Dickran Tevrizian's distinguished career on the federal bench grew out of a USC College education.
Photo credit: Brian Morri
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Legal LeaningsGenerations of USC College graduates have found satisfaction, success in law careers.
By Pamela J. Johnson September 2006
Inside
Judge Dickran M. Tevrizian Jr.s chambers, a single brick from the
oldest public high school in Southern California held down papers on
his desk. Rescued after the 1971 Sylmar earthquake from
the rubble that was once Los Angeles High School, the old, chipped
brick represents the senior federal judges devotion and ties to the
City of Angels, where he was born and has lived his entire 66 years.
After
Tevrizian graduated from Los Angeles High School, his father a market
owner who as a teen emigrated from Armenia to L.A. offered his oldest
child some advice.
Son, you can go to any college you want, as long as its USC, Tevrizian recalled his father saying.
On
a wall, amid many framed honors and awards, Tevrizians 1962 bachelors
degree from USC College hung next to his law degree from the USC Gould
School of Law. The distinguished judge, who will retire in early 2007,
is among many USC College graduates who pursue a career in law.
Tevrizian
majored in finance and accounting, graduating cum laude before
attending law school. He comes from a family of Trojans. His brother
and two sisters, as well as an uncle and cousin, are all USC graduates.
His wife, Geraldine, whom he met at age 16 during an Armenian community
church picnic, is also a Trojan.
My dad owned a market
right on Vermont [Avenue], in the West Adams district, close to the USC
campus, said Tevrizian, seated in his chambers at the Roybal Federal
Building in downtown L.A. So SC was always drilled into my head.
The
first Armenian-American appointed to the U.S. federal bench, Tevrizian
helped to create the Colleges USC Institute of Armenian Studies, which
honored him in a banquet last year.
In addition to his contributions to the institute, he is establishing a
scholarship for inner-city and minority youths wishing to attend USC
law school.
I think everybody has an obligation to give back to
their university, especially if youve been somewhat successful, he
said. So, now its payback time.
His success was reflected in
the framed photos scattered around his chambers. There were photos of
him shaking hands with presidents, including Ronald Reagan, who as a
governor appointed him to the Los Angeles Municipal Court in 1972. At
31, Tevrizian was one of the youngest persons ever appointed to the
judiciary. In 1989, President Reagan appointed him to federal court.
Tevrizian
recalled when a young Reagan frequented his fathers market -- where
Tevrizian began working at age 12 sorting Coke and Pepsi deposit
bottles -- when the store moved to Crenshaw Boulevard. He was a mans man, Tevrizian said of Reagan. A real gentleman.
His
fierce loyalty to the USC football team is legendary. Unless he was
sick or away on business, he has been at every home game since 1958.
His fraternity buddies from the Beta Theta Pi remain his closest
friends.
USC students, he said, are getting a quality
education, and making fabulous contacts for the future. The
undergraduates are going to have the best four years of their lives.
Lauralee Gooch was a College student at 17, and at 25 practices corporate law in Century City.
Photo credit: Pamela J. Johnson | An Early Start About
14 miles west of the Roybal Federal Building, Lauralee M. Gooch gazed
out her window from the 16th floor to bustling Century City and the
Santa Monica Mountains.
In 2002, Gooch graduated from USC
College magna cum laude with a bachelors in political science and
English. Three years later, she graduated from Stanford Law School. She
now practices corporate law at Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton.
When
told her achievements are astonishing for a person of 25, Gooch
modestly replied: I guess. When told she personified the definition
of success, she corrected: The definition of luck.
Born and
reared in Boulder, Colo., Gooch was on the intellectual fast track
early on. At 17, she was accepted to the USC Resident Honors Program,
and was college bound while in her high school senior year.
She always knew she wanted to practice law.
I
wanted to be in a job that was challenging and interesting, she said.
I wanted to be surrounded by bright people and make a decent living.
And she knew she didnt want to be a litigator.
I
like drafting documents. I like the writing part of it, Gooch said. I
like working in a more collaborative atmosphere, where people are
trying to reach the same goal. As opposed to litigation, where youre
trying to beat someone else.
She felt right at home in the Colleges Thematic Option Program, USCs general education honors program.
Everyone
around you is so driven and so interested in the material, Gooch said.
The professors who teach these classes are just amazing, top flight
professors.
At USC, she met her now fiancé, Ryan Soelberg,
currently a James A. Michener fellow studying writing at the University
of Texas.
Between her visits with Soelberg and time at the law
firm, where she recently was part of a team that closed a
billion-dollar aerospace merger deal, shes lucky if she can squeeze in
a movie or dinner with a friend.
Frankly, she said. I dont have a lot of leisure time as of late.
But thats how she wants it. Shes happy where life has taken her.
I love California, she said. I knew that I wanted to base my career here. I love L.A. and feel very comfortable here.
Brandon Paradise's bicoastal career in law traces back to a USC College education with a little help from Plato and an electrical fire.
Photo credit: Pamela J. Johnson | Quest for Knowledge Back
in downtown L.A., Brandon L. Paradise sipped a cup of half-decaf,
half-regular coffee inside the high-rise building were he works as an
associate, and talked about his extraordinary life so far.
Paradise,
27, recently moved here from New York, where he practiced law at
Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz. After passing the New York State
bar examination, hes awaiting his California bar exam results while
practicing law at Sidley Austin LLP.
L.A. is my home, he
said of returning to L.A., where in 2001 he received a bachelors in
philosophy and economics from USC College, earning a 4.0 GPA in both
majors. Three years later, he graduated from Yale Law School.
How
Paradise arrived at one of the worlds largest law practices defending
and prosecuting business litigation in the heart of L.A. has something
to do with an electrical fire in his boyhood home and Plato.
Living with his mother in an apartment in Rancho Cucamonga, he was jolted awake one night by blistering heat.
I awoke with flames on my mattress, Paradise said. It nearly killed me. Our apartment was uninhabitable.
Paradise,
who was 15, and his mother, a furniture saleswoman, moved to Chino,
where he began taking advanced classes. Although his grade-school
teachers had identified him as gifted, he had never fully focused on
academics until that sophomore year in high school.
About that
time, while watching the USC marching band perform before a game on
television, he recalled getting swept up in the Trojan school spirit.
He thought about how great it would be to attend USC.
I
remember thinking to myself that a school like that just may be out of
reach for me, he said. Because of the money, and because,
unfortunately, what my academic performance had been up to that point.
But
in his new school, away from his buddies, he hunkered down and quickly
excelled. Thats when he decided to move in with a cousin in Fullerton,
where he thought the superior school system would better position him
to attend a major university.
So at age 16, he left his mother, moved in with his older cousin, and aced his senior high school year.
I applied to a number of colleges and got into all of them, Paradise said. He decided to fulfill his dream and attend USC.
He attributes his gumption to Plato.
In seventh or eighth grade, I began reading Plato on my own, Paradise recalled. Platos idea in his Republic that acquiring knowledge results in good character and ultimately the good life powerfully influenced me very early in life.
First in Her Family Juaneita
M. Veron-Foster, who attended USC College during World War II, is
another strong-willed person who beat the odds. When she was one, her
mother died due to childbirth complications. She and her aunt, who
raised her, moved from Fresno to southeast Los Angeles after her high
school graduation.
Living near USC, she was determined to be the first in her family to graduate from college.
Id
always wanted to be a lawyer ever since I was a little kid, the
80-year-old retired municipal court judge said. At the time, financing
was a real problem and the chances of getting into college werent so
great. But I did. And my adopted mother worked and I worked. I made 40
cents an hour working at Bullocks [department store].
Veron-Foster
graduated from USC College in 1943. At USC Law, she was one of five
women in her graduating class of 300. She became a trial attorney in
Orange and L.A. counties, and in 1970 was appointed to the Los Angeles
Municipal Court. She retired in 1993.
Now enjoying leisure time
at her home in Rancho Palos Verdes, Veron-Foster shared her advice to
College students considering a career in law.
You have to want
it really bad, Veron-Foster said. I dont know how hard it is now,
but it wasnt easy then. Now they have computers. Then, we were lucky
to have a ladies bathroom. Work awfully hard. Stick to it. Just keep
fighting on.
This is the first in a series of articles about the wide variety of careers pursued by the alumni of USC College.
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