University of Colorado Law Review

Volume 73 Issue 1, Winter 2002

ABOUT THE CONTRIBUTORS

JEFFREY L. KIRCHMEIER, Another Place Beyond Here: The Death Penalty Moratorium In The United States. B.A., J.D., Case Western Reserve University. Jeffrey L. Kirchmeier is an Associate Professor of Law at The City University of New York School of Law, where he teaches courses on criminal law, criminal procedure, and the death penalty. Prior to coming to CUNY School of Law in 1998, he taught at Tulane Law School. Before that, he was an attorney at the Arizona Capital Representation Project and an adjunct professor at Arizona State University School of Law. He began his legal career as a litigation associate at Arnold & Porter in Washington, D.C. He is the author of several articles about criminal procedure and the death penalty, and he is a member of the Capital Punishment Committee of the Association of the Bar of the City of New York.

EDWARD S. ADAMS, Using Evaluations To Break Down the Male Corporate Hierarchy: A Full Circle Approach. Edward S. Adams is the Howard E. Buhse Professor of Finance and Law and the Co-Director of the Kommerstad Center for Business Law and Entrepreneurship at the University of Minnesota Law School where he specializes in corporate law, corporate finance, secured transactions, commercial paper, and bankruptcy. Following his graduation cum laude from the University of Chicago Law School, where he served as managing editor of the Law Review, Professor Adams clerked for Judge Harvie Wilkinson, III of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit and worked in the Chicago office of Latham and Watkins. He is the author of fifteen books and over thirty articles on business-related issues, the two-time recipient of the University of Minnesota Law School's Stanley V. Kinyon Teacher of the Year Award, a 1997 M.B.A. with highest honors grauduate of the Carlson School of Management at the University of Minnesota, a 1998 Vance K. Opperman Research Scholar, and the a co-holder of the 1999 Julius E. Davis Chair in Law.

MICHAEL C. BLUMM, Reversing The Winters Doctrine?: Denying Reserved Water Rights For Idaho Wilderness And Its Implications. B.A., Williams College; J.D., LL.M, George Washington University. Mr. Blumm is Professor of Law at Northwestern School of Law of Lewis and Clark College, where he teaches courses in property, public lands law, Pacific salmon law, Native American natural resources law, and American legal history. He is author of Sacrificing the Salmon: A Legal and Policy History of the Decline of Columbia Basin Salmon, Native American Natural Resources Law (co-authored with Judith Royster), and Reserved Water Rights, 4 WATERS AND WATERS RIGHTS ch. 37. Professor Blumm is also co-director of the Northwest Water Law and Policy Project.