| Be a Better Lawyer by Being a Better Writer |
New York Law Journal |
2000 |
| Effect of Changes in Decisional Law On Other Cases Depends Upon Status When New Ruling is Made |
New York State Bar Journal |
1999 |
| Court of Appeals Defines ‘Altering’ For Purposes of the State Scaffold Law |
New York Law Journal |
1999 |
| Vicarious Liability of Motor Vehicle Owners Under V&TL § 388 Is Extensively Litigated |
New York State Bar Journal |
1998 |
| How Procedural Shortcomings Can Mean Failure in Appeals |
New York Law Journal |
1998 |
| The Trials (and Tribulations) of the Trial Lawyer: Solutions to Some Common Trial Problems |
New York State Bar Association |
1998 |
| Oh, Those Dastardly Trial Lawyers |
New York State Bar Journal |
1998 |
| The Vanishing American Jew |
New York Law Journal |
1997 |
| TV or Not TV: There Is No Question |
New York Law Journal |
1997 |
| The Omnibus Workers’ Compensation Act Reform Act of 1996, And Its Effect On The Dole-Dow Rule |
Trial Lawyers Quarterly |
1997 |
| Retroactivity And the Workers’ Compensation Law |
New York Law Journal |
1996 |
| The Harmless Error Rule as a Key Respondent's Argument |
New York State Bar Journal |
1996 |
| The Premises Security Case: It’s All A Matter of Notice, Notice, Notice |
New York State Bar Association |
1996 |
| Cross-Examination and Its Limits |
New York State Bar Journal |
1996 |
| Assumption of the Risk as a Bar to Recovery |
New York State Bar Association |
1995 |
| Excessive Zeal Can Ruin A Summation |
New York Law Journal |
1995 |
| The V&TL’s Emergency Vehicle Privilege: How Much Disregard is 'Reckless Disregard,'? |
Trial Lawyers Quarterly |
1995 |
| The Case Of The Missing Witness |
New York Law Journal |
1994 |