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Legal Education

Michigan Law Review

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Full-Text Articles in Law

Legal Writings Of Edson R. Sunderland, Michigan Law Review Nov 1959

Legal Writings Of Edson R. Sunderland, Michigan Law Review

Michigan Law Review

The following bibliography, with some additions and corrections supplied to the editors, is reprinted by permission of Professor Sunderland's family who presented the original to him in 1957 on the occasion of his eighty-fourth birthday.


Oppenheim: Federal Antitrust Laws, Cases And Comments (Second Edition), Carl H. Fulda Nov 1959

Oppenheim: Federal Antitrust Laws, Cases And Comments (Second Edition), Carl H. Fulda

Michigan Law Review

A Review of Federal Antitrust Laws, Cases and Comments (Second Edition). By S. Chesterfield Oppenheim, assisted by Richard W. Pogue.


Michigan Legal Studies: A Review, Max Rheinstein Aug 1942

Michigan Legal Studies: A Review, Max Rheinstein

Michigan Law Review

To the knowledge of this reviewer, the relation between printers' wages and the development of the law has not yet been investigated. This problem is by no means so absurd as it may sound. The very principle of stare decisis presupposes the existence of the printing press, a high development of the art of indexing, a well-organized book trade and a price level under which reports and search books are accessible to the members of the legal profession. Treatises and other learned discussions cannot influence legal developments where printing costs are prohibitive. Yet, the extent to which a legal system …


Trusts-Restated And Rewritten, Harry W. Vanneman Jun 1936

Trusts-Restated And Rewritten, Harry W. Vanneman

Michigan Law Review

Two books were published during the past year which are of the greatest importance to those of the legal profession who are interested in the law of trusts. Professor Bogert's seven volumes appeared first, followed shortly by The Restatement of the Law of Trusts by the American Law Institute, of which Professor Scott, of the Harvard Law School, was the reporter. Professor Bogert, of the University of Chicago Law School, was a member of the Institute's Committee on Trusts. Since 1927, therefore, when the Institute began work on the Restatement of Trusts, Professor Bogert apparently has been working …