Everyone is entitled to a mistake or two-I have had my share. Probably my most glaring is that I attended that other law school, the one a little up north. So, when I first joined the faculty in 1974, Yale was, if not an alien, then certainly an unfamiliar, institution
I first heard Yale Kamisar\u27s name in the spring of 1977 while deciding where to go to law school....
It is difficult to imagine Michigan Law School without Yale Kamisar. He seems as much a part of the ...
Yale Kamisar was absent when I was first interviewed by a number of faculty members from the Univers...
Everyone is entitled to a mistake or two-I have had my share. Probably my most glaring is that I att...
About forty-five years ago, in my second year as a student at the Yale Law School, an extraordinary ...
Abe Goldstein was a boundary crosser. During his half-century on the faculty, he enriched the life o...
Gene Rostow was probably the greatest dean in the history of the Yale Law School. When he became dea...
The Yale Law School owes more to Simeon E. Baldwin than to any other person. This is not the debt of...
Yale Kamisar arrived in Ann Arbor in the fall of 1965, just after I graduated from the University of...
This occasion is a cause for me to relax the natural modesty that has otherwise restrained me from d...
My legal education began with Jerry Israel. During the fall of 1977, I was assigned to his section o...
It is an honor and privilege to contribute to this Issue of the Emory Law Journal remembering my lon...
The following remarks by Dean Post were delivered at Professor Burt\u27s funeral. The remaining Trib...
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...
I first heard Yale Kamisar\u27s name in the spring of 1977 while deciding where to go to law school....
It is difficult to imagine Michigan Law School without Yale Kamisar. He seems as much a part of the ...
Yale Kamisar was absent when I was first interviewed by a number of faculty members from the Univers...
Everyone is entitled to a mistake or two-I have had my share. Probably my most glaring is that I att...
About forty-five years ago, in my second year as a student at the Yale Law School, an extraordinary ...
Abe Goldstein was a boundary crosser. During his half-century on the faculty, he enriched the life o...
Gene Rostow was probably the greatest dean in the history of the Yale Law School. When he became dea...
The Yale Law School owes more to Simeon E. Baldwin than to any other person. This is not the debt of...
Yale Kamisar arrived in Ann Arbor in the fall of 1965, just after I graduated from the University of...
This occasion is a cause for me to relax the natural modesty that has otherwise restrained me from d...
My legal education began with Jerry Israel. During the fall of 1977, I was assigned to his section o...
It is an honor and privilege to contribute to this Issue of the Emory Law Journal remembering my lon...
The following remarks by Dean Post were delivered at Professor Burt\u27s funeral. The remaining Trib...
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...
I first heard Yale Kamisar\u27s name in the spring of 1977 while deciding where to go to law school....
It is difficult to imagine Michigan Law School without Yale Kamisar. He seems as much a part of the ...
Yale Kamisar was absent when I was first interviewed by a number of faculty members from the Univers...