Dr. Sharlene McEvoy, professor of business law in the Dolan School of Business, and actor William Windom (of “Murder She Wrote” and “To Kill a Mockingbird”) will present a paper on show business law at the Northeast Academy of Legal Studies and Business in Cooperstown, N.Y., on Saturday, April 27, at 2 p.m.

Meanwhile, Windom will be talking with Dr. McEvoy’s students in classes on Monday, April 22: “The Legal Environment of Business” and “The Law of Business Organizations and Financial Transactions”; and on Tuesday, April 23 at 7 p.m.: “Labor Law.”

Dr. McEvoy has made it a trademark of her teaching to find innovative ways to link her classroom lectures with tangible experiences for her students. Last semester she used her recently purchased 2001 Toyota Prius, one of the new gasoline-electric hybrid cars, to drive home the lessons she was teaching in her Environmental Law course on ultra-low emissions vehicles and the Clean Air Act.

This semester, she is helping her students explore legal issues in show business that relate to agents, unions, ageism and sexism in Hollywood for her course in the Legal Environment of Business. Involving an actor of Windom’s stature makes the discussion more poignant when discussing that agents can now be invested in by media companies and the legal implications that has for the agent-client relationship.

Windom was the opposing attorney to Gregory Peck’s portrayal of Atticus Finch in “To Kill a Mockingbird.” In addition to his role as Angela Lansbury’s confidant in “Murder She Wrote,” Windom has performed in one-man shows about author and World War II correspondent Ernie Pyle and writer James Thurber.

Among Dr. McEvoy’s other creative endeavors to enliven her teaching experiences have been: enrolling in the Field of Dreams Fantasy Camp to learn about the tax implications of playing baseball in multiple municipalities; whitewater rafting in Colorado Springs to familiarize herself with exculpatory contracts used by rafting outfitters; and swimming in a Florida lagoon with two 800-pound dolphins, while researching the legal aspects of the Marine Mammal Protection Act.

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