[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 173 (Wednesday, December 22, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S11032-S11033]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO WILLIAMS S. GREENBERG
Mr. MENENDEZ. Mr. President, I would like to recognize
Brigadier General (Retired) William S. Greenberg, one of my
constituents, who was honored on October 14, 2010, with the Rutgers Law
School Alumni Association Public Service Award. Bill Greenberg has a
long association with Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey. He
is a member of the Newark law class of 1967. In 1966, as president of
the Student Bar Association, he gave a memorable speech accepting the
new law school building on behalf of the student body. He was joined in
that ceremony by then-Chief Justice of the United States Earl Warren.
Following his graduation from Rutgers, he enlisted in the 5th
Squadron of the 117th Cavalry of the 50th Armored Division, the Jersey
Blues, and was selected as the outstanding enlisted cavalry trooper of
the training cycle while at Fort Knox. Returning to New Jersey, he
served as law secretary to Judge Robert A. Matthews, a Rutgers Law
School alumnus, then sitting as a judge of the New Jersey Superior
Court, Chancery Division, in Hudson County, and later as presiding
judge of the Superior Court, Appellate Division.
Bill Greenberg began a long and distinguished career as a lawyer, bar
leader, and soldier, author, public servant, and benefactor with
McCarter & English, New Jersey's oldest and largest law firm and one of
the region's most respected, where Bill is a senior partner today.
Throughout his career, his connection to Rutgers has remained strong,
as exemplified by his support of the Justice Morris Pashman Scholarship
Fund. He was chosen one of four commissioners of the New Jersey State
Commission of Investigation by his Rutgers Law classmate, the late Alan
J. Karcher, then-speaker of the New Jersey General Assembly. During a
public-service leave from McCarter & English, he served as assistant
counsel to Gov. Richard J. Hughes, himself a graduate of Rutgers Law
School. He represented the Governor in an important case involving
senatorial courtesy before the New Jersey Supreme Court. This was the
first of many important cases Bill Greenberg has argued. He has more
than 100 published opinions to his credit. During his more than 40
years of private practice, he has founded his own law firm, served in
many public positions, has been a noted litigator and bar association
leader, as well as an author and benefactor of many educational and
charitable institutions.
He served as prosecutor of Princeton. He was a commissioner of the
New Jersey State Scholarship Commission. He was appointed by the
Supreme Court of New Jersey to the Mercer County Ethics Committee and
the Civil Practice Committee. He also served as a member of the New
Jersey Supreme Court Committee on the admission of foreign attorneys, a
groundbreaking effort by the New Jersey Supreme Court to permit Cuban
lawyers who had emigrated to New Jersey to be permitted to take the bar
examinations.
He was a trustee of both the New Jersey State Bar Association and the
New Jersey State Bar Foundation. He served as chair of the Military Law
Section of the New Jersey State Bar Association. In addition to holding
many offices in the Association of Trial Lawyers of America, New
Jersey--the New Jersey Association for Justice--he served as its
president. He is an author and frequent lecturer on many litigation
matters, and for over 20 years he has been the author and editor of the
Civil Trial Handbook, Volume 47 of the New Jersey Practice Series, now
in its fifth edition.
Civic minded and charitable, Bill Greenberg serves as a vice
president of the Thanks To Scandinavia Educational and Charitable Trust
of New York, which gives educational scholarships to recognize the
efforts made by the Scandinavian countries to save Jews during World
War II. He is chairman of the Mary Sachs Charitable Trust in
Harrisburg, PA, established by his great aunt, which has over the past
50 years distributed millions of dollars in scholarships and other aid
to educational and charitable organizations in central Pennsylvania. He
and his wife, the former Betty Kaufmann Wolf of Pittsburgh, have
established the Dr. Peter Scardino Trust at the Memorial Sloan
Kettering Cancer Center to aid needy cancer patients. In addition, he
and his wife have established endowed scholarships at Johns Hopkins and
Brown Universities for needy students and have contributed
substantially to the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton.
He recently received the Distinguished Alumnus Award from Johns
Hopkins and serves on its undergraduate advisory board. In December
2009, he was selected Lawyer of the Year by the New Jersey Law Journal,
the leading law publication of record in our State. This year, he
received the Major General Howard Louderback Award for lifetime service
from the New Jersey Committee of the Department of Defense Committee
for Employer Support of the Guard and Reserve.
I was pleased to recommend Bill Greenberg to the White House to be
Chairman of the Reserve Forces Policy Board. He was selected by
Secretary Gates for that important position in August 2009 and
reappointed in August 2010. This board, created by Congress in 1952, is
the principal policy adviser to the Secretary of Defense for Reserve
component matters. I was pleased to make this recommendation because of
General Greenberg's background of 27 years of military service in the
Reserve components as an enlisted cavalry trooper, a member of the
Judge Advocate General's Corps, and as a flag officer. More
importantly, he established the Military Legal Assistance Program of
the New Jersey State Bar Association for wounded or injured reservists
called to duty after September 11, 2001. He personally and with members
of his law firm, McCarter & English, has represented over 50 individual
soldiers at Walter Reed in obtaining adequate
[[Page S11033]]
military and veterans compensation. He is widely recognized as an
expert in the field as well as a selfless advocate for individual
soldiers and veterans in their legal struggles.
To those of us who are privileged to know Bill Greenberg personally,
he brings passion, energy, hard work, patriotism, and dedication to all
that he undertakes. These qualities have been recognized by his
colleagues in the legal profession and in the Pentagon, where he has
served with distinction and has consistently put foremost the interests
of the individual reservist and the veteran. The American soldier has
no greater friend than Bill Greenberg.
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