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NEWS RELEASEThe National
Center for State Courts |
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Contact: Theodore Curry Inducted
into Burger Society
Williamsburg, VA (Nov. 5, 2002) – The National Center for State Courts recently inducted Theodore H. Curry II, a professor at Michigan State University, into the Warren E. Burger Society. The Burger Society honors individuals who have demonstrated the highest commitment to improving the administration of justice through extraordinary contributions of service and support to the National Center for State Courts. Chief Justice of the United States William H. Rehnquist and Chief Judge Judith S. Kaye of New York Unified Courts, chair of The National Center’s Board of Directors and president of the Conference of Chief Justices, recently inducted Mr. Curry and other new members into the Burger Society at a luncheon in Washington, D.C. Mr. Curry, who serves as director of Michigan State’s graduate school of Labor and Industrial Relations, has been a dedicated supporter and of The National Center for years. He regularly serves as a seminar leader for management development program for the Center’s Institute for Court Management. Professor Curry also is a member of the ICM Advisory Committee. Inductees to the society are selected by a committee, which is chaired by Texas attorney Charles M. Noteboom who commissioned the original portrait of Chief Justice Burger, which hangs in The National Center’s headquarters. Each new society member receives a limited edition print of the portrait, which is signed and numbered by the artist Fran Di Giacomo. Chief Justice Burger’s children own the first two prints and Chief Justice Rehnquist owns the last print, numbered 1986, the year Chief Justice Burger retired and Chief Justice Rehnquist took office. The National Center for State Courts, founded by Chief Justice of the United States Warren Burger in 1971, is dedicated to improving the administration of justice and provides leadership, research, technology, education and training to the state courts. The National Center also has taken the lead on several key issues facing the justice system. For example, it established the Civil Justice Reform Initiative, which is a multi-year project that is examining the most efficient practices in civil case management and how complex litigation procedures can be improved through the use of technology. Other national initiatives driven by The National Center include improving public trust and confidence in the courts, pro se litigation and the judicial selection process. The National Center carries out its mission through its offices in Williamsburg, Washington, D.C. and Denver, Colo., ### |
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