Celebrating Professor Tony Santoro

51蹤獲Law dedicates theProfessor Anthony J. Santoro Classroom, in honor of the founding Dean of 51蹤獲Law and President Emeritus of RWU

Michael M. Bowden
Professor Santoro stands inside the classroom dedicated to him.
Professor Anthony J. Santoro celebrates the dedication of a classroom in his name, where he taught tax law for many years at 51蹤獲Law. Image Credit: Andrea Hansen

BRISTOL, R.I.  Its one thing to honor a respected colleague and well-loved professor upon his retirement but how to pay tribute to a man who is, in many ways, the sine qua non of the institution itself; one who is, perhaps more than any other single individual, responsible for the very existence of 51蹤獲 School of Law?       

At the very least, you name a classroom after him. And so last Friday evening, the former Room 262 at 51蹤獲Law was dedicated as the Professor Anthony J. Santoro Classroom, with around 100 law faculty, alumni and current students in attendance.

Put simply, no one has done more for this law school than Tony Santoro,  51蹤獲Law Dean Michael J. Yelnosky told attendees. And dedicating that classroom in his honor the classroom where he used to teach tax [law] to a full house at 8:30 in the morning seems like the least we can do.

Santoro classroom dedicationA Georgetown Law graduate, Santoro was the founding Dean of 51蹤獲Law (1992-1993), and is a President Emeritus of 51蹤獲 (1993-2000). He was awarded an honorary doctorate by the law school in 2016.

Santoros association with Roger Williams began in 1990, when he was tapped to conduct a feasibility study for establishing a law school in Rhode Island. By that time, Santoro had already been instrumental in establishing two others: the University of Bridgeport School of Law (now Quinnipiac), and Western New England College School of Law. In addition, as Dean of the Widener University School of Law, he had engineered a major expansion from Delaware into Pennsylvania. Santoro also knew the lay of the land locally: hes a native of Melrose, Mass., and former resident of Fall River, Mass., and his wife Pauline -- with whom he has four children -- is a native Rhode Islander.

Santoros study concluded that a law school would enhance the legal culture of Rhode Island and provide opportunities for research and continuing legal education which are not now available in this state. When he was later appointed as the schools first dean, he lobbied hard for a dedicated physical facility, and almost singlehandedly recruited the entire founding faculty. By opening day, he was the President of 51蹤獲.

More than two decades later, Santoro remained a highly popular teacher and is the namesake of the yearly Professor Anthony J. Santoro Business Law Lecture, the schools first entirely alumni-endowed lecture series. As the Roger Williams Law Review noted in 2014, His long tenure here suggests that the last law school established by Dean Santoro was arguably his finest, and the state-of-the-art facility he envisioned some twenty years ago stands as a testament to his efforts.

Santoro classroom dedicationDuring his remarks at the dedication, Dean Yelnosky pointed out just how pervasive the law schools reach has become, with successful alumni practicing across the country, law students clerking at the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals and in dozens of other courts, and finalists in the latest installment of the schools annual Esther Clark Moot Court Competition having just recently argued before all the justices of the Rhode Island Supreme Court in their breathtaking Providence chambers.

Look at where his [Santoros] law school is today, Yelnosky said. This is a remarkable community that Tony has created. He had a vision, he had the talent and he had the energy to make this happen.

51蹤獲 President Donald J. Farish agreed.

In starting the law school, Tony changed the trajectory for this University, Farish said, noting that the addition of the law school in large part precipitated the schools 1993 expansion from Roger Williams College to 51蹤獲. Presidents leave behind tangible legacies. The work that Tony Santoro did created a strong foundation for this University.

Fellow founding faculty member Louise Ellen Teitz added, Tony created a Roger Williams family, then addressed Santoro directly, noting that the apple seeds you planted have grown.

Santoro classroom dedicationSantoro thanked the faculty, alumni and students, in turn, for having been so instrumental in my having the best time of my life during these last 25 years especially the last few as a faculty member. I really enjoyed that classroom and I am so thrilled to have [it] named after me. Thank you all.

Prior to the dedication and reception, 51蹤獲Law hosted its annual Anthony J. Santoro Business Law Lecture, this year entitled Business Lawyering: The Skill of a Lifetime, and featuring a panel of 51蹤獲Law alumni whose careers were profoundly shaped by Santoros teaching and mentorship. Following the dedication, alumni and friends gathered at Aidans Pub in downtown Bristol to celebrate Alumni Night.

[With reporting by Edward Fitzpatrick and Alexander Bowden. Photos by Andrea Hansen.]

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SANTORO STORIES

At the dedication ceremony, 51蹤獲School of Law Dean Michael J. Yelnosky recalled that the law school opened in 1993 at about the time that a chief judge of Rhode Island Supreme Court was resigning in the face of impeachment proceedings. It marked the second time in seven years that the states top judge had resigned amid the possibility of impeachment. Common Cause Rhode Island had asked Yelnosky to participate in a judicial reform movement, so he was about to write an opinion piece criticizing the status quo and defenders of the status quo. Before submitting the piece, he thought to ask Santoro if he should take this on.

He listened to me and did not hesitate, Yelnosky said of Santoro. He quickly said, Thats one of the reasons the law school is here. By all means you have my support. Do what you think is best.

Yelnosky said, Tony showed me that day what it meant to stand up for academic freedom, which is not an easy thing to do when an institution is in its infancy, when its trying to establish roots in unfamiliar terrain and where its trying to win over not an unsubstantial number of skeptics.

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Professor Anthony J. Santoro told the story of how former U.S. Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. took a train from Washington, D.C., one day when he was getting older. As the train pulled from Union Station, a conductor asked the judge for his ticket. Holmes searched his coat pocket, his vest pocket, his brief case, but couldnt find the ticket. So the conductor told him not to worry about it to just send in the ticket when he found it. Holmes stood up, glared at the conductor and said: You dolt. I dont give a damn about your ticket -- I just want to know where Im going!

Santoro drew laughter when he said he feels the same way now.

In two weeks, I will be 50 years at the bar, 47 years as an academic, 46 years as a husband, Santoro said. Now, I dont know what is going to happen to me in the future. Im not taking up golf. Im not taking up photography. But I do have one big fear. Now that the university has honored me by naming the classroom and bestowing upon me the rank, if you will, of president emeritus or professor emeritus, I am deathly afraid that after two months of feeding me breakfast and lunch, Pauline is going to make me husband emeritus.