
of the New Hampshire District and
Municipal Court Judges Association at the
group's Annual Meeting June 17 in North
Conway. The Association voted at the
meeting to create a two-year term for the
President, and so Lawrence will serve as the
Association's President for the nexnt two
years.
Also elected at the Judges Association's
Annual Meeting was New London District
Court Justice F. Graham McSwiney as
President-Elect. Auburn District Court
Justice John A. Korbey was elected to his
second term as Treasurer and Lancaster
District Court Judge Paul F. Donovan was

Lawrence

page 4

John H. Sanders

Concord attorney John H. Sanders died
June 14 at Concord Hospital. Before his
retirement in 1983, he was a practicing at-
torney with the law firm of Upton, Sanders &
Smith for fifty years.
A lifetime resident of Concord, he was a
1926 graduate of Concord High School. A
1930 graduate of Dartmouth College, Sanders
earned a law degree from Harvard Law School
in 1933 and was admitted to the New Hamp-
shire Bar that same year. He was honored in
January, 1983 for his fifty years of distin-
guished service as a New Hampshire lawyer.
Described as a lawyer's lawyer by his
partner Richard F. Upton, Sanders was hailed
as one of New Hampshire's most abl6 trial
lawyers, noted for his knowledge of the law of
evidence. As Upton put it, most judges felt
when John objected on an evidentiary matter

Charles J. Hepburn, Jr.
Law Weekly recently learned that attorney
Charles J. Hepburn, Jr. died at his Sugar
Hill home January 18 after a long illness. Up
until the time of his death, the 77-year-old
had been a practicing attorney with the
Bruckner   Professional  Corporation  of
Woodsville.
A resident of Sugar Hill for nine years,
Hepburn previously lived in Newtown Square,
Pennsylvania where he had resided for 25
years.
A 1930 graduate of Williams College, he
earned his law degree from the University of
Pennsylvania in 1935. He was admitted to
the New Hampshire Bar in 1980, Hepburn
was honored by the New Hampshire Bar
Association in January, 1985 for his fifty
years of distinguished legal practice as a
member of the bar in Pennsylvania and New

page2  Hepburn                 Page 12

IN MEMORIAM

INSIDE
 Practical Ethics
- Outside Service
Providers        3
* Trial Advocacy CLE  5
• Word From Washington
- Forfeiture Provisions  6
* Supreme Court
Opinion Summaries  7
Proposed New Hampshire
Title Examination
Standards         Insert

Vol 14, No. 1, Page I

July 1, 1987

Sanders

S7 -A b T. C.; f 1: 77M

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