Author Archives: Kathleen O'Donnell

Joseph J. Jamail Donates $3 Million to the Journalism School

Joe Jamial photoNicknamed the “King of Torts,” Joseph Jamail was one of the most successful practicing attorneys in America, and a consummate Texan. In December, he ensured his legacy outside of the Lone Star State and made a $3 million gift to the Columbia School of Journalism. The gift will be dedicated to the renovation of the school’s main lecture hall, and establish an annual lecture devoted to justice and civil rights—themes that have run though his life and career. The refurbished space will be renamed the Joseph D. Jamail Lecture Hall.

The annual lecture will honor John Peter Zenger, a printer in 18th Century New York whose trial on libel charges established truth as a defense in such cases, a precedent that stands today.

The gift also honors Journalism School Dean Steve Coll. The two first met 30 years ago when Coll interviewed him and found him to be “brilliant, open, funny, wild, and big-hearted.”

Jamail, who passed away on December 23 at the age of 90, is perhaps best known for the 1984 case in which Pennzoil won a $10.53 billion verdict against Texaco; the settled amount totaled $3 billion. At the time, it was the largest ever handed down by a jury. Jamail’s Texas-sized demeanor won him hundreds of other cases at trial or settlement, along with an almost mythical reputation. Attorneys and law students at Columbia and beyond have passed around the Supreme Court of Delaware’s rebuke of his
“outrageous” behavior during a deposition (he told an opposing lawyer he “could gag a maggot off a meat wagon”) or the YouTube video of him in action titled simply “Texas-Style Deposition” (too colorful to quote here).

Despite earning billions of dollars through his success in the courtroom, Jamail never forgot his roots. Born in Houston to Lebanese immigrants during the Great Depression, he passionately and aggressively represented countless poor and middle class plaintiffs in lawsuits against corporations. His many generous
donations to the University of Texas, Rice University, and other schools, along with hospitals, city parks, and other causes, were transformative in his home state. The University of Texas erected two statues in his honor, and the Longhorns even play their home football games on Joe Jamail Field.

“I admired him deeply and am very pleased that Columbia University’s trustees have agreed to memorialize his life, career and values with the named lecture hall and lecture series at our school,” Coll said.

 

 

Introducing Campaign Countdown

Colleagues,

What an exciting time to work in alumni and development at Columbia!

Giving Day 2015, once again, smashed previous records.  Columbia College launched its $400 million Core to Commencement campaign.  And the Welcome Center was renamed after Susan Feagin, who spearheaded its creation.

This newsletter is designed to share our successes, our milestones, and our stories as we work with alumni, donors, and friends to

  • Achieve unprecedented fundraising success
  • Engage more alumni than ever before 
  • Increase our donor pipeline

As we approach Thanksgiving, I wanted to say how deeply I appreciate all your hard work, enthusiasm, and accomplishments as we work toward making this our best year ever.  Stay tuned: members of the campaign core team will be reaching out to some of you regarding working sessions and goal setting.
 
With warm wishes for the holiday,
Amelia

Big Idea Event of the Month: Global Exposure

c886f9ae-53fe-4897-929e-bed1441a0997The Committee on Global Thought presents a GLOBAL THINK-IN with Columbia Global Freedom of Expression director, Agnes Callamard; Columbia Law professor, Bernard Harcourt; editor-in-chief of The Intercept, Betsy Reed; and New York Times reporter and Wired columnist, Clive Thompson, along with CGT member and dean of strategic initiatives, Arts and Sciences, David K. Park. Harcourt’s new book, Exposed, offers a powerful critique of our new virtual transparency, revealing how just unfree we are becoming and how little we seem to care.  December 9 | 5 p.m. | Jerome Greene Hall
More Jerry’s Picks