Eric kept all of us on the faculty from feeling our age. He was interested in us all to the very end. I am seventy-three, which I find hard to believe every time I think of it, but I always knew during our forty-two years of friendship and working together that I could have been Eric\u27s son. As time has passed, a larger and larger number of the faculty could have been my sons and daughters and Eric\u27s grandsons and granddaughters--certainly you can\u27t be a grandchild without feeling young somewhere inside yourself
I met John in the fall of 2000, when he traveled to Washington to recruit new faculty at the annual ...
The first installment of the following article on products liability wasdedicated to Mr. Corbin to h...
I first met Fritz Kessler in the Spring of 1983, under somewhat unusual circumstances. When Grant Gi...
Eric Stein was one of the wisest, shrewdest, most broadly knowledgeable, and most benign human being...
My first encounter with Eric dates back forty years. In 1971 he taught a course at the Hague Academy...
My memory of Eric Stein is of a teacher and mentor rather than a colleague. I will leave to others m...
On July 28,2011, Eric Stein, pillar of international law, pioneer of the legal study of European int...
I knew Andy Walkover best as a student. I met him first in my evidence class at the University of Mi...
It is difficult to imagine Michigan Law School without Yale Kamisar. He seems as much a part of the ...
I knew Andy Walkover best as a student. I met him first in my evidence class at the University of Mi...
Eric Stein was clearly one of the important legal scholars of our time. I enjoyed him as a colleague...
A year ago we were saddened by the sudden and untimely death of Ted Stein, one of our most talented ...
One of the pleasures of teaching, less frequently experienced than most of us care to admit, is the ...
The American Society of International Law Committee recommended that the Manley 0. Hudson Medal be a...
My acquaintance with Ernest Lorenzen began in 1916. He was then still under forty years of age; but ...
I met John in the fall of 2000, when he traveled to Washington to recruit new faculty at the annual ...
The first installment of the following article on products liability wasdedicated to Mr. Corbin to h...
I first met Fritz Kessler in the Spring of 1983, under somewhat unusual circumstances. When Grant Gi...
Eric Stein was one of the wisest, shrewdest, most broadly knowledgeable, and most benign human being...
My first encounter with Eric dates back forty years. In 1971 he taught a course at the Hague Academy...
My memory of Eric Stein is of a teacher and mentor rather than a colleague. I will leave to others m...
On July 28,2011, Eric Stein, pillar of international law, pioneer of the legal study of European int...
I knew Andy Walkover best as a student. I met him first in my evidence class at the University of Mi...
It is difficult to imagine Michigan Law School without Yale Kamisar. He seems as much a part of the ...
I knew Andy Walkover best as a student. I met him first in my evidence class at the University of Mi...
Eric Stein was clearly one of the important legal scholars of our time. I enjoyed him as a colleague...
A year ago we were saddened by the sudden and untimely death of Ted Stein, one of our most talented ...
One of the pleasures of teaching, less frequently experienced than most of us care to admit, is the ...
The American Society of International Law Committee recommended that the Manley 0. Hudson Medal be a...
My acquaintance with Ernest Lorenzen began in 1916. He was then still under forty years of age; but ...
I met John in the fall of 2000, when he traveled to Washington to recruit new faculty at the annual ...
The first installment of the following article on products liability wasdedicated to Mr. Corbin to h...
I first met Fritz Kessler in the Spring of 1983, under somewhat unusual circumstances. When Grant Gi...