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Law firm Sidley Austin established a visiting professorship of law. John Cogan Jr., former chairman of the law firm Hale & Dorr, now called WilmerHale, gave at least $6 million. Kagan announced in early 2009 that the money would be used for the school's international legal studies program. Joseph Flom, a partner in the law firm Skadden Arps, helped found the school's Petrie-Flom Center for Health Law Policy, Biotechnology and Bioethics. Rita Hauser, named by President Barack Obama to his intelligence advisory board, and her husband Gus Hauser donated to establish the Rita E. Hauser Professorship of Human Rights and Humanitarian Law. Howard Milstein, chief executive of the New York Private Bank & Trust Corp., and his wife Abby Milstein donated. The law firm Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz donated. Partners in the Kirkland & Ellis law firm gave $3 million to renovate a large classroom, now named Kirkland & Ellis Hall. Harvard declined to release a full donor list. As dean, Kagan frequently expressed gratitude to the Harvard donors. "We are enormously grateful to everyone at Kirkland & Ellis for this new gift, and for Kirkland's unwavering support over the years," Kagan said in June 2005, announcing the firm's donation. Asked by the Senate Judiciary Committee to list potential conflicts of interest, Kagan didn't mention her Harvard fundraising, and senators didn't ask her about it during two days of questioning at her confirmation hearing last week. "The principal conflicts of interest that I would encounter arise from my service as solicitor general," Kagan wrote on her Senate questionnaire, adding that the only others she was aware of would involve Harvard litigation. It's up to justices to decide whether to recuse themselves. Kagan told the committee she would step away from all cases in which she had been attorney of record, and would look to judicial and government ethics rules and her colleagues for guidance. Harvard Law graduate Jack S. Levin, a Kirkland & Ellis partner in Chicago who helped arrange his firm's $3 million donation and head the campaign's Midwestern effort, said he knows four justices well. Levin said he has a high regard for Kagan and thinks the feeling is mutual, but doesn't consider their connection something that would give him or his firm an advantage before the court. "People like Elena Kagan deal with hundreds and hundreds of people, and once that's over, they don't owe them any allegiance," Levin said.
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