Robert w. champion
- •
Biography
Rebecca Wexler
- Alumni
- United States
- 2005 MPhil History & Philosophy of Science & Medicine
- Wolfson College
Rebecca Wexler works on data, technology, and criminal justice. She has published with The Stanford Law Review, The Berkeley Technology Law Journal, The Yale Law Journal Forum, and The Yale Journal of Law & Technology. Her work challenging the trade secret evidentiary privilege in criminal proceedings has appeared in The New York Times, Washington Monthly, Slate, and NPR's The Takeaway. Rebecca is currently a law clerk to the Honorable Katherine Polk Failla of the Southern District of New York, and previously clerked for the Honorable Pierre N. Leval of the Second Circuit. She is a graduate of Harvard College, Cambridge University, and Yale Law School. She has worked as a Yale Public Interest Fellow at The Legal Aid Society's criminal defense practice and a Lawyer-in-Residence at The Data and Society Research Institute. Rebecca will begin as an Assistant Professor of Law at the U.C. Berkeley School of Law in 2019.
Previous Education
Harvard Universi
- •
Laura Wexler
Laura Wexler is Professor of American Studies, Professor of Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, and Co-Chair of the Women’s Faculty Forum at Yale. She holds an affiliation with the Film Studies Program, the Program in Ethnicity, Race and Migration, and the Public Humanities Program. She chaired the Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies Program from 2003-2007. In 1999 she founded, and she continues to direct, the Photographic Memory Workshop at Yale. From 2007 to the present she has been a Principal Investigator of the Women, Religion and Globalization Project, supported by a grant from the Henry R. Luce Foundation as well as a grant from the William and Betty MacMillan Center for International and Area Studies at Yale. Wexler’s scholarship centers upon intersections of race, gender, sexuality and class with film and photography in the United States, from the nineteenth century to the present. Her book, TenderViolence: Domestic Visions in an Age of U. S. Imperialism, won the Joan Kelley Memorial Prize of the American Historical Association for the best book i
- •
Yale Wexler
American actor
Yale Richard Wexler (February 6, 1930 – February 12, 1996)[1] was an American actor who became a developer of real estate.
Early years
Wexler was the son of Simon Wexler, the founder of Allied Radio Corporation, which became the RadioShack electronics retailer.[2] His brothers were filmmaker Haskell Wexler and developer Jerrold Wexler.[3] Wexler himself graduated from Francis Parker School (where he was co-captain of the basketball team)[3] and studied theater at Carnegie Tech.[2]
Entertainment
Wexler worked in stock theater, including Malden Bridge Playhouse in New York and Pittsburgh Playhouse.[4] His Broadway credits include Tea and Sympathy (1953) and The Best House in Naples (1956).[5] He also worked behind the scenes, producing plays in Chicago.[3] On film, Wexler starred in Stakeout on Dope Street (1958) and appeared in Time Limit (1957).[2] He also had a multi-year tenure as chairman of the Chicago International Film Festiv
Copyright ©tiedame.pages.dev 2025