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31 Biotechnology L. Rep. 1 (2012)

handle is hein.journals/bothnl31 and id is 1 raw text is: Welcome to Our 30th Anniversary Issue
and Enhanced Editorial Team
By GERRY J. ELMAN
Editor-in-Chief, Biotechnology Law Report

This issue of Biotechnology Law Report marks our
30th anniversary, having commenced publication at the
beginning of 1982, the year after Mary Ann Liebert
founded her flagship publication Genetic Engineering
News (GEN).1 Later in this issue, you may read my
remembrances.
I am now delighted to announce the appointment of
Christopher M. Holman as the new Executive Editor
of BLR. Chris will be ably assisted by attorney Steven
J. Zweig in the newly created role of Consulting
Editor, and by the continuing efforts of Judith Gunn
Bronson as Managing Editor and the many members
of the publication staff at Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.
Chris is a well-known expert and teacher in biotech-
nology law. He has been an associate professor at the
University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Law
since 2005. His primary research focus lies at the inter-
section of intellectual property and biotechnology, and
he has taught classes in patent law; intellectual property;
food, drug, and biotechnology law; antitrust and com-
petition law; drug and medical technology torts; and
property. Thus, he is supremely qualified to follow
in the footsteps of our former Executive Editor, Bob
Bohrer, of the California Western School of Law.
Prior to becoming a law professor, Professor Holman
served as vice-president of intellectual property and pat-
ent counsel at several Silicon Valley biotechnology com-
panies and worked as an associate at a major intellectual
property law firm. He was also a tenure-track chemistry
professor in the California State University system.
A native of California, Professor Holman received his
Ph.D. in biochemistry and molecular biology from the
University of California at Davis and engaged in post-
doctoral drug discovery research at Roche Biosciences
in Palo Alto, Calif. He then attended law school at UC
Berkeley's Boalt Hall, during which time, he was an as-
sociate editor for the Berkeley Technology Law Journal
and served as a full-time judicial extern in federal court
in the Northern District of California.
I am also delighted to announce the following addi-
tions to our distinguished Editorial Board:
A. Christal Sheppard has been an assistant profes-
sor at the University of Nebraska College of Law in

Lincoln since last Spring, after seven cumulative years
as a Counsel to the United States Congress where she
focused on intellectual property, science, and competition
law. She was instrumental in every bill affecting these
matters during her tenure and led many efforts, particular-
ly in the areas of patent reform and the operation and
funding of the United States Patent and Trademark
Office. Professor Sheppard earned M.S. and Ph.D. de-
grees in Cellular and Molecular Biology from the Univer-
sity of Michigan. After receiving a J.D. from Cornell
University Law School and interning with Judge Randall
Rader at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
(CAFC) and with the Executive Office of the President's
Office of Science and Technology Policy, she practiced at
the law firm of Foley & Lardner and then served in the
Office of the General Counsel of the United States Inter-
national Trade Commission, working on Section 337
matters and arguing before the CAFC.
Shine Tu is an associate professor at the West Vir-
ginia University College of Law in Morgantown. He
has worked as a research assistant for Judge Richard
A. Posner of the United States Court of Appeals for
the Seventh Circuit. He was a postdoctoral fellow at
the La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology
and studied at the College of Veterinary Medicine at
Cornell University. Professor Tu received his law de-
gree, with honors, from the University of Chicago
Law School. He received his Ph.D. from Cornell Uni-
versity in pharmacology and cancer cell biology. He
also had earned bachelor's degrees in both chemistry
and microbiology from the University of Florida.
He, too, has practiced with Foley & Lardner.
F. Scott Kieff is a professor at The George Wash-
ington University Law School and a senior fellow at
Stanford University's Hoover Institution, where he
directs the Project on Commercializing Innovation.
He has served as law clerk to Judge Giles Sutherland
Rich of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal

'Now Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News. (www
.genengnews.com).

1

31 Biotechnology Law Report 1
Number 1, 2012
© Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.
DOI: 10.1089/bir.2012.9945

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