It has been my uniform practice never to read from a manuscript or use notes when I am speaking to an audience, but in speaking of so old and dear a friend I feel a certain inhibition of emotion that stands in the way of an adequate oral speech. Moreover, when I think of Dean Bates\u27 unswerving adherence to exact, accurate statement, his abhorrence of all exaggeration, of all overstatement, I feel that he would not be satisfied with one who followed the relatively loose method of oral statement instead of adhering to a carefully and meticulously prepared manuscript for every word of which he could vouch
This is probably the most difficult speech that I have ever had to make. I know this because I have ...
Gentlemen : The American Bar Association is to be congratulated on the organization of a Section of ...
Henry King and I were suite mates for 24 years. Even now, four months after his passing, I find it d...
There are people to whom any sense of fitness would assign a long life. Henry Moore Bates is one of ...
Henry Moore Bates, Professor Emeritus of Law and Dean Emeritus of the Law School, was born in Chicag...
It is with great sorrow that the Journal reports the death of Judge Henry Wade Rogers on August 16, ...
This issue of the Vanderbilt Law Review is dedicated to Mr. John Howard Moore. At the end of this cu...
•Cook Lecturer Stresses Historical Method •Former Prime Minister Discusses European Future •Baker Re...
From its opening in October, 1859, the Law School of the University of Michigan has been fortunate i...
When I started my first year at Harvard Law School, 17 years after Osborn did, I wasn’t looking for ...
I met John Mansfield in 1968 at the house of a mutual friend. A few months later I started Harvard L...
The address of Dean Henry M. Bates on academic life and the war, delivered at the opening of the 191...
It is, of course, a great and undeserved honor for me to be offering this year\u27s Horace E. Read M...
I first met George Palmer, nearly fifteen years ago, when I came to Ann Arbor to discuss the possibi...
The following is an excerpt from the Dean\u27s remarks to the graduating class of 2005. (See commenc...
This is probably the most difficult speech that I have ever had to make. I know this because I have ...
Gentlemen : The American Bar Association is to be congratulated on the organization of a Section of ...
Henry King and I were suite mates for 24 years. Even now, four months after his passing, I find it d...
There are people to whom any sense of fitness would assign a long life. Henry Moore Bates is one of ...
Henry Moore Bates, Professor Emeritus of Law and Dean Emeritus of the Law School, was born in Chicag...
It is with great sorrow that the Journal reports the death of Judge Henry Wade Rogers on August 16, ...
This issue of the Vanderbilt Law Review is dedicated to Mr. John Howard Moore. At the end of this cu...
•Cook Lecturer Stresses Historical Method •Former Prime Minister Discusses European Future •Baker Re...
From its opening in October, 1859, the Law School of the University of Michigan has been fortunate i...
When I started my first year at Harvard Law School, 17 years after Osborn did, I wasn’t looking for ...
I met John Mansfield in 1968 at the house of a mutual friend. A few months later I started Harvard L...
The address of Dean Henry M. Bates on academic life and the war, delivered at the opening of the 191...
It is, of course, a great and undeserved honor for me to be offering this year\u27s Horace E. Read M...
I first met George Palmer, nearly fifteen years ago, when I came to Ann Arbor to discuss the possibi...
The following is an excerpt from the Dean\u27s remarks to the graduating class of 2005. (See commenc...
This is probably the most difficult speech that I have ever had to make. I know this because I have ...
Gentlemen : The American Bar Association is to be congratulated on the organization of a Section of ...
Henry King and I were suite mates for 24 years. Even now, four months after his passing, I find it d...