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Chief Judge Diane P. Wood to Receive Peck Senior Medal

Wabash College President Gregory Hess announced that Chief Judge Diane P. Wood, United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, is the 2017 recipient of the David W. Peck Senior Medal for Eminence in the Law.

Wood will be on campus to deliver a lecture – “Public Service and Private Initiative: An American Tradition” – at 5 p.m. on Monday, April 24, in Baxter Hall room 101, and will receive the Senior Peck Medal thereafter at the 44th Annual Peck Dinner.

“Chief Judge Diane Wood has been a true trailblazer at every juncture of her career, and she is one of the most respected judges in the country,” Hess said. “She is a brilliant scholar who listens carefully to all sides before forming her opinions. She is a model of critical thinking and civil discourse, and I am pleased that our students will have the opportunity to learn from her.”

Chief Judge Diane P. Wood.Twice on the shortlist for the U.S. Supreme Court, her breadth of experience includes teaching international trade, anti-trust and technology transfer disputes at the University of Chicago Law School. Further, Mother Jones has described her as a “rockstar of the written word” for wide-ranging scholarship including “The Rule of Law in Times of Stress,” “Anti-Trust at the Global Level,” and “Sex Discrimination in Life and Law.”

A graduate of the University of Texas (B.A. 1971/J.D. 1975), she began her legal career clerking for Judge Irving L. Goldberg of the Fifth Circuit and for Justice Harry Blackmun, making her one of the first female law clerks on the U.S. Supreme Court.

She worked briefly at the U.S. State Department, focusing on international investment, antitrust, and transfer of technology issues, before going into private practice. In 1980-81, Wood taught at the Georgetown University Law Center before joining the faculty at the University of Chicago Law School in 1981, serving as associate dean from 1989-92. Prior to becoming a judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit in 1995, Judge Wood was the Harold J. and Marion F. Green Professor of International Legal Studies.

“Chief Judge Wood epitomizes the reason lawyers value the privilege of arguing their cases in front of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit,” said Josh Minkler ’85, the United States Attorney in the Southern District of Indiana. “She critically examines your case in tough but fair manner requiring a well written appellate brief and thorough preparation for oral argument. Judge Wood makes you a better lawyer. When a judgment on a case prosecuted by our office is affirmed by that court, we know we have done our job well. Judge Wood honors Wabash College by joining other outstanding recipients of the Peck Medal.”

Wabash alumnus John Collett ’24 established the Peck Medal to honor his fraternity brother Judge David W. Peck ’22, who practiced law for many years at Sullivan & Cromwell in New York City and also served as presiding justice of the courts in Manhattan and the Bronx.

For over four decades, the Peck Dinner has provided a unique opportunity for Wabash students interested in the law to meet lawyer alumni and to benefit from the wisdom of the Senior Peck Medal recipient. The event also recognizes student Prelaw award winners.

 

Senior Peck Medal Recipients

1974       Cleon H. Foust ‘28

1975       Bethuel M. Webster

1976       William D. Ruckelshaus

1977       Whitney N. Seymour

1978       Harold A. Stevens

1979       Victor G. Rosenblum

1980       Paul H. Buchanan, Jr.

1981       Byron Hollett ‘36

1982       Richard D. Cudahy

1983       Thomas M. Lofton

1984       William F. Harvey

1985       William I. Garrard ‘54

1986       Richard O. Ristine ‘41

1987       Charles E. Rice

1988       Thomas K. Milligan ‘63

1989       Sara Evans Barker

1990       James E. Bond, Jr. ‘43

1991       Bruce A. Polizotto ‘63

1992       Pasco Bowman III

1993       Roger D. Billings, Jr. ‘59

1994       David N. Shane ‘70

1995       Richard Epstein

1996       Vincent F. Grogg ‘55

1997       Frank M. Rasmussen ‘56

1998       Timothy A. Guiden ‘82

1999       Robert George

2000       Dock McDowell, Jr. ‘72

2001       Richard Neely

2002       Randall T. Shepard

2003       Edward B. McLean

2004       David E. Kendall ‘66

2005       Theodore R. Boehm

2006       John T. Noonan, Jr.

2007       Geoffrey R. Stone

2008       Stephen L. Carter

2009       Morris Dees

2010       John R. Crook ‘69

2011       Bryan A. Stevenson

2012       William Neukom

2013       David Hamilton

2014       Thomas B. Griffith

2015       John Daniel Tinder

2016       Ken Falk

2017       Diane P. Wood

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