The Atlanta Lawyer December 2017/January 2018 | Page 8
programs by other bar associa-
tions. The MDCP has placed 350
1L students in law firms, corporate
law departments, and with judg-
es during the summer following
their first year of law school. This
milestone demonstrates the stay-
ing power of the program and the
impact it has had upon so many
members of the Bar.
Join the Atlanta Bar
Foundation Lifetime
Fellows
On behalf of the Atlanta Bar Foun-
dation, I want to invite you to
become an Atlanta Bar Foundation
Lifetime Fellow. The Atlanta Bar
Foundation distributes monies
from the Fellows Fund to youth
development programs, such as
the SLIP and MDCP, and also sup-
ports the Atlanta Bar Foundation
Grants Program which supplies
much needed funding to pro bono
service providers in the commu-
nity that provide legal support to
the underserved.
Please consider helping us con-
tinue this rich legacy of supporting
our youth and the community. The
financial commitment to become
a Lifetime Fellow is a one-time tax
deductible payment of $1000.00
or a $200 annual contribution for
six years ($1200 total). Your name
will be listed as a Lifetime Fellow
in all promotional materials, as
your donation works to support
impactful programs of the Bar.
If you are already a Lifetime Fel-
low, please consider becoming a
Sustaining Fellow, which requires
an annual contribution of $200.
Thank you in advance for your
consideration of becoming an
Atlanta Bar Foundation Lifetime
Fellow and/or Sustaining Fellow.
We are proud of the work that
the Atlanta Bar Foundation ac-
complishes in the development of
young lawyers, in supporting pro
bono organizations that provide
vital legal services to those in need,
and in contributing to worthwhile
projects that serve our community.
If you would like to find out
ways that you can become in-
volved in supporting our mission,
please contact executive director
Terri Bryant at 404-537-4949 or
[email protected].
My best wishes for a great 2018!
Back row L-R: Talley Wells and Sharon Hill (Georgia Appleseed Center for Law
& Justice), Amir Naim (Georgia Asylum & Immigration Network), Marty Ellin
(Atlanta Volunteer Lawyers Foundation), Anibal Torres (Latin American Associa-
tion), Rachel Spears (Pro Bono Partnership of Atlanta), G. Wayne Hillis (Atlanta
Bar Association Minority & Diversity Clerkship Program).
Front row L-R: Susan Walker Goico and Laura Rishidi-Yazd (Atlanta Legal Aid),
Claire Gilbert (Georgia Innocence Project), Anjali Nair (Southern Poverty Law
Center.
Not pictured: Ilham Askia (Gideon's Promise), Caren Cloud (Truancy Interven-
tion Project), Brenda Smeeton (Georgia Justice Project).
8
December 2017 / January 2018
▪