Abstract
I have tried to let this article reflect the qualities that made Dean Teitelbaum so distinguished in his calling. He was an irresistible teacher, an influential scholar, a solicitous colleague, a superb dean. He succeeded in those things because he turned all his intelligence and energy on them. More, he was attentive to the human beings around him. Not just to his students, colleagues, and staff, but to the people-the individual human beings-who lived under the law he studied. Dean Teitelbaum wrote about theory, but he thought about people.
Recommended Citation
Schneider, Carl E. and Teitelbaum, Lee E.
(2006)
"Life's Golden Tree:
EmPrcal Scholarship and American Law,"
Utah Law Review: Vol. 2006:
No.
1, Article 4.
Available at:
https://dc.law.utah.edu/ulr/vol2006/iss1/4