Thursday, March 28, 2024

AdvertiseDonateSubmit
NewsSportsArtsOpinionThe QuadPhotoVideoIllustrationsCartoonsGraphicsThe StackPRIMEEnterpriseInteractivesPodcastsBruinwalkClassifieds

UCLA swears in new lawyers

By Daily Bruin Staff

Dec. 7, 1994 9:00 p.m.

UCLA swears in new lawyers

By Gil Hopenstand

Daily Bruin Senior Staff

For better or worse, California will have 200 more lawyers by
nightfall.

UCLA’s School of Law will swear in its recent alumni tonight to
both state and federal bars at a Schoenberg Hall ceremony. Even
though they have passed the bar exams, the graduates only become
accredited lawyers once they have been officially sworn in.

Holding both state and federal events together is now common,
said UCLA law professor and faculty sponsor Cruz Reynoso, adding
that having a special law school ceremony is rare.

"I think it’s a very good idea. It’s a service to the students
and also it’s a more personal approach to conducting a swearing-in
ceremony," he said, contrasting the small UCLA event to the normal
occasion attended by hundreds of lawyers in Pasadena.

The new lawyers will be sworn in by judges Audrey Collins from
U.S. district court, central district of California, Alex Kazinski
from the ninth circuit court of appeals, and William Masterson from
the state court of appeals, second district.

Masterson, a UCLA undergraduate and law school alumni, said he
was delighted to be asked to attend the ceremony, only the second
private ceremony UCLA has held in as many years.

"I just leapt at the chance. It’s a real thrill for me," he
said, adding that he will speak on the "difficulties of entering
practice and the satisfaction that can be derived from being in
practice."

Collins, who graduated in 1977, will also address the UCLA
audience.

"I will deliver the message that they are at the beginning of a
wonderful journey in law. The profession is so broad and so rich
with opportunities," she said.

Christina Bold, a 1994 graduate and ceremony participant, said
she was "thrilled" to find that she had passed the bar. She also
said she is thankful for the UCLA ceremony.

"It’s really nice because on a social level, you can be there
with all your friends. It will be nice to cross that threshold with
the people I worked with and people I respect in the law school,"
Bold said. "It would be a more intimate setting with all my pals
there."

The ceremony participants are part of the 320-person graduating
class of 1994 who passed the recent bar exam. Of the 234 Bruins who
took the bar, 216, or 92 percent, passed. The percentage is the
UCLA’s highest average ever and is one of the highest in the state
this year. The graduates join this year’s record number of students
to pass the State bar.

School officials said the state average for recent years has
been about 78 percent passing the bar, adding that California has
one of the most "stringent" tests in the nation.

When told of the students’ lofty success rate, Bold responded,
"They can let everyone in as long as they let me in."

Share this story:FacebookTwitterRedditEmail
COMMENTS
Featured Classifieds
More classifieds »
Related Posts