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Former
IRS Official to Speak at U.Va.
Alumnus To Give Commencement Address
February 18, 2003--
Mortimer Caplin, a former top government official and leading
advocate of public service who also made his mark as a collegiate
boxing champion, will deliver the commencement address at the University
of Virginia.
Caplin,
commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service during the Kennedy
administration, will be the speaker at Finals Exercises on May 18
at 10 a.m. on the Lawn. He is a 1937 graduate of the College of
Arts & Sciences and graduated from the School of Law in 1940.
When
he entered U.Va. at age 17, Caplin committed himself to all aspects
of University life. He was a standout athlete from 1933-37 in the
University’s leading sport, going undefeated in the ring for
three years in the mid-1930s, including his last two on the team.
Although he suffered a broken hand, he still won the NCAA middleweight
title.
He
also served as coach of the boxing team and was president of the
University Players drama group. In addition, he graduated as the
top law student in his class and was editor-in-chief of the Virginia
Law Review.
Known
for his deep commitment to public service, teaching and the educational
process, he was awarded the Thomas Jefferson Foundation Medal in
Law in 2001. He was a member of U.Va.’s Board of Visitors
from 1992-97. His generosity as a benefactor to the Law School has
funded the Law School’s Caplin Auditorium, the Daniel Caplin
Professorship, the Mortimer Caplin Public Service Scholarship, the
Mortimer Caplin Public Service Award, the Mortimer Caplin Public
Service Center and several major improvements to the school. He
has served as a trustee of the Law School Foundation, and, since
its inception in 1990, as chairman of the University’s Council
for the Arts.
Caplin
taught tax law at U.Va. from 1950-61, while serving as president
of the Atlantic Coast Conference. After serving as commissioner
of the Internal Revenue Service from 1961-64, he founded Caplin
& Drysdale in Washington, one of the nation’s leading
tax law firms. The U.S. Treasury Department presented him with its
Alexander Hamilton Award for his “outstanding and unusual
leadership” when he left government service.
Caplin
has been chairman of the board of the National Civic Service League
and the American Council on International Sports and a trustee of
the Peace Through Law Foundation in Washington. His many honors
include the Tax Executives Institute’s Distinguished Service
Award and the American Jewish Committees Judge Learned Hand Human
Relations Award.
Dr.
L. D. Britt, a 1972 graduate of the College of Arts & Sciences
who is a professor and chairman of surgery at Eastern Virginia Medical
School, will give the Valedictory address on May 17 at 11 a.m. on
the Lawn.
Contact:
Katherine Thompson Jackson, (434) 924-3629
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