William R. Moller had style. Whether it was wearing a fashionable straw hat, tooling around in a fancy convertible or conducting a cross-examination that other lawyers described as “spellbinding,” he was a hard guy to ignore.

But Moller also had substance. The longtime lawyer, who died this month at age 83, two months after being badly burned when a cigar set his bed on fire, was a respected bar leader, a quick-witted trial advocate and an influential teacher.

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