By: Meredith E. Green* Green_LawReview_September2009 *J.D. candidate, December 2010, Wake Forest University School of Law. Many thanks to Professor Michael D. Green for his advice and helpful comments, my husband, Josh, for his clever insight, love, and support, and Daniel Moebs for his exacting editing skills and unfailing diplomacy.

By: W. Jonathan Cardi* Cardi_LawReview_September2009 * Dorothy Salmon Professor of Law, University of Kentucky. I would like to thank Mike Green, Bill Powers, and the Wake Forest Law School for bringing together such an auspicious group and for including even the inauspicious.

By: Victor E. Schwartz* Phil Goldberg** Christopher E. Appel*** SchwartzGoldbergAppel_LawReview_September2009 * Victor E. Schwartz is Chairman of the Public Policy Group in the Washington, D.C., office of the law firm of Shook, Hardy & Bacon L.L.P. He coauthors the most widely used torts casebook in the United States, PROSSER, WADE AND SCHWARTZ’S TORTS (11th ed. […]

By: Mark A. Geistfeld* Geistfeld_LawReview_September2009 * Sheila Lubetsky Birnbaum Professor of Civil Litigation, New York University School of Law. In addition to those who gave me helpful comments at the Symposium, I am also indebted to my colleagues in the New York City Torts Group for their instructive insights. © Mark A. Geistfeld.

By: Stephen D. Sugarman* Sugarman_LawReview_September2009 *Roger J. Traynor Professor of Law, University of California, Berkeley. Thanks to Christine Fujita (UC Berkeley School of Law 2009) for research and editing assistance.