
April 19, 2011
COLUMBIA AND FORDHAM LAW SCHOOL STUDENTS WIN
COMMERCIAL AND FEDERAL LITIGATION SECTION MINORITY FELLOWSHIPS
New York City residents Mariel S. Fernandez, a first-year student at
Columbia Law School, and Danielle D. May, a first-year student at
Fordham University School of Law, are the 2011 recipients of The New
York Bar Foundation’s Commercial and Federal Litigation Section
Minority Fellowships.
As the winners of $6,000 fellowships, Ms. Fernandez will work this
summer in the chambers of Acting Justice O. Peter Sherwood, and Ms. May
will work in the chambers of Justice Barbara R. Kapnick. Both are
justices of the New York State Supreme Court, New York County,
Commercial Division.
“We are pleased to again award the Commercial and Federal
Litigation Section Fellowships to two very worthy recipients,”
said Bar Foundation President M. Catherine Richardson of Syracuse (Bond,
Schoeneck & King). “Both Ms. Fernandez and Ms. May
will gain a wealth of experience under the mentorship of two esteemed
judges while working on complicated commercial disputes and their
ultimate resolutions.”
Section Chair Jonathan D. Lupkin (Flemming Zulack Williamson Zauderer
LLP, New York) said, “We are pleased to have The New York Bar
Foundation confer this year’s Fellowships on two very worthy
recipients. These Fellowships were established to help create student
awareness of commercial litigation and foster greater diversity among
commercial litigators throughout the State of New York. We are confident
that both Ms. Fernandez and Ms. May will come away from their summers
working for these respected jurists with invaluable experience and
insight into the litigation and resolution of commercial
disputes.”
Ms. Fernandez is the Hamilton Fellow and Wien Scholar at Columbia
Law. She is a member of the European Union Law Moot Court Team. She
earned a B.A. in International Studies from the University of Chicago,
where she was a University Scholar.
Ms. May earned a B.A. in Spanish at Florida State University magna
cum laude and also pursued studies in Panama. She is involved in the
Domestic Violence Action Center, Courtroom Advocacy Project.
Recipients were honored at an awards ceremony at Lincoln Center in
New York City on April 14.
For further information, contact The New York Bar Foundation at
518/487-5651 or foundation@tnybf.org. Established
in 1950, The New York Bar Foundation is dedicated to aiding charitable
and educational projects to meet the law-related needs of the public and
the legal profession.
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