Publication Date
1969
Abstract
It was with a distinct feeling of pleasure that I accepted the task of writing, from a student's viewpoint, about a former teacher and friend for whom I have much respect and admiration. Yet, as I began to write, I found it extremely difficult, to express adequately the real feeling that I have for Dr. Green.
Much is a matter of record. During the more than 40 years that he taught as a member of the University of Georgia Law School faculty, Dr. Green achieved both regional and national prominence as a noteworthy legal authority in his primary areas of interest, Evidence and Federal Jurisdiction. Dr. Green's scholarly works have been published in the leading law reviews of the country and his leadership in the field of evidence was recognized by his appointment by Chief Justice Warren as Reporter to the Committee on the Uniform Rules of Evidence of the Judicial Conference of the United States. He was designated Distinguished Professor of Law by the Alumni Foundation, and his work on the Georgia Law of Evidence has been a cornerstone of every Georgia lawyer's and judge's library for more than a decade. It is, however, the contribution of the more tangible part of the Green record-the influence that he had upon his students-that I want to discuss.
Recommended Citation
Bondurant, Emmet J. II
(1969)
"A Student's Memories of Dr. Green,"
Georgia Law Review: Vol. 4:
No.
1, Article 7.
Available at:
https://digitalcommons.law.uga.edu/glr/vol4/iss1/7