Celebrating 100 Indigenous UNSW Law Graduates 100-Indigenous-Law-Graduates-Event_Booklet_V13_FIN | Page 5

5 including the law course I was in the process of setting up. Clearly what was needed was a “special admission” program for Aboriginal students that would have regard to the actual capacity of students to undertake a course, rather than a formal classification into which an unsympathetic system had delivered them. I was keen to have such a system in place before we recruited our first year of students, and this required the support of the Professorial Board and the approval of the University Council. I drew up a recommendation that a person of Australian Aboriginal descent might with the necessary approval be admitted to any Faculty as a student additional to the quota. The purpose of requiring individual approval was to ensure that a student was not set up for failure by being admitted to a course in which they had no reasonable prospect of success. Indigenous students given special admission were additional to the quota so that no student could complain that the presence of the Aboriginal students had deprived a non-Aboriginal student of a place that would have otherwise been available. I took this proposal to the Professorial Board which recommended it to Council on 8 December 1970. On 25 January 1971 it was adopted by the University Council, and ever since that date the avenue of special admission has been available to Indigenous students in every Faculty of UNSW, should they need it. I had succeeded in getting the special admission policy approved before the Faculty opened, but the question remained whether any candidates were available at such short notice. I was able to find two (both office-bearers on the Aboriginal Legal Service) who became members of our first year of students. Unfortunately, one of them, a brilliant student named Gary Williams, decided that a legal career was not for him and he left before the year was out. He has recently made a name for himself in scholarly circles through his work on Aboriginal languages. The other student, Paul Coe, finished the year and ultimately took out his degree and practised for some time as a barrister. However, he was not able to be our first law graduate. He was enrolled in a five-year combined degree course, and in the School’s second year of operation Pat O’Shane, who had already acquired a degree while doing teacher training, was able to enrol in our three-year graduate course, which she completed in minimum time, becoming our first graduate. I returned to the Bar and went on to the Supreme Court in 1973. I knew that the Law School’s interest in Indigenous people was safe in the capable and caring hands of others, particularly Garth Nettheim, who made it his life’s work after he joined the School early in 1971. I am sad that he did not live to share my pride in the School’s 100th graduate. Hal Wootten AC QC Foundation Dean, UNSW Law (1969 – 1973)