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  1. Walter Gellhorn. Walter Fischel Gellhorn (September 18, 1906 – December 9, 1995) was an American legal scholar and professor. Life and career. Gellhorn was born in St. Louis, Missouri on September 18, 1906 [1] to suffragist Edna Fischel Gellhorn and George Gellhorn.

  2. 11. Dez. 1995 · Walter Gellhorn, the longtime Columbia University law professor whose writings, teachings and periodic sallies into the public arena helped shape key elements of modern American law, died on...

  3. Gellhorn, Walter (b. 18 September 1906 in St. Louis, Missouri; d. 9 December 1995 in New York City), legal scholar, author, and educator who was a major influence on the practice of administrative law and a staunch proponent of civil rights.

  4. PROFESSOR WALTER GELLHORN. 711. which met for lunch in a private dining room in John Jay Hall. Even five years. ago, it would have been heralded as a brilliant innovation in public interest clinical law teaching. That it was in 1947. His seminar functioned incon-.

  5. Rev. 600 (1996). Available at: https://scholarship.law.columbia.edu/faculty_scholarship/211. Walter Gellhorn had been a primary figure in administrative law and at Columbia for thirty-five years when I arrived here twenty-five years ago, hoping to establish a scholarly career.

    • Peter L. Strauss
  6. Walter Gellhorn of Columbia University, one of the nation's leading law authorities, champion of civil rights and pioneer in the modern study of law, died Saturday, December 9, at his home on Morningside Heights in Manhattan. He was 89.

  7. WALTER GELLHORN: COLLEAGUE Walter Gellhorn is the most forward-looking, the least antiquarian, of the country's great legal scholars. Nostalgia for old ways is not his style, for, in his words, "every new problem necessitates a fresh judgment." His pragmatism is Jamesian, strenuous in mood: "To remain free, we must see