EDGAR A. JONES JR. ’42
EDGAR A. JONES JR., a retired professor of law at the University of California at Los Angeles, who played the part of a judge on television courtroom shows, died May 10, 2013, at age 92. The son of Edgar A. Jones of the class of 1912, he was a member of Phi Sigma Kappa and received his law degree from the University of Virginia. During World War II he served in the U.S. Marine Corps. He joined the UCLA law school faculty in 1951 and taught torts, labor law, and labor arbitration there until his retirement in 1991. His television career began with a call from a producer who needed to cast someone knowledgeable about the law for the program Traffic Court. He was such a hit that he also was the judge on Day in Court and Accused. He worked without a script on the shows because he preferred the air of realism that came from letting the events unfold, and he became a star of the new genre in an era when fictional and quasi-real courtroom shows were becoming popular. Among those who survive are his wife, Helen Callaghan Jones, 11 children, 23 grandchildren, and five great-grandchildren.