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Full-Text Articles in Law
A Golden Anniversary, P. Thomas Distanislao Iii, Ann Elizabeth Reid
A Golden Anniversary, P. Thomas Distanislao Iii, Ann Elizabeth Reid
University of Richmond Law Review
No abstract provided.
Preface, John J. Hogan
Acknowledgements, Robert J. Farlow
Acknowledgements, Robert J. Farlow
University of Richmond Law Review
No abstract provided.
Preface, Christopher W. Bascom
Preface, Christopher W. Bascom
University of Richmond Law Review
No abstract provided.
Acknowledgements, Clint A. Nichols
Acknowledgements, Clint A. Nichols
University of Richmond Law Review
No abstract provided.
Preface, Tracey A. Theret
Foreword, Patricia E. Mealer
Foreword, Patricia E. Mealer
University of Richmond Law Review
This issue of the Annual Survey of Virginia Law is very special. It completes volume twenty-five of the University of Richmond Law Review. Initially, the Law Review was published by the faculty. However, the publication of volume three marked the beginning of the Law Review as a student-run publication.
From The Editors
University of Richmond Law Review
With this volume the Review proudly welcomes Dr. Harold G. Wren as the new Dean of the T. C. Williams School of Law. Dr. Wren succeeds M. Ray "Judge" Doubles, who unselfishly returned from retire- ment to serve as Interim Dean for almost an entire academic year. Dr. Wren has accepted a great challenge in becoming the Dean when many feel that bold and decisive steps need to be taken to insure that T. C. Williams continues as one of the forerunners of legal education in Virginia.
From The Editors
University of Richmond Law Review
This issue of the Review is dedicated to the memory of "Mr. B," professor, administrator, and friend of the law school for 50 years. This year's class was the first in half a century to explore the in- tricacies of property, wills and sales without the benefit of his socratic guidance. Though we did not know him as a professor or administrator, we knew him as a friend, and as an institution whose memory serves as an inspiration to those who would conscientiously undertake the study of the law.
Foreword
University of Richmond Law Review
The Review hails the entrance of the T.C. Williams School of Law into its second century of educative endeavor, and commends to its readership the awareness of the need for socio-legal interaction. That the law constitutes a significant regulator of interpersonal behavior is unquestionable. It is to be hoped, however, that our three interdisciplinary articles will help alleviate such jurisprudential myopia as might tend to overestimate the effectiveness of the law as an instrument of social control in the eyes of its disciples. In our changing society, the methodology and knowledge attributable to the social sciences must necessarily play an …