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Articles 1 - 30 of 83
Full-Text Articles in Entire DC Network
Nirvana, Josh Hockensmith
Untitled, Amy Snyder
Back Study, Jennifer Massey
Westhampton Green, Jeff Hall
Untitled, Kris Shonk
Headache, Inga Clough
Self P., Chris Foley
Two Appendices For Thomas G. Kaufman's 'Verdi And His Major Contemporaries', Linda B. Fairtile
Two Appendices For Thomas G. Kaufman's 'Verdi And His Major Contemporaries', Linda B. Fairtile
Verdi Forum
No abstract provided.
Abstract: Some Remarks On Stage Music In Dvorak's Last Operas And A Relationship With Verdi, Martin Chusid
Abstract: Some Remarks On Stage Music In Dvorak's Last Operas And A Relationship With Verdi, Martin Chusid
Verdi Forum
No abstract provided.
Verdi And The Metronome, Roberta Montemorra Marvin
From The Director's Desk, Martin Chusid
How Verdi's Serious Operas End, David Rosen
Abstract: Verdi's Patriarch And Puccini's Matriarch Or 'Through The Looking Glass And What Puccini Found There', Helen M. Greenwald
Abstract: Verdi's Patriarch And Puccini's Matriarch Or 'Through The Looking Glass And What Puccini Found There', Helen M. Greenwald
Verdi Forum
No abstract provided.
University Of Richmond Law Review
University Of Richmond Law Review
University of Richmond Law Review
No abstract provided.
Guardianship Laws: Reform Efforts In Virginia, Harriette Haile Shivers
Guardianship Laws: Reform Efforts In Virginia, Harriette Haile Shivers
University of Richmond Law Review
During the decade following 1978, six statewide initiatives addressed the need for reform in the Virginia guardianship system. In 1988, the General Assembly established a joint subcommittee to evaluate the status of guardianship in the Commonwealth and to make recommendations to enhance the existing program to ensure the protection of citizens who entrust their lives and property to the guardianship system. Additionally, prompted by the urgent need for a public response to the shortage of available guardians, the General Assembly directed the Department of Social Services to examine the possibility of reserving public guardianship for use only as a last …
Judiciary: Know Thy Place, Thomas L. Jipping
Judiciary: Know Thy Place, Thomas L. Jipping
University of Richmond Law Review
Alexander Hamilton wrote in The Federalist No.78 that the judiciary "has no influence over ... the purse."' Yet in Missouri v. Jenkins, the Supreme Court approved indirect judicial taxation. Hamilton wrote that the judiciary "will always be the least dangerous" and "beyond comparison the weakest" branch of government. Yet in Roe v. Wade, the Supreme Court created out of nothing a right to choose abortion, invalidated the abortion laws of all fifty states developed over more than a century, and shut millions of Americans out of the process of developing public policy on this important political issue. Hamilton wrote that …
Blood Bank And Blood Products Manufacturer Liability In Transfusion-Related Aids Cases, Dana J. Finberg
Blood Bank And Blood Products Manufacturer Liability In Transfusion-Related Aids Cases, Dana J. Finberg
University of Richmond Law Review
Can a blood bank or a blood products manufacturer be held liable if a patient contracts AIDS through a transfusion of blood or a blood product? And, if so, should the bank or manufacturer be held liable? As of February 1989, approximately 200 cases touching on this issue were pending in the United States.
Mireles V. Waco: The Supreme Court Prescribes The Bitter Pill Of Judicial Immunity And Summary Reversal, Linwood I. Rogers
Mireles V. Waco: The Supreme Court Prescribes The Bitter Pill Of Judicial Immunity And Summary Reversal, Linwood I. Rogers
University of Richmond Law Review
This language opened Justice Douglas' stinging dissent in the 1967 United States Supreme Court decision of Pierson v. Ray, holding that section 1983 of the Civil Rights Act did not abolish the common law doctrine of judicial immunity. Eleven years later, the Court expanded and redefined the scope of the doctrine of judicial immunity in Stump v. Sparkman. The Stump Court attached immunity to actions of a judicial nature taken by a judge in his judicial capacity where such actions were not taken in the clear absence of all jurisdiction. But rather than clarifying the doctrine of judicial immunity, the …
Annual Survey Of Virginia Law: Administrative Law, James N. Christman
Annual Survey Of Virginia Law: Administrative Law, James N. Christman
University of Richmond Law Review
This article covers changes made to the Virginia Administrative Process Act (VAPA) during the 1992 session of the General Assembly. It also covers selected recent cases from Virginia courts dealing with state administrative procedure decided between August 30, 1990 and September 17, 1992.
Annual Survey Of Virginia Law: Bankruptcy Law, Michael A. Condyles
Annual Survey Of Virginia Law: Bankruptcy Law, Michael A. Condyles
University of Richmond Law Review
This survey article reviews and analyzes legislative and judicial developments that have occurred in bankruptcy law between April, 1991 and April, 1992. The article is intended to alert the general practitioner to significant recent developments in the bankruptcy area. Legislative changes made to Virginia statutory law and federal bankruptcy decisions issued within the Fourth Circuit are the focus of this article.
The Paradox Of United State Democracy, C. A. Gearty
The Paradox Of United State Democracy, C. A. Gearty
University of Richmond Law Review
This program is about a paradox at the heart of American democracy. We take it for granted that elected officials, like President Bush and members of Congress, run America. In fact, many of the country's most important decisions are taken by nine unelected lawyers accountable to no one. It is a paradox which is increasingly under scrutiny as more and more Americans are coming to question the power of their Supreme Court.
Annual Survey Of Virginia Law: Legal Issues Involving Children, Robert E. Shepherd Jr.
Annual Survey Of Virginia Law: Legal Issues Involving Children, Robert E. Shepherd Jr.
University of Richmond Law Review
Three events in the past year significantly impacted the way the legal system treats children. First, the family court experiment being conducted under the auspices of the Supreme Court of Virginia and the Judicial Council was concluded. Second, the General Assembly established a state-wide, community-based, inter-agency system to deliver services to children and youth. Third, the Virginia Supreme Court promulgated the first set of statewide rules governing proceedings in juvenile and domestic relations district courts. The year's other developments were not as systemic or far reaching as those above, although recommendations flowing from the Youth Services Commission's' legislatively-mandated study of …
Annual Survey Of Virginia Law: Environmental Law, Theodore R. Kingsley, Carole M. Agee
Annual Survey Of Virginia Law: Environmental Law, Theodore R. Kingsley, Carole M. Agee
University of Richmond Law Review
This article addresses significant developments in Virginia law pertaining to air quality, water quality and solid and hazardous waste which have occurred between the publication of the 1990 survey and May 1, 1992.
The Supreme Court: Final Arbiter Of Our Nation's Legal Disputes, Strom Thurmond
The Supreme Court: Final Arbiter Of Our Nation's Legal Disputes, Strom Thurmond
University of Richmond Law Review
"I have had the opportunity to review twenty-three Supreme Court nominations during my thirty-seven years in the Senate."
University Of Richmond Law Review Index
University Of Richmond Law Review Index
University of Richmond Law Review
This is the index for Law Review Volume XXVI.
Unlocking The Chamber Doors: Limiting Confidentiality In Proceedings Before The Virginia Judicial Inquiry And Review Commission, Brian R. Pitney
Unlocking The Chamber Doors: Limiting Confidentiality In Proceedings Before The Virginia Judicial Inquiry And Review Commission, Brian R. Pitney
University of Richmond Law Review
In a Mississippi case, a judge imposed and collected criminal fines, then willfully and fraudulently documented the case as dismissed, keeping the money for himself. In California, the Commission of Judicial Qualifications removed a judge for prodding an attorney with a "dildo," grabbing a court commissioner by his testicles in a public hallway, and habitually making offensive sexual remarks at his office. A Massachusetts judge received public censure for making derogatory and obscene references to members of the bench and bar, becoming intoxicated and urinating in public, and setting unusually high bail for African-American defendants. After a Federal Bureau of …