While thousands upon thousands of Cedar City boys and girls have
used the campus of this university as their personal playground over the years,
Stan Parry—honored tonight as the alumnus of the year—had, and has, a special
bond to the institution. His great grandfather John Parry aided immensely as a
state representative in establishing the school. And, Stan’s uncle, Forrest
Parry of the class of 1941, and the inventor of the magnetic stripe card
virtually everyone has in their wallet, ever proudly announced his status as an
alumnus of the Branch Agricultural College.
Young Stan enjoyed his youth in the town, chasing after lizards
and horny toads in what he called the wilderness of Leigh Hill, loved the night
sky and glimpses of the Milky Way, and recalls fondly his attendance at the
first performances of the Utah Shakespeare Festival in 1961—seated upon the
grass—an experience he would repeat yearly. Following his graduation from Cedar
High in 1967, he decided to stay home to study. After a year, he served an LDS
mission to Germany before returning. Along the way at Southern Utah State
College, he married Carol Lynne Wright, a 1971 graduate in English with a
teaching certificate, and Stan shined as a Thunderbird, graduating with highest
honors in 1974 in political science with a minor in German. He was elected vice
president of academic affairs of the student body and was the Outstanding
Student of the College of Social Sciences before heading off to law school at
BYU. While there, he served as an intern for Senator Frank Moss in Washington,
D.C. Just last year, he earned an LLM degree in International Business
Transactions at Lazarski Faculty of Law in Warsaw, Poland.
His career has been and continues to be a diverse and
colorful one, as his successes in 12 years as a prosecutor for both the Clark
County District Attorney and the U.S. Department of Justice brought him both
satisfaction and renown. He won convictions in a bevy of high-profile federal
criminal cases, including trials involving public corruption, racketeering, tax
fraud, and loan-sharking. Among his most notable cases was one that involved mobster
Tony Spilotro. It was the basis for the 1995 film “Casino,” with Joe Pesci portraying
the character based on Spilotro.
Stan entered the private practice of law in 1989, was a
partner in several law firms, and in 2006 became a litigator and partner in Las
Vegas office of the prodigious national firm of Ballard Spahr, specializing in
representing companies in a wide variety of disputes, largely in the business
and construction domains. Annually, he is among the very highest-rated
attorneys in the state of Nevada.
He has also served as chairman of the City of Las Vegas
Ethics Review Board, and as legal advisor to the Clark County Planning
Commission. He has been a visiting professor at several universities in Eastern
Europe, and will serve as such at Jagiellonian
University in Krakow, Poland, this November. He is a member of the SUU
National Advisory Board and the Lazarski University Council of Experts, and
thoroughly enjoys his work as an arbitrator for the American Arbitration
Association, and as the president of the World Affairs Council of Las Vegas.
The latter two functions will keep him particularly busy as he heads to
retirement in the years ahead, he says. He and Carol plan to serve a mission
for their church, and Stan keeps his hand in now, teaching an early morning
seminary class.
One may well ask how he finds the time for all that.
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