One of the pleasures of teaching, less frequently experienced than most of us care to admit, is the sense that one has made a contribution to a student\u27s intellectual development. Another, even rarer, is the experience of encountering a student who contributes to one\u27s own intellectual development. Andy was, for me, a source of both kinds of pleasure, though I am more confident that I am justified in the latter than in the former
An obituary for Thomas J. Holdych, contracts and commercial law professor at the Seattle University ...
Others in this Issue have noted David Bederman\u27s unsurpassed intellect as a scholar in admiralty ...
More than a decade after graduating from the University of Michigan Law School, I was invited to ret...
I knew Andy Walkover best as a student. I met him first in my evidence class at the University of Mi...
I knew Andy Walkover best as a student. I met him first in my evidence class at the University of Mi...
In a tribute to Andrew Walkover, Dean James Bond revisits the first meeting he had with Professor Wa...
One of the pleasures of teaching, less frequently experienced than most of us care to admit, is the ...
It has been my good fortune to have enjoyed the friendship of Vernon Miller throughout the some fort...
Yale Kamisar arrived in Ann Arbor in the fall of 1965, just after I graduated from the University of...
I first met George Palmer, nearly fifteen years ago, when I came to Ann Arbor to discuss the possibi...
I first heard Yale Kamisar\u27s name in the spring of 1977 while deciding where to go to law school....
In the popular imagination, legal education is the experience of sitting in a classroom and being pu...
Eric Stein was one of the wisest, shrewdest, most broadly knowledgeable, and most benign human being...
Tributes to Professor Andrew King upon his retirement from the University of Maryland School of Law
It has been my good fortune to have served in more different roles in relation to Allan Smith than h...
An obituary for Thomas J. Holdych, contracts and commercial law professor at the Seattle University ...
Others in this Issue have noted David Bederman\u27s unsurpassed intellect as a scholar in admiralty ...
More than a decade after graduating from the University of Michigan Law School, I was invited to ret...
I knew Andy Walkover best as a student. I met him first in my evidence class at the University of Mi...
I knew Andy Walkover best as a student. I met him first in my evidence class at the University of Mi...
In a tribute to Andrew Walkover, Dean James Bond revisits the first meeting he had with Professor Wa...
One of the pleasures of teaching, less frequently experienced than most of us care to admit, is the ...
It has been my good fortune to have enjoyed the friendship of Vernon Miller throughout the some fort...
Yale Kamisar arrived in Ann Arbor in the fall of 1965, just after I graduated from the University of...
I first met George Palmer, nearly fifteen years ago, when I came to Ann Arbor to discuss the possibi...
I first heard Yale Kamisar\u27s name in the spring of 1977 while deciding where to go to law school....
In the popular imagination, legal education is the experience of sitting in a classroom and being pu...
Eric Stein was one of the wisest, shrewdest, most broadly knowledgeable, and most benign human being...
Tributes to Professor Andrew King upon his retirement from the University of Maryland School of Law
It has been my good fortune to have served in more different roles in relation to Allan Smith than h...
An obituary for Thomas J. Holdych, contracts and commercial law professor at the Seattle University ...
Others in this Issue have noted David Bederman\u27s unsurpassed intellect as a scholar in admiralty ...
More than a decade after graduating from the University of Michigan Law School, I was invited to ret...