John Reed is the Fred Astaire of the law school world. That doesn\u27t mean John would win prizes for his waltzing and tangoing; the kinship runs much deeper. There is the same purity of line in gesture and speech, the same trimness of content and grace of expression, and the same ineffable talent for brightening up a scene just by entering it
The following essay, which appears here with permission, is based on a talk delivered by Thomas M. C...
What is it that makes John Sexton so special? It is a combination of qualities that makes him so un...
Jack Dawson, known to many at Michigan as Black Jack, taught at the Law School from 1927 to 1958. Mu...
John Reed is the Fred Astaire of the law school world. That doesn\u27t mean John would win prizes fo...
When I started my first year at Harvard Law School, 17 years after Osborn did, I wasn’t looking for ...
•A Look at the Lawyer\u27s Club •An International Law Society is Born •At the Flicks •Miscellaneous ...
8 pagesHolmes asked himself––and all of us––how one could “live greatly in the law...”? Well, one an...
Many fine law schools have faculty members who are outstanding teachers, preeminent scholars, and ge...
Theodore W. Swift, 1955 graduate of the Law School, was a member of the law firm of Foster, Swift, C...
The University of Michigan Law School was ninety-five years old when Ted St. Antoine first entered H...
A path to greatness often begins with a special teacher, and this is such a story. In the fall of 19...
Wigmore, John Henry (1863-1943). Law professor and dean. Wigmore was born and reared in San Francisc...
Joseph Vining has been appointed the first Henry Burns Hutchins Collegiate Professor of Law and Jame...
A path to greatness often begins with a special teacher, and this is such a story. In the fall of 19...
John H. Pickering, \u2740: A Lifetime of Achievement in the LawA. Vincent Buzard, \u2767, named pres...
The following essay, which appears here with permission, is based on a talk delivered by Thomas M. C...
What is it that makes John Sexton so special? It is a combination of qualities that makes him so un...
Jack Dawson, known to many at Michigan as Black Jack, taught at the Law School from 1927 to 1958. Mu...
John Reed is the Fred Astaire of the law school world. That doesn\u27t mean John would win prizes fo...
When I started my first year at Harvard Law School, 17 years after Osborn did, I wasn’t looking for ...
•A Look at the Lawyer\u27s Club •An International Law Society is Born •At the Flicks •Miscellaneous ...
8 pagesHolmes asked himself––and all of us––how one could “live greatly in the law...”? Well, one an...
Many fine law schools have faculty members who are outstanding teachers, preeminent scholars, and ge...
Theodore W. Swift, 1955 graduate of the Law School, was a member of the law firm of Foster, Swift, C...
The University of Michigan Law School was ninety-five years old when Ted St. Antoine first entered H...
A path to greatness often begins with a special teacher, and this is such a story. In the fall of 19...
Wigmore, John Henry (1863-1943). Law professor and dean. Wigmore was born and reared in San Francisc...
Joseph Vining has been appointed the first Henry Burns Hutchins Collegiate Professor of Law and Jame...
A path to greatness often begins with a special teacher, and this is such a story. In the fall of 19...
John H. Pickering, \u2740: A Lifetime of Achievement in the LawA. Vincent Buzard, \u2767, named pres...
The following essay, which appears here with permission, is based on a talk delivered by Thomas M. C...
What is it that makes John Sexton so special? It is a combination of qualities that makes him so un...
Jack Dawson, known to many at Michigan as Black Jack, taught at the Law School from 1927 to 1958. Mu...