Evening Stars: History revisited as program graduates first class

St. Mary's evening law program 2007 entering class, many of whom graduated this May.
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Aug. 4, 2011
When St. Mary’s University School of Law
brought back the evening law program in 2007,
the idea was to attract talented, motivated
students who would be able to balance their
professional lives with the demands of law school.
The program, which just finished its fourth year,
has not only done that, it also produced the top
graduate for the Class of 2011, Bernie Kray.
The evening program—which early in the
history of the School of Law was the only
option—now accounts for a quarter of the School
of Law’s student body. This time around, the
evening program was designed as an option for
students with significant work experience who
needed or wanted to keep working while attending
law school.
“The evening program is a difficult one,” said
Dean Charles E. Cantú. “It requires a different
set of skills to balance fulltime careers with legal
education. These students not only excel in the
classroom, but are involved in extracurricular
activities such as the Clinical Program, the
Advocacy Program and the scholarly journals.”
This spring, the St. Mary's School of Law
Foundation awarded scholarships to the top
students in each class, two of whom were
evening students (Kray for the third–year class
and Viera Buzgova, for the second–year class).
Several evening students were staff writers and
editors in the St. Mary's Law Journal and The
Scholar, including Kray, Tiffany House, Alicia
Calzada, Carolyn Rangel and Sarah Minter. Some,
including Nicole Hines–Glover and Marion Reilly,
have excelled in the advocacy programs.
“I was really impressed with the level of my
fellow students,” said Alicia Calzada, a successful
photojournalist who completed the program
in December and passed the bar in February.
She remained an evening student throughout
her education, but took summer courses and
internship credits to finish early. “It was an
intelligent group that was already so accomplished.
I enjoyed getting to know them.”
“Faculty members have stated one reason they
enjoy teaching evening students is they are very
hard workers who understand clearly the reasons
they are in law school,” said Michael Ariens,
professor of law, who served as Assistant Dean of
Evening Studies for the program’s first four years.
By the midpoint of their legal educations, many
students accelerate into the full–time day program
and take leave from full–time careers. The flexible
program encourages students to fulfill their legal
education in a way that fits their routines and
professions.
Richard Johnston, a certified public accountant
for Valero, was looking to beef up his résumé
with an advanced degree, but not a drastic
career change. Johnston, a California transplant,
graduated from the University of Texas at San
Antonio and had already completed a career in the
U. S. Air Force and worked in public accounting
before joining Valero.
“I’m an older student; I knew where I was
going at the end of the day,” Johnston said. But
balancing a fulltime career had its ups and downs.
“Some days were worse than others. Once you
get past the initial shock of going back to the
classroom, it becomes tolerable. You realize you
can do it. It is tough, but doable.”
The sentiment is echoed by Kray, who also
had a career in the U.S. Air Force. He earned
his undergraduate degree in telecommunications
from the University of Denver and was a
technical support engineer for Qwest
Communications when he came to
St. Mary's. Kray chose the evening program
to continue his career while studying law.
“I wanted to hedge my bets and didn’t
want to quit my job with the economy,” said
Kray. “After my first semester I realized, ‘I
can do this’ and took advantage of a layoff
opportunity at my company.”
While no longer working fulltime,
Kray chose not to accelerate into the day
program, but decided to concentrate on
academic activities like the St. Mary's Law
Journal and fine tuning legal skills through
experiential internships. At the journal,
he spent a year as a staff writer and last
year served as articles editor. He worked
as law clerk at Davis, Cedillo & Mendoza
from August 2009 to July 2010 and as
legal research assistant for law professor
Chenglin Liu. Kray also did a stint as a
judicial intern with Judge Edward Prado,
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit.
In his home life, Kray got married three
weeks before beginning law school and now
has one son.
Johnston worked with St. Mary's
Academic Support program tutoring firstyear
law students for two years. He was the
lone evening student who took on clinic
hours in the Criminal Justice Clinic, and
all the while continued working full–time
at Valero.
“The faculty was very accommodating.
I was working on an acquisition in Europe
and they worked with me through that as I
traveled out of the country,” Johnston said.
Like most of his classmates, he has spent
this summer studying for the July bar.
“The School of Law did a great job
providing the evening curriculum with
all the core classes and making sure we
had a core education to prepare us for
the bar. The other side of that is we didn’t
get the opportunity to take some of the
electives we would have liked to take, but
there are only so many hours and so many
professors,” Johnston said.
The same scheduling challenges face the
new graduates as they study for the bar.
Johnston takes his bar preparation course
online and does an hour at lunch and a
couple hours at night.
After passing the bar, Kray hopes to
concentrate in intellectual property law
and Johnston may move into a more legal
position within his company. Calzada
continues working as a photojournalist with
her established clients, but the only new
clients she accepts these days have legal
issues.
Calzada was inspired to go to law
school after working closely with the
National Press Photographers Association
on issues that photographers face, such
as access to sporting events, harassment
while shooting in public areas and First
Amendment rights. Now, the National
Press Photographers Association is her first
client. In the fall she will be doing contract
work for an attorney who concentrates on
photographer issues as well.
“I learned as a photographer how
many legal needs I had and now I am
really excited to be in a position to help
photographers,” Calzada said. “This is what
I envisioned when I started law school and
now I’m doing it.”