Some courses you took at Michigan Law School because they were required. Some you took just because they sounded interesting. Some you thought were somehow related to what you expected to be doing after graduation. And then there was Federal Courts and the Federal System, taught by Professor Terry Sandalow. That course you took as a challenge - because it was there, and you knew that if you did not take it, you would always wonder how you would have done. I took the challenge in the Fall of 1977. I worked hard and thrived on the experience. For my efforts, I got the lowest grade I received in any course in Law School
We have spent some pleasant time together in searching out the foundations of the law. In studying i...
Ages ago, I had the excellent luck to fall into a collaboration with Terrance Sandalow to produce a ...
The Bigelow program began in 1937 as a tutoring system before transitioning into the first-year writ...
Some courses you took at Michigan Law School because they were required. Some you took just because ...
In the popular imagination, legal education is the experience of sitting in a classroom and being pu...
My first encounter with Terry Sandalow occurred in a classroom at the University of Chicago in the f...
I first heard Yale Kamisar\u27s name in the spring of 1977 while deciding where to go to law school....
Terry Sandalow has an extraordinary mind, its power suggested by his incredible brow and forehead. (...
Michigan Law Faculty are the best of the best. As you look through these pages, you will see some of...
More than a decade after graduating from the University of Michigan Law School, I was invited to ret...
It is difficult to imagine Michigan Law School without Yale Kamisar. He seems as much a part of the ...
The seven papers that follow are the words and thoughts of the Michigan Law School faculty members w...
A half-century ago when this Law Quadrangle was conceived and constructed, it was surely an act of f...
One of the pleasures of teaching, less frequently experienced than most of us care to admit, is the ...
Thirty-six years ago (September, 1903) as Dean Bates was taking up law teaching as Tappan Professor ...
We have spent some pleasant time together in searching out the foundations of the law. In studying i...
Ages ago, I had the excellent luck to fall into a collaboration with Terrance Sandalow to produce a ...
The Bigelow program began in 1937 as a tutoring system before transitioning into the first-year writ...
Some courses you took at Michigan Law School because they were required. Some you took just because ...
In the popular imagination, legal education is the experience of sitting in a classroom and being pu...
My first encounter with Terry Sandalow occurred in a classroom at the University of Chicago in the f...
I first heard Yale Kamisar\u27s name in the spring of 1977 while deciding where to go to law school....
Terry Sandalow has an extraordinary mind, its power suggested by his incredible brow and forehead. (...
Michigan Law Faculty are the best of the best. As you look through these pages, you will see some of...
More than a decade after graduating from the University of Michigan Law School, I was invited to ret...
It is difficult to imagine Michigan Law School without Yale Kamisar. He seems as much a part of the ...
The seven papers that follow are the words and thoughts of the Michigan Law School faculty members w...
A half-century ago when this Law Quadrangle was conceived and constructed, it was surely an act of f...
One of the pleasures of teaching, less frequently experienced than most of us care to admit, is the ...
Thirty-six years ago (September, 1903) as Dean Bates was taking up law teaching as Tappan Professor ...
We have spent some pleasant time together in searching out the foundations of the law. In studying i...
Ages ago, I had the excellent luck to fall into a collaboration with Terrance Sandalow to produce a ...
The Bigelow program began in 1937 as a tutoring system before transitioning into the first-year writ...