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Full-Text Articles in Law
On The Constitution Of John H. Jackson, Ernst-Ulrich Petersmann
On The Constitution Of John H. Jackson, Ernst-Ulrich Petersmann
Michigan Journal of International Law
A Tribute to John H. Jackson
A Tribute To John Jackson, Debra P. Steger
A Tribute To John Jackson, Debra P. Steger
Michigan Journal of International Law
A Tribute to John H. Jackson
For John: A Tribute To A Scholar And Friend, Alan O. Sykes
For John: A Tribute To A Scholar And Friend, Alan O. Sykes
Michigan Journal of International Law
A Tribute to John H. Jackson
The House That Jackson Built: Restructuring The Gatt System, Robert L. Howse
The House That Jackson Built: Restructuring The Gatt System, Robert L. Howse
Michigan Journal of International Law
A Tribute to John H. Jackson
A Tribute To Theodore J. St. Antoine, Jeffrey S. Lehman
A Tribute To Theodore J. St. Antoine, Jeffrey S. Lehman
Michigan Law Review
The University of Michigan Law School was ninety-five years old when Ted St. Antoine first entered Hutchins Hall in 1951. In half as many years, he profoundly influenced the institution, its traditions, and its character. Ted came west to Michigan after studying philosophy and theology at Fordham College in New York City. He came with the proven abilities of a summa cum laude. He came ready to engage what he considered a more practical challenge: he wanted to become a lawyer.
Professor Theodore J. St. Antoine: A Legendary Figure, Harry T. Edwards
Professor Theodore J. St. Antoine: A Legendary Figure, Harry T. Edwards
Michigan Law Review
Ted St. Antoine's career as a law professor started more than three decades ago, in 1965, just after I had graduated from the University of Michigan Law School. I never had the good fortune to experience Ted in the classroom and I have always regretted that, for he has been a legendary teacher at the University of Michigan Law School. Indeed, even among those of us who graduated before his arrival at Michigan, Ted quickly gained a reputation as one of the finest classroom teachers ever to deliver a lecture in Hutchins Hall. He has graced his classes with brilliance, …
Ted St. Antoine: An Appreciation, Benjamin Aaron
Ted St. Antoine: An Appreciation, Benjamin Aaron
Michigan Law Review
In seeking to encompass the many facets of Ted St. Antoine's complex life and career, one thinks of other persons to whom he can be compared. John Maynard Keynes comes immediately to mind. Although Ted may never attain the worldwide renown and influence of the great British economist, the two men share several significant traits. Like Keynes, St. Antoine is an internationally prominent and respected scholar in his own field. Like him, also, Ted is a bon vivant and a lover of the arts. He can generally be relied upon for information about the best places to eat, especially in …
A Tribute To Professor Jerold Israel--My Teacher, My Co-Author, My Good Friend, Paul D. Borman
A Tribute To Professor Jerold Israel--My Teacher, My Co-Author, My Good Friend, Paul D. Borman
Michigan Law Review
A Tribute to Jerry Israel
Tribute To Jerry Israel, Jeffrey S. Lehman
Tribute To Jerry Israel, Jeffrey S. Lehman
Michigan Law Review
A Tribute to Jerry Israel
Random Thoughts By A Distant Collaborator, Wayne R. Lafave
Random Thoughts By A Distant Collaborator, Wayne R. Lafave
Michigan Law Review
A Tribute to Jerry Israel
A Tribute To Jerry Israel: A Friend With A Messy Office, Debra Ann Livingston
A Tribute To Jerry Israel: A Friend With A Messy Office, Debra Ann Livingston
Michigan Law Review
A Tribute to Jerry Israel
William J. Pierce, Lawrence J. Bugge
William J. Pierce, Lawrence J. Bugge
Michigan Law Review
A tribute to William J. Pierce
William W. Bishop, Jr.: Vita And Bibliography, Michigan Journal Of International Law
William W. Bishop, Jr.: Vita And Bibliography, Michigan Journal Of International Law
Michigan Journal of International Law
No abstract provided.
In Memoriam, John H. Jackson
In Memoriam, John H. Jackson
Michigan Journal of International Law
The University of Michigan law faculty has been saddened twice within six months by the deaths of colleagues. These events can only serve to remind us that not only are the lives of individuals transitory, but institutions also can be deeply affected by the mortality of their members.
William Warner Bishop, Jr.:Remembering A Gentle Giant, George P. Smith Ii
William Warner Bishop, Jr.:Remembering A Gentle Giant, George P. Smith Ii
Michigan Journal of International Law
The name William Warner Bishop, Jr. came into my vocabulary when I was a student at the Indiana University Law School in Bloomington in the early 1960s. There I enrolled in a course styled simply, "International Law," in which we used the course book entitled INTERNATIONAL LAW: CASES AND MATERIALS by Professor Bishop. The man Bill Bishop entered my life the Summer of 1965 in The Hague, Netherlands, at the Academie du Droit International where I was enrolled as a student. Among the several other courses which I had elected, the "General Course of Public International Law" given by William …
A Tribute From A Political Scientist, Harold K. Jacobson
A Tribute From A Political Scientist, Harold K. Jacobson
Michigan Journal of International Law
Political scientists who specialize in international relations knew Bill Bishop as the Editor-in-Chief of the American Journal of International Law, the author of the classic text in international law, and the teacher of our former students. A fortunate few of us, at Princeton before he joined the faculty of the Michigan Law School and at Michigan after his formal retirement, knew him as a superb teacher of international law to undergraduate students in political science courses. However we knew him, we had and have immense respect, admiration, and affection for him.
Recollections Of Professor Bishop As A Teacher Of Teachers Of Transnational Law, Covey T. Oliver
Recollections Of Professor Bishop As A Teacher Of Teachers Of Transnational Law, Covey T. Oliver
Michigan Journal of International Law
It will be interesting to me to see, should this modest tribute survive editing, whether others writing in this Symposium have also chosen to single out Bill Bishop's influence on a post-World War II generation of teachers of international public law, conflict of laws, comparative public law, and admiralty: men and women who have in considerable part been led, aided, or influenced by him into one or several aspects of the global normative science, named "transnational law" by one of his own great teachers (and mine), Philip C. Jessup.' If others have also sounded this theme, reiteration of it can …
William W. Bishop, Jr.: A Great Life In The Law, Michael H. Cardozo
William W. Bishop, Jr.: A Great Life In The Law, Michael H. Cardozo
Michigan Journal of International Law
The career of William W. Bishop, Jr., provides a special opportunity to observe one of the ways, as Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. put it, of "living greatly in the law." His accomplishments must have brought great satisfaction to him, for he was recognized worldwide as one of the leading authorities and teachers in the field of public international law. That alone bespeaks a good life in the law.
True Michiganian, Moritoshi Fukuda
True Michiganian, Moritoshi Fukuda
Michigan Journal of International Law
At the beginning of January, 1988, the saddest news came from Betty Bishop in her letter informing me that her father, William W. Bishop, Jr., had passed away suddenly but peacefully at his home in Ann Arbor on December 29, 1987. His last act on this earth was feeding the birds and squirrels in his snowy garden. Then he sat down on the porch and apparently was struck down by a heart attack. He was 81 years old.
William W. Bishop, Jr.: A Law Teacher Whose Inward Happiness Was Reflected In His Relations With Students And Colleagues, James N. Hyde
William W. Bishop, Jr.: A Law Teacher Whose Inward Happiness Was Reflected In His Relations With Students And Colleagues, James N. Hyde
Michigan Journal of International Law
Bill Bishop's students and colleagues at Michigan showed their love and respect for him, which I, as a contemporary in age, shared. Like my father, Charles Cheney Hyde, I had associations with Bishop while lecturing there. Through these associations I developed my own interest in the Law School and its students. His colleague, Eric Stein, has emphasized the impact of his casebook and teaching. He refers to Bishop's "historical perspective and traditional systematic presentation, which formed the background for consideration of perpetual change," which Bishop saw and documented. In the Foreword to the Proceedings of a 1955 Summer Institute on …
Memorial To William W. Bishop, Jr., Richard B. Lillich
Memorial To William W. Bishop, Jr., Richard B. Lillich
Michigan Journal of International Law
Time, that everrolling stream, has taken Bill Bishop away, but his legacy will remain with us - as individuals and as a Society - forever. Many of his contemporaries and colleagues also have recorded their memories of the man. This memorialist, his collaborator on various joint ventures within and without the Society over the past decade and a half, saw Bill not so closely nor over so long a period, but from a different perspective perhaps no less worth recording.
A Tribute From A Private Practitioner, Rotraud M. Perry
A Tribute From A Private Practitioner, Rotraud M. Perry
Michigan Journal of International Law
William W. Bishop, Jr. was a great scholar in the field of international law, with a unique mind, an intensive understanding in his field, an industrious application to all problems which came before him, and an abiding affection for his students - which affection was reciprocated by a countless number. Year after year his voluntary international law classes had to be split in two because so many enrolled.
William W. Bishop, Jr.:My Saya, Myint Zan
William W. Bishop, Jr.:My Saya, Myint Zan
Michigan Journal of International Law
Bill Bishop to me was a Saya in the fullest sense of this Burmese word. Saya means a teacher who is at the same time a scholar, role model, guide, comforter, and friend. As a scholar and teacher he has imparted not only legal knowledge, but also intellectual honesty: a capacity to see and a sympathy to understand other points of view. What better role model can one give than to be a noted international legal scholar, a caring, conscientious, and affectionate person that he was? But it is in his role as a guide, comforter, and friend that he …
A Tribute To Wade Mccree, Allan F. Smith
A Tribute To Wade Mccree, Allan F. Smith
Michigan Law Review
A Tribute to Wade H. McCree, Jr.
Wade H. Mccree, Jr., Lee C. Bollinger
Wade H. Mccree, Jr., Lee C. Bollinger
Michigan Law Review
A Tribute to Wade H. McCree, Jr.
Wade H. Mccree, Jr., David L. Chambers
Wade H. Mccree, Jr., David L. Chambers
Michigan Law Review
A Tribute to Wade H. McCree, Jr.
Wade H. Mccree, Jr.: A Model Of Excellence, Harry T. Edwards
Wade H. Mccree, Jr.: A Model Of Excellence, Harry T. Edwards
Michigan Law Review
A Tribute to Wade H. McCree, Jr.
Wade H. Mccree, Jr.: Student Perspectives, Professor Mccree's Students
Wade H. Mccree, Jr.: Student Perspectives, Professor Mccree's Students
Michigan Law Review
A Tribute to Wade H. McCree, Jr.
The Quintessential Public Servant, Otis M. Smith
The Quintessential Public Servant, Otis M. Smith
Michigan Law Review
A Tribute to Wade H. McCree, Jr.
John W. Reed, Douglas W. Hillman