Michael Berch, a professor at the Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law, and Michael Gallagher, a graduate of the college and a leading Phoenix attorney, will receive top honors at the 2007 State Bar of Arizona Convention.
The list of things retiring professor Gary Lowenthal will miss about the Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law is as colorful and substantial as his famed collection of loud ties and patterned socks.
If Victoria Tandy's father could have been at her law school graduation this week, there would have been pride in his eyes – and a bouquet of orchids and daisies (her favorites) in his hands.
The learning curve for Zarinah T. Nadir, new director of admissions at the Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law, is shorter than most. She's already familiar with many of the names, the faces and the classrooms that surround her.
The advantages and dangers of emerging technologies that may accurately read individuals' innermost thoughts and memories through brain scanning is the subject of a spring conference conducted by ASU's Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law.
More than 80 people gathered recently at the Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law as part of a new multilevel mentoring program that connects high school students with pre-law undergraduates, law students and local lawyers.
Michael Berch is one of three ASU professors selected to speak at the 12th annual Last Lecture Series this month. The honor is based on students' nominations and the nominees' lecture proposals, and in both categories, Berch's was top-notch.
Tracy Rineberg is either sublimely good-natured or punchy from sleep deprivation – or perhaps a bit of both – because her reaction to being asked how her days begin and end is laughter.