Were it not for Jack, I probably would not be teaching at Columbia Law School today. Way back in 1983, Jack, then several years from emeritus status, determined to identify and recruit a prospective intellectual property scholar who would join him in building an IP program for Columbia, and might in the long run succeed him. Jack had read all the articles about copyright published by young scholars and would-be scholars, and then proceeded to contact some of the authors for interviews. The interview led, at least in my case, to an invitation to teach a session of Jack\u27s Business Torts class, as the intellectual property survey course was then called
When the editors of this issue told me of Professor Yale Kamisar\u27s decision to retire from full-t...
Writing a tribute for any beloved colleague who is retiring is a difficult experience. Writing about...
John McNeill, better known as Jack, died on January 18, 2016, after a lengthy battle with prostate c...
Were it not for Jack, I probably would not be teaching at Columbia Law School today. Way back in 198...
It is a pleasure to join in the dedication of this issue of the Washington Law Review to Professor E...
When I learned that the Editors of the Columbia Law Review were planning to dedicate this issue to P...
For almost thirty years Jack Huston has been a valued colleague and friend of mine who was particula...
I had the great fortune to work with John Pickering during my own stint as a young associate at Wilm...
This new well-deserved tribute to Professor Bermann as we now present to the arbitration world is sp...
Besides being brief, it is not apparent what one should say. No doubt due to my own upbringing, I ca...
John Ely\u27s life ended too soon, on October 25, a few weeks before his sixty-fifth birthday. Six m...
This dedication was in recognition of John E. Kennedy’s death. John E. Kennedy was a member of the C...
Kent Greenawalt was my colleague and friend for half a century. Over those years, we shared responsi...
In the year 1978, the 1976 Copyright Act had just entered into effect. Marshall Leaffer, whom this a...
An obituary for Thomas J. Holdych, contracts and commercial law professor at the Seattle University ...
When the editors of this issue told me of Professor Yale Kamisar\u27s decision to retire from full-t...
Writing a tribute for any beloved colleague who is retiring is a difficult experience. Writing about...
John McNeill, better known as Jack, died on January 18, 2016, after a lengthy battle with prostate c...
Were it not for Jack, I probably would not be teaching at Columbia Law School today. Way back in 198...
It is a pleasure to join in the dedication of this issue of the Washington Law Review to Professor E...
When I learned that the Editors of the Columbia Law Review were planning to dedicate this issue to P...
For almost thirty years Jack Huston has been a valued colleague and friend of mine who was particula...
I had the great fortune to work with John Pickering during my own stint as a young associate at Wilm...
This new well-deserved tribute to Professor Bermann as we now present to the arbitration world is sp...
Besides being brief, it is not apparent what one should say. No doubt due to my own upbringing, I ca...
John Ely\u27s life ended too soon, on October 25, a few weeks before his sixty-fifth birthday. Six m...
This dedication was in recognition of John E. Kennedy’s death. John E. Kennedy was a member of the C...
Kent Greenawalt was my colleague and friend for half a century. Over those years, we shared responsi...
In the year 1978, the 1976 Copyright Act had just entered into effect. Marshall Leaffer, whom this a...
An obituary for Thomas J. Holdych, contracts and commercial law professor at the Seattle University ...
When the editors of this issue told me of Professor Yale Kamisar\u27s decision to retire from full-t...
Writing a tribute for any beloved colleague who is retiring is a difficult experience. Writing about...
John McNeill, better known as Jack, died on January 18, 2016, after a lengthy battle with prostate c...