Writing a tribute for any beloved colleague who is retiring is a difficult experience. Writing about Tom Bergin, who is retiring after twenty-nine years at the Law School, is an even greater challenge. The challenge stems from Tom\u27s legacy to his students and to his colleagues at the Law School; both the challenge and the legacy require some explanation
It is difficult for me to accept the reality that Doug Kahn is about to retire after a triumphant fi...
Professor Chris Rideout pays tribute to Joseph M. Williams, 1933-2008, Professor Emeritus, Universit...
There are some tasks that present themselves as, at the same time, an opportunity and a challenge. C...
Writing a tribute for any beloved colleague who is retiring is a difficult experience. Writing about...
Writing a brief tribute to Frank Allen, a man I admire as much as any I have known, should have been...
With the graduation on May 22, 2004, two valued members of the law school faculty retired. Not only ...
Besides being brief, it is not apparent what one should say. No doubt due to my own upbringing, I ca...
In preparing these remarks, I was struck by how difficult it is to composean effective retirement sp...
The University of Michigan law faculty has been saddened twice within six months by the deaths of co...
Writing a tribute to former acting deans is a challenge: usually, it is troubled times that push the...
When the editors of this issue told me of Professor Yale Kamisar\u27s decision to retire from full-t...
Dear Boss, An unfamiliar voice on my answering machine was the first to tell me you retired
I. INTRODUCTION In a planning meeting for the 2009 Mercer Law Review Symposium celebrating the twent...
Professor Emeritus Reynolds was oft known as the "heart and soul" of our Law School. Indeed, the imp...
A Tribute to a Legend: With Professor John Brumbaugh\u27s passing in early August, the School of La...
It is difficult for me to accept the reality that Doug Kahn is about to retire after a triumphant fi...
Professor Chris Rideout pays tribute to Joseph M. Williams, 1933-2008, Professor Emeritus, Universit...
There are some tasks that present themselves as, at the same time, an opportunity and a challenge. C...
Writing a tribute for any beloved colleague who is retiring is a difficult experience. Writing about...
Writing a brief tribute to Frank Allen, a man I admire as much as any I have known, should have been...
With the graduation on May 22, 2004, two valued members of the law school faculty retired. Not only ...
Besides being brief, it is not apparent what one should say. No doubt due to my own upbringing, I ca...
In preparing these remarks, I was struck by how difficult it is to composean effective retirement sp...
The University of Michigan law faculty has been saddened twice within six months by the deaths of co...
Writing a tribute to former acting deans is a challenge: usually, it is troubled times that push the...
When the editors of this issue told me of Professor Yale Kamisar\u27s decision to retire from full-t...
Dear Boss, An unfamiliar voice on my answering machine was the first to tell me you retired
I. INTRODUCTION In a planning meeting for the 2009 Mercer Law Review Symposium celebrating the twent...
Professor Emeritus Reynolds was oft known as the "heart and soul" of our Law School. Indeed, the imp...
A Tribute to a Legend: With Professor John Brumbaugh\u27s passing in early August, the School of La...
It is difficult for me to accept the reality that Doug Kahn is about to retire after a triumphant fi...
Professor Chris Rideout pays tribute to Joseph M. Williams, 1933-2008, Professor Emeritus, Universit...
There are some tasks that present themselves as, at the same time, an opportunity and a challenge. C...