For almost thirty years Jack Huston has been a valued colleague and friend of mine who was particularly helpful in making my move from practice to teaching as smooth as possible. Jack was a unique colleague from another perspective--during his entire teaching career he was incredibly dedicated and loyal to the law school, often at considerable personal inconvenience and expense. Colleagues and deans could always count on Jack to carry the flag, rally the alumni, conceive and coordinate a CLE program, host visiting dignitaries, and otherwise put his fingers in the dike
The article that leads off this issue, Lessons from a Changing Japan, is based on John Owen Haley\...
It has been my good fortune to have enjoyed the friendship of Vernon Miller throughout the some fort...
And so my old friend Robert Sherwood Hunt (Bob, to me), after his distinguished career as a faculty ...
It is a pleasure to join in the dedication of this issue of the Washington Law Review to Professor E...
I met John in the fall of 2000, when he traveled to Washington to recruit new faculty at the annual ...
An obituary for Thomas J. Holdych, contracts and commercial law professor at the Seattle University ...
The dedication of this issue of the Washington Law Review to Professor Robert Meisenholder suitably ...
At an early point during the fifteen years that we were colleagues on the faculty of the University ...
Born in Chicago in 1918, Homer Clark was raised in the Long Island suburbs of New York City. After h...
Professor Marjorie Dick Rombauer has been associated with the University of Washington School of Law...
Yale Kamisar arrived in Ann Arbor in the fall of 1965, just after I graduated from the University of...
The teacher could boast only three or four years of maturity over his students; hence, he was vulner...
I recall vividly how, as a junior at Harvard College, I landed a coveted position on Professor Oglet...
Rudolph Nottelmann, professor of law since 1927, becomes Professor of Law Emeritus this quarter, and...
More than a decade after graduating from the University of Michigan Law School, I was invited to ret...
The article that leads off this issue, Lessons from a Changing Japan, is based on John Owen Haley\...
It has been my good fortune to have enjoyed the friendship of Vernon Miller throughout the some fort...
And so my old friend Robert Sherwood Hunt (Bob, to me), after his distinguished career as a faculty ...
It is a pleasure to join in the dedication of this issue of the Washington Law Review to Professor E...
I met John in the fall of 2000, when he traveled to Washington to recruit new faculty at the annual ...
An obituary for Thomas J. Holdych, contracts and commercial law professor at the Seattle University ...
The dedication of this issue of the Washington Law Review to Professor Robert Meisenholder suitably ...
At an early point during the fifteen years that we were colleagues on the faculty of the University ...
Born in Chicago in 1918, Homer Clark was raised in the Long Island suburbs of New York City. After h...
Professor Marjorie Dick Rombauer has been associated with the University of Washington School of Law...
Yale Kamisar arrived in Ann Arbor in the fall of 1965, just after I graduated from the University of...
The teacher could boast only three or four years of maturity over his students; hence, he was vulner...
I recall vividly how, as a junior at Harvard College, I landed a coveted position on Professor Oglet...
Rudolph Nottelmann, professor of law since 1927, becomes Professor of Law Emeritus this quarter, and...
More than a decade after graduating from the University of Michigan Law School, I was invited to ret...
The article that leads off this issue, Lessons from a Changing Japan, is based on John Owen Haley\...
It has been my good fortune to have enjoyed the friendship of Vernon Miller throughout the some fort...
And so my old friend Robert Sherwood Hunt (Bob, to me), after his distinguished career as a faculty ...