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The Supreme Court And The Constitution: The Continuing Debate On Judicial Review, Donald P. Kommers Jan 1985

The Supreme Court And The Constitution: The Continuing Debate On Judicial Review, Donald P. Kommers

Journal Articles

The three books reviewed in this essay are recent contributions to the growing literature of constitutional theory (Michael J. Perry, The Constitution, the Courts, and Human Rights (New Ha- ven: Yale University Press, 1982); Sotirios A. Barber, On What the Constitution Means (Baltimore and London: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1984); and John Agresto, The Supreme Court and Constitutional Democracy (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1984). They explore important questions about the role of the Supreme Court and the meaning of the Constitution.


Judicial Disability And The Good Behavior Clause, Walter F. Pratt Jan 1976

Judicial Disability And The Good Behavior Clause, Walter F. Pratt

Journal Articles

Justice Douglas's retirement ended months of speculation about his health and ability to remain on the Court. Coming at the end of a decade during which the fitness of judges was increasingly examined, his illness stimulated renewed consideration of judicial disability. Numerous remedies have been suggested. Two examples of such proposals in the present Congress are S. 1110 and H.R. 10439. S. 1110 would establish a Council on Judicial Tenure composed of judges in regular active service. The proposed Council would receive complaints about judges, conduct investigations, and report to the Judicial Conference of the United States. If a report …


Book Review, Clarence Emmett Manion Jan 1975

Book Review, Clarence Emmett Manion

Journal Articles

Reviewing: THE PRICE OF PERFECT JUSTICE. By Macklin Fleming. The Adverse Consequences of Current Legal Doctrine on the American Courtroom. Justice of the California Court of Appeals (Basic Books, Inc. New York).


Memorial Tribute To Roger J. Kiley, Thomas L. Shaffer Jan 1975

Memorial Tribute To Roger J. Kiley, Thomas L. Shaffer

Journal Articles

The editors and staff of the Notre Dame Lawyer pay tribute in this final issue of our fiftieth volume to the late Roger J. Kiley, Circuit Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit. In so doing, we honor him as the model of the Notre Dame lawyer.


Introduction, Joseph O'Meara Jan 1964

Introduction, Joseph O'Meara

Journal Articles

A symposium was held on February 29, 1964, devoted to the constitutional amendments proposed by the Council of State Governments. Very briefly these amendments would (1) vest power to amend the Constitution in State legislatures; (2) set up a "Court of the Union," composed of the chief justice of the supreme court of each of the 50 states, which would have authority to review "any judgment of the Supreme Court relating to the rights reserved to the states or to the people by this Constitution"; (3) take from the federal courts all jurisdiction over the apportionment of representation in State …


Natural Law And Everyday Law, Joseph O'Meara Jan 1960

Natural Law And Everyday Law, Joseph O'Meara

Journal Articles

Like most terms "natural law" has had, and has, a variety of meanings. In most of its meanings it touches scarcely at all the professional concerns of the lawyer but moves, rather, on a plane widely separated from his daily cares and duties. Thus, for the most part, natural law stands aloof from the urgent here-and-now with which lawyer and judge necessarily are preoccupied; it inhabits a world apart.

In these remarks I hope to suggest an approach to natural law which will make it useful on a day-to-day basis in the perplexities by which practitioners and judges constantly are …


The Supreme Court In The American Constitutional System: Foreword, Joseph O'Meara Jan 1958

The Supreme Court In The American Constitutional System: Foreword, Joseph O'Meara

Journal Articles

Our Symposium’s purpose is to examine the function of the Supreme Court and the conditions under which it necessarily operates, and in this way, we hope, to illuminate some of the far-reaching questions which are involved.


Appeal To The Conscience Of The Practicing Bar, Joseph O'Meara Jan 1940

Appeal To The Conscience Of The Practicing Bar, Joseph O'Meara

Journal Articles

The impact of the war will inevitably produce vast and profound, if not revolutionary changes in our economic and political arrangements, putting in jeopardy our democratic way of life. The ominous shadow of these changes that press upon us, due to the ascendancy of Force in so large a part of the world, gives rise to the question: What can we do about it? More particularly: What can the lawyer, as a lawyer, do about it? That leads to the deeper question of the role of Law in the successful functioning of the democratic process. In every state and city, …


Reviewing Judicial Review, Clarence Emmett Manion Jan 1937

Reviewing Judicial Review, Clarence Emmett Manion

Journal Articles

Address of Clarence E. Manion, Professor of Law at Notre Dame University School of Law, delivered at the mid-winter meeting of the Indiana State Bar Association January 16, 1937.


Review Of The Power To Please By J. W. Donovan, Thomas Frank Konop Jan 1931

Review Of The Power To Please By J. W. Donovan, Thomas Frank Konop

Journal Articles

This little book of sixty pages edited by H. L. Herschberg and dedicated to Henry Ford contains more meat than volumes many times its size. It contains quotations from the best and many interesting experiences and stories of this grand old lawyer. It is full of suggestions to lawyers and speakers and professional men in general.