EDWARD D. OHLBAUM ’72

EDWARD D. OHLBAUM, professor of law at Temple University, known in the legal community as a pioneer in trial advocacy, and the author of a treatise on evidence, died Mar. 13, 2014. He was 64. After receiving his degree cum laude and with several prizes, he received a master’s degree in Religion from Wesleyan and then his law degree from Temple University. He spent seven years with the public defender’s office in Philadelphia and then worked for Temple University’s office of university counsel, from which he joined the law school faculty. He created a trial advocacy program there and taught students how to represent their clients skillfully, zealously, and with complete integrity. In 1994 he was named the inaugural Jack E. Feinberg Professor of Litigation. His advocacy programs won awards from the American College of Trial Lawyers and the Committee on Professionalism of the American Bar Association. The author of three books and numerous articles, he traveled widely to speak on evidence and advocacy at key international and domestic conferences. He was also deeply committed to the Support Center for Child Advocates and to his synagogue. His wife, Karyn L. Scher, his son, and his sister survive.