Grandmother once said to me, Johnny boy, it ain\u27t as long as it has been. Stated another way, Grandma was telling me that there were not as many years to come in her life as had already passed. In some respects, that\u27s the way it is with one\u27s teaching career. There is a beginning, a middle, and then a something else. I write to briefly share a few personal comments regarding how I am thinking about what happens next in my evolving career. [..
A 1958 alumnus explores the differences between law school today and the law school of 40 years past...
In spite of a firm decision that my writing and speaking days were at an end, it is not possible for...
Jackie Robinson once said, A life is not important except in the impact it has on other lives. By ...
More than a decade after graduating from the University of Michigan Law School, I was invited to ret...
For a law school professor, the legal history of race could provide new legal theories for the 21st ...
I teach in classrooms where, ten years ago, I sat as a student. People who were my teachers are now ...
I am old enough to give my younger colleagues (and a few of my contemporaries) some advice. Study th...
Sometime ago, the New York Times reported that Erwin Griswold -former Dean of the Harvard Law School...
Every academic year, new law school faculty enter legal academia. Many of these new teachers are pra...
Next to fatherhood and my faith, teaching is what matters most to me, and yet it has been filled wit...
Tonight is a time to look back on your three years as law students, and look forward to your future ...
At a meeting of the Northeast Corridor in October, 1990, Paulette Caldwell wondered aloud whether bl...
In the past, law school graduates were molded into lawyers through along period of training. However...
Teaching law has its special pleasures. At Yale, they come in abundance, since our classes are small...
•Out of Retirement, One More Time: A Conversation with Professor Emeritus John W. Reed •Riding Off i...
A 1958 alumnus explores the differences between law school today and the law school of 40 years past...
In spite of a firm decision that my writing and speaking days were at an end, it is not possible for...
Jackie Robinson once said, A life is not important except in the impact it has on other lives. By ...
More than a decade after graduating from the University of Michigan Law School, I was invited to ret...
For a law school professor, the legal history of race could provide new legal theories for the 21st ...
I teach in classrooms where, ten years ago, I sat as a student. People who were my teachers are now ...
I am old enough to give my younger colleagues (and a few of my contemporaries) some advice. Study th...
Sometime ago, the New York Times reported that Erwin Griswold -former Dean of the Harvard Law School...
Every academic year, new law school faculty enter legal academia. Many of these new teachers are pra...
Next to fatherhood and my faith, teaching is what matters most to me, and yet it has been filled wit...
Tonight is a time to look back on your three years as law students, and look forward to your future ...
At a meeting of the Northeast Corridor in October, 1990, Paulette Caldwell wondered aloud whether bl...
In the past, law school graduates were molded into lawyers through along period of training. However...
Teaching law has its special pleasures. At Yale, they come in abundance, since our classes are small...
•Out of Retirement, One More Time: A Conversation with Professor Emeritus John W. Reed •Riding Off i...
A 1958 alumnus explores the differences between law school today and the law school of 40 years past...
In spite of a firm decision that my writing and speaking days were at an end, it is not possible for...
Jackie Robinson once said, A life is not important except in the impact it has on other lives. By ...