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ABI's Young and New Members Committee, which encourages active involvement of young bankruptcy
practitioners, is co-chaired by <b>Brian Shaw, Melissa Kibler Knoll</b> and <b>Douglas E. Deutsch.</b>

</p><p>Brian Shaw is a member of the Business Insolvency Group at Shaw Gussis Fishman Glantz Wolfson &amp; Towbin
LLC in Chicago. He represents chapter 11 debtors, chapter 7 and 11 trustees, creditors' committees, assignees,
landlords, labor organizations, secured and unsecured creditors. He has litigated various creditors' rights causes of
action, including ones under state and federal fraudulent conveyance law and the Illinois Revised Uniform Limited
Partnership Act. He also has participated in the liquidation of many bankruptcy estates, encompassing both real and
personal property. Mr. Shaw joined ABI in 1998 and also is a member of the Chicago and Illinois State Bar
Associations. He served a three-year term on the University of Illinois College of Law Recent Alumni Advisory
Board from 1998-2000. Mr. Shaw has been published numerous times in a wide variety of publications, including
<i>The Bankruptcy Strategist</i> and <i>Norton Bankruptcy Law Advisor.</i> He was a presenter for "Nuts &amp; Bolts of Effective
Bankruptcy Trial Practice" at the 2003 Annual Spring Meeting and faculty member of the 2003 Litigation Skills
Symposium, and currently serves as vice-chair of ABI's Chicago Consumer Consumer Bankruptcy Conference,
scheduled for July 25, 2004 (<i>see</i> p. 61).

</p><p>Melissa Kibler Knoll provides accounting and financial advisory services in a variety of industries to debtors,
secured lenders, unsecured creditors and other parties-in-interest in turnarounds, restructurings, bankruptcies and
related litigation at KPMGLLPin Chicago. Her experience includes out-of-court workouts, formal proceedings under
chapter 11 or chapter 7, receiverships/trusteeships and other related forums. Ms. Knoll recently led engagement
teams in large, complex restructurings including Kmart Corp., Bethlehem Steel Corp., The Warnaco Group,
Assisted Living Concepts and The Singer Co., as well as companies involved in out-of-court restructurings in the
automotive repair/distribution, health care, non-food distribution and other industries. Ms. Knoll joined KPMG in
June 1999 and is currently partner-in-charge of its Midwestern Region Corporate Recovery Practice. She became a
Certified Public Accountant in 1992 and is also a Certified Turnaround Professional. She is a former board member
and treasurer of the Turnaround Management Association's Northwest Chapter. Ms. Knoll is a newly elected
member of the ABI Board of Directors (<i>see</i> p. 69) and had a leading role in the development of the Fundamentals
educational programs.

</p><p>Douglas E. Deutsch is an associate in the New York office of Chadbourne &amp; Parke LLP. A former editor-in-chief of
the <i>ABI Law Review,</i> he clerked for Hon. <b>Leif M. Clark</b> (W.D. Tex.) before joining Sheinfeld, Maley &amp; Kay in the
firm's Dallas office, where he worked on the Dow Corning bankruptcy. In 2000, he returned to St. John's
University for his LL.M. and was the first recipient of the ABI scholarship in the St. John's University LL.M.
program. His thesis, "Ensuring Proper Bankruptcy Solicitation: Evaluating Bankruptcy Law, the First Amendment,
The Code of Ethics and Securities Law in Bankruptcy Solicitation Cases," was published in the Spring 2003 <i>ABI
Law Review.</i> He is admitted to practice in both Texas and New York, and is a member of ABI's Business
Reorganization, Law School and Mass Torts Committees.

</p><p>The committee anticipates collaborating with other committees in the future to provide YNMC members with
substantive programming.

</p><h3>More Members in the News</h3>

<p><b>Thomas W. Waldrep Jr.,</b> a partner in the law firm of Bell Davis &amp; Pitt in Winston-Salem, N.C., was selected to
fill a bankruptcy judgeship in the bankruptcy court for the Middle District of North Carolina in Greensboro.

</p><p>Goulston &amp; Storrs, Boston, announced that <b>Christine D. Lynch</b> has been elected a director of the firm. Ms. Lynch
concentrates on bankruptcy and creditors' rights matters. She has extensive experience in representing creditors'
committees, unsecured and secured creditors and debtors in complex chapter 11 cases, as well as representing buyers
of assets out of bankruptcy. Ms. Lynch is co-chair of the Practice &amp; Procedure Committee of the Boston Bar
Association's Bankruptcy Law Section and is a member of the Attorney Advisory Committee of the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court for the District of Massachusetts. She is admitted to the Bar in New York and Massachusetts.

</p><p>Pathway Strategic Partners LLC, a corporate recovery consulting firm and subsidiary of Buxbaum Group,
announced it has been approved by the bankruptcy court to oversee the restructuring of manufacturer Waterman
Industries, which has been operating under chapter 11 protection since earlier this year. <b>Kenneth G. Leddon,</b> a
principal of Pathway, will serve as Chief Restructuring Officer of Exeter, Calif.-based Waterman.

</p><p>McCarter &amp; English LLP has named <b>William F. Taylor Jr.</b> a partner in its Wilmington, Del., office. Formerly a
special counsel, Mr. Taylor represents a variety of individuals and organizations in litigation-related matters
including bankruptcy, corporate and general litigation. He represents such parties as DIPs, secured and unsecured
creditors' committees, liquidating trustees, banks and landlords in Delaware's various state courts. Mr. Taylor is
admitted to practice in Delaware and Pennsylvania and before the U.S. District Court for the District of Delaware
and the U.S. Third Circuit Court of Appeals.

</p><p>Lindquist &amp; Vennum PLLP announced that <b>George H. Singer,</b> a partner in the firm's Minneapolis office, has been
selected as the firm's recipient of the Leonard E. Lindquist Pro Bono Award. The award, named after the firm's
91-year-old co-founder, is presented annually to the attorney who exemplifies the firm's pro bono efforts. Mr.
Singer practices in the areas of corporate and commercial law, including bankruptcy and reorganizations. A
considerable part of his pro bono legal services is in the bankruptcy and workout arena.

</p><p>The National Bar Association Bankruptcy Law Section honored U.S. Bankruptcy Judge <b>Cornelius Blackshear</b> during a special Gala Awards Dinner and Ceremony on May 27 at New York City's Marriott Marquis. Judge
Blackshear was sworn in as a U.S. Bankruptcy Judge for the Southern District of New York in November 1985 after
serving as the U.S. Trustee for the Southern District of New York, a position to which he was appointed in 1983 by
Attorney General William French Smith. ABI, the National Conference of Bankruptcy Judges and the American
College of Bankruptcy were among the organizations that made special presentations at the dinner.

</p><p><b>Lawrence R. Ahern III,</b> the member in charge in the Nashville, Tenn., office of Greenebaum Doll &amp; McDonald
PLLC, was recently appointed to the Advisory Board of the Bankruptcy LL.M. program at St. John's University
School of Law. Mr. Ahern is board certified in business bankruptcy by the American Board of Certification, and his
practice includes bankruptcy reorganization and commercial transactions. He has served as adjunct professor of law
at Vanderbilt University since 1998, teaching secured transactions, and in the fall semester of 2002 he taught
full-time at the Cumberland School of Law at Samford University in Birmingham. On the St. John's Advisory
Board, Mr. Ahern will be involved with curriculum, the <i>ABI Law Review</i> (which St. John's publishes twice a year)
and the Duberstein Bankruptcy Moot Court Competition, a national program sponsored annually by St. John's and
ABI.

</p><p><b>Joel L. Tabas</b> of Tabas, Freedman, Soloff &amp; Miller P.A. in Miami recently participated in a panel at the
University of Rochester Simon Graduate School of Business titled, "Preserving Valve in Chapter 11: A
Roundtable Discussion of the Bankruptcy Process."

</p><p>Wilmer Cutler Pickering and Hale &amp; Dorr announced they have agreed to combine to create a firm of more than
1,000 attorneys, making the new firm the 11th largest in the United States. ABI Director <b>William J. Perlstein,</b>
chairman of Washington, D.C.-based Wilmer Cutler, said that the purpose of the merger is to combine Wilmer
Cutler's expertise in antitrust and securities matters with Boston-based Hale &amp; Dorr's expertise in intellectual
property law.

</p><p><b>Michael McGrath,</b> chairman of the Bankruptcy Section of Mesch, Clark &amp; Rothschild in Tucson, Ariz., was
inducted into the 15th Class of Fellows of the American College of Bankruptcy. Mr. McGrath serves as a lawyer
delegate to the Ninth Circuit Judicial Conference and has served on the Bankruptcy Rules Committee for the
District of Arizona, as well as the Merit Selection Committee for the district's bankruptcy judges and the
Bankruptcy Advisory Commission for the certification of bankruptcy specialists. He has been listed in <i>The Best
Lawyers in America</i> since 1991.

</p><p>The international law firm of Greenberg Traurig LLP announced that <b>Clifton Jessup Jr.</b> and <b>Bruce White</b> joined the firm's new Dallas office as shareholders, and <b>William Medford</b> joined as an
associate. All are former attorneys of the Dallas office of Patton Boggs LLP. Mr. Jessup will head Greenberg
Traurig's eight-member Dallas reorganization, bankruptcy and restructuring group, which includes <b>Michelle A.
Mendez,</b> a prominent Dallas bankruptcy attorney recently named to the planning committee for the State Bar of
Texas Bankruptcy Section Conference. Mr. Jessup was recently recognized as one of the top African-American
lawyers in the nation by <i>Black Enterprise Magazine</i> and was also named as one of the "Texas Super Lawyers 2003"
by <i>Texas Monthly.</i> He has more than 26 years of experience in bankruptcy, creditors' rights and business
reorganization, representing secured and unsecured creditors, committees, equity-holders, debtors and trustees in
federal bankruptcy cases in more than 37 states. Mr. White has 15 years of experience in all aspects of bankruptcy,
corporate reorganization and creditors' rights. He has considerable experience in representing boards of directors of
publicly traded companies in reorganizations and in bankruptcy matters. Mr. Medford has eight years of experience
in bankruptcy, creditors' rights and business reorganization. He has represented debtors, examiners, secured
creditors, unsecured creditors, committees and trustees, as well as post-confirmation liquidation trustees in
bankruptcy cases in more than 30 states. Mr. White and Mr. Medford are long-time contributing editors to the <i>ABI
Journal</i>'s "Practice &amp; Procedure" column (<i>see</i> p. 22).

</p><p><b>Leslie Ann Berkoff,</b> a partner at Garden City, N.Y.-based Moritt Hock Hamroff &amp; Horowitz LLP, has been
selected as one of "Long Island's Top 50 Women" by the business publication <i>Long Island Business News.</i> She has
been practicing law for 14 years, concentrating in bankruptcy and related litigation. Ms. Berkoff is chair of the
Bankruptcy Committee for the Nassau County Bar Association, a founding member of the Electronic Filing
Committee and Local Rules Committee for the Eastern District of New York Bankruptcy Court, and the vice chair
of the International Women's Insolvency and Restructuring Confederation (2002-04).

</p><p><b>Sheila T. Smith,</b> a principal in Deloitte &amp; Touche's Boston Reorganization Services Group, was inducted as a
fellow in the American College of Bankruptcy. She holds an M.B.A. from Boston University and has been an
ABImember since 1985.

</p><p>Poyner &amp; Spruill LLP announced that <b>David M. Warren</b> of the firm's Rocky Mount, N.C., office was recertified
in business and consumer bankruptcy law by the American Board of Certification. He was initially certified in
1993. Mr. Warren serves on the Panel of Chapter 7 Bankruptcy Trustees and as chairman of the Local Rules
Committee for the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina. In addition, Mr. Warren is
certified in business and consumer bankruptcy law by the North Carolina State Bar Board of Legal Specialization.

</p><p>Citigate, an international business intelligence, corporate investigations, business controls and security consulting
firm, announced the promotion of <b>Randall D. Wilson</b> to managing director. Mr. Wilson, based in Chicago, heads
the firm's Corporate Recovery Group nationally. He has more than 14 years of bankruptcy and restructuring
experience, serving as a financial advisor and consultant to a wide variety of distressed companies. He also has
worked extensively in chapter 11 proceedings as well as out-of-court cases. He became a Certified Public Accountant
in 1991 and earned his J.D. at the Chicago-Kent College of Law in 1999.

</p>

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