I knew Andy Walkover best as a student. I met him first in my evidence class at the University of Michigan. He was the sixties type in the left rear corner who, especially at first, was too often absent but had the most interesting things to say when he came to class. I did not realize it at the time, but Andy was just beginning to discover his vocation
Waggoner\u27s role in reforming law of donative transfers; heavy U-M representation in issue of a jo...
Rudolph Nottelmann, professor of law since 1927, becomes Professor of Law Emeritus this quarter, and...
•Out of Retirement, One More Time: A Conversation with Professor Emeritus John W. Reed •Riding Off i...
I knew Andy Walkover best as a student. I met him first in my evidence class at the University of Mi...
I knew Andy Walkover best as a student. I met him first in my evidence class at the University of Mi...
One of the pleasures of teaching, less frequently experienced than most of us care to admit, is the ...
In a tribute to Andrew Walkover, Dean James Bond revisits the first meeting he had with Professor Wa...
Yale Kamisar arrived in Ann Arbor in the fall of 1965, just after I graduated from the University of...
Tributes to Professor Andrew King upon his retirement from the University of Maryland School of Law
Eric Stein was one of the wisest, shrewdest, most broadly knowledgeable, and most benign human being...
More than a decade after graduating from the University of Michigan Law School, I was invited to ret...
When the BU School of Law community lost Professor Mark Pettit, Jr. last summer, we lost a great tea...
I first heard Yale Kamisar\u27s name in the spring of 1977 while deciding where to go to law school....
An obituary for Thomas J. Holdych, contracts and commercial law professor at the Seattle University ...
Yale Kamisar was absent when I was first interviewed by a number of faculty members from the Univers...
Waggoner\u27s role in reforming law of donative transfers; heavy U-M representation in issue of a jo...
Rudolph Nottelmann, professor of law since 1927, becomes Professor of Law Emeritus this quarter, and...
•Out of Retirement, One More Time: A Conversation with Professor Emeritus John W. Reed •Riding Off i...
I knew Andy Walkover best as a student. I met him first in my evidence class at the University of Mi...
I knew Andy Walkover best as a student. I met him first in my evidence class at the University of Mi...
One of the pleasures of teaching, less frequently experienced than most of us care to admit, is the ...
In a tribute to Andrew Walkover, Dean James Bond revisits the first meeting he had with Professor Wa...
Yale Kamisar arrived in Ann Arbor in the fall of 1965, just after I graduated from the University of...
Tributes to Professor Andrew King upon his retirement from the University of Maryland School of Law
Eric Stein was one of the wisest, shrewdest, most broadly knowledgeable, and most benign human being...
More than a decade after graduating from the University of Michigan Law School, I was invited to ret...
When the BU School of Law community lost Professor Mark Pettit, Jr. last summer, we lost a great tea...
I first heard Yale Kamisar\u27s name in the spring of 1977 while deciding where to go to law school....
An obituary for Thomas J. Holdych, contracts and commercial law professor at the Seattle University ...
Yale Kamisar was absent when I was first interviewed by a number of faculty members from the Univers...
Waggoner\u27s role in reforming law of donative transfers; heavy U-M representation in issue of a jo...
Rudolph Nottelmann, professor of law since 1927, becomes Professor of Law Emeritus this quarter, and...
•Out of Retirement, One More Time: A Conversation with Professor Emeritus John W. Reed •Riding Off i...