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students hated his course, because they learned no law. Goldstein had failed the bar and had
never practiced a day in his life. I loved his course and seminars and was deeply influenced by his
approach to law.
Another professor who influenced my approach to law, but in a rather different way was Alex
Bickel, who taught me advanced constitutional law. He looked at our constitution politically and
structurally and had a coherent, if imperfect, theory of how the constitution should be interpreted.
Both of these mentors defied conventional labels, such as liberal or conservative.
The professor who had the most influence on my career choice was Telford Taylor, who
combined an active constitutional law practice with teaching and writing. Although we could not
have been more different in background and bearing—he was a tall, elegant WASP, had served as
a general in the Army, was the Chief Prosecutor at the Nuremburg Trials, always wore a suit and
tie, and was polite to a fault—we had much in common and became close friends and colleagues.
(So much for needing mentors of the same ethnicity, religion, race, gender, etc!) I consciously
tried to model my career (except for the Army part) after his.
Shortly after John Kennedy was elected president, rumors began to circulate that Taylor was
being considered to head the C.I.A. He took me aside one day after class and asked me, in
confidence, whether I would consider coming with him to Washington, if he were to get the
appointment, and serving as his executive assistant. I told him I would certainly consider such an
offer. Eventually President Kennedy appointed someone else, deeming Taylor too liberal for the
job. Years later, Telford and I discussed how different our lives would have been if we had both
joined the CIA. “One thing I know would have been different,” Telford quipped. “There would
have been no Bay of Pigs.”
Telford Taylor made me another offer, during my second year in law school, which I also could
not accept. He had been hired to go to Jerusalem to broadcast the trial of Adolf Eichmann, a job
for which he was eminently suited, having been the Chief Prosecutor of Nazi war criminals at
Nuremberg and also Chairman of the Federal Communications Commission. He asked me to
come with him to serve as his research assistant and translator. But I had just been elected Editor-
in-Chief of the Yale Law Journal and didn’t feel comfortable being away for so long. I declined
the offer, and have always regretted missing that important historical event. (Years later, I
observe and write about the trial of accused Nazi war criminal John Demjanjuk in Jerusalem.)
During law school I also developed a keen interest in the relationship between law and other
disciplines, such as economics and science—both physical and social. I worked as a research
assistant on Professor Calabresi’s groundbreaking article on law and economics, and a research
assistant to Professors Goldstein and Katz on their teaching and writing on law and psychiatry. I
eventually collaborated with Goldstein and Katz on a book entitled Psychoanalysis, Psychiatry and
the Law. Later I collaborated with Telford Taylor n several human rights projects.
During law school I also developed interests in civil rights, especially with regard to
desegregation. In college I had joined the NAACP and had participated in a bus protest to
Washington. In my second summer at law school I went to Howard University in Washington
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