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Report Of The Dean 1981–1982, David T. Link Dec 1982

Report Of The Dean 1981–1982, David T. Link

1975–1999: David T. Link

Dean David Link provides a description of the state of Notre Dame Law School as it closes the 1981–1982 academic year. The elements covered in his report include: faculty, students, the London Programme, curriculum, administration, alumni, physical facility, and strategic planning complete with goals and objectives.


137th University Of Notre Dame Commencement And Mass Program, University Of Notre Dame Aug 1982

137th University Of Notre Dame Commencement And Mass Program, University Of Notre Dame

Commencement Programs

137th University of Notre Dame Commencement and Mass Program

Summer


The University Of Notre Dame Law School, Bulletin Of Information 1983–84, Volume 78, Number 2, University Of Notre Dame Jul 1982

The University Of Notre Dame Law School, Bulletin Of Information 1983–84, Volume 78, Number 2, University Of Notre Dame

Bulletins of Information

Notre Dame Law School

4 Notre Dame Law School

5 Foreign Law Study

7 Joint Degree Programs

7 Requirements for Admission and Graduation

10 Fees and Expenses

11 Financial Aid Program

The Law Program

14 Student Activities

16 Curriculum

16 Course Descriptions

Appendix

26 Officers of Administration

26 The Law School Faculty

27 London Faculty

27 Practice Court Judges

28 Faculty Profiles

33 Endowed Chairs

33 The Thomas J. White Chair in Law

33 The John N. Matthews Chair in Law

33 The Concannon Program of International Law

33 The Institute for Public Policy

34 The Thomas and Alberta White …


Enforcing The Federal-Indian Trust Relationship After Mitchell, Nell Jessup Newton Jul 1982

Enforcing The Federal-Indian Trust Relationship After Mitchell, Nell Jessup Newton

Journal Articles

The Mitchell decision has been criticized appropriately as breaking with precedent on both Court of Claims jurisdiction and Indian trust law. Assuming this break with tradition was intentional, however, this article will focus on Mitchell's effects on breach of trust litigation in the Court of Claims and the federal district courts. To provide an understanding of the state of the law at the time Mitchell was decided, the article begins with a discussion of the influential breach of trust cases decided before Mitchell. Next, Justice Marshall's analysis in the majority opinion will be examined in fuller detail. The article will …


137th University Of Notre Dame Commencement And Mass Program, University Of Notre Dame May 1982

137th University Of Notre Dame Commencement And Mass Program, University Of Notre Dame

Commencement Programs

137th University of Notre Dame Commencement and Mass Program


Natural Law And The "Is"-"Ought" Question: An Invitation To Professor Veatch, John M. Finnis Jan 1982

Natural Law And The "Is"-"Ought" Question: An Invitation To Professor Veatch, John M. Finnis

Journal Articles

This Article invites Professor Henry Veatch to consider some of Finnis' previous work. Finnis asserts that his work presents "serious questions" for those who interpret Aristotle and Acquinas in the way the Veatch does and invites Veatch to respond.


Christian Lawyer Stories And American Legal Ethics, Thomas L. Shaffer Jan 1982

Christian Lawyer Stories And American Legal Ethics, Thomas L. Shaffer

Journal Articles

My view of legal ethics rests on, or at least involves, a couple of biases. For one thing, I think of legal ethics as an ethical subject rather than as a legal subject. When it comes to "professional responsibility" I am more interested in morals than I am in law. In this (and in very little else), I am in agreement with Dean Monroe Freedman, who said, in a lecture dedicated to the memory of Pope John XXIII, that the question which interests him is whether a good person can be a lawyer. For Freedman, I think, and for me, …


Manual Of The Law Of Evidence, Geoffrey Bennett Jan 1982

Manual Of The Law Of Evidence, Geoffrey Bennett

Journal Articles

Reviewing: Phipson & Elliott, Manual of the Law of Evidence. 11th ed. London: Sweet & Maxwell. 1980. 376 pp.


Rico Civil Fraud Action In Context: Reflections On Bennett V. Berg, G. Robert Blakey Jan 1982

Rico Civil Fraud Action In Context: Reflections On Bennett V. Berg, G. Robert Blakey

Journal Articles

In Bennett v. Berg, the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, as a matter of "first impression in the Circuit Courts of Appeals," faced and resolved a number of significant issues in the construction of Title IX, the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (hereinafter "RICO") provisions of the Organized Crime Control Act of 1970. In Bennett, the plaintiffs, residents in a "life care" retirement village, sought treble damages and equitable relief under 18 U.S.C. § 1964 from a number of defendants, including named individuals, a not-for-profit corporation, the John Knox Village, attorneys, accountants, the firm of Snyder, …


Congress And The Supreme Court's Jurisdiction, Charles E. Rice Jan 1982

Congress And The Supreme Court's Jurisdiction, Charles E. Rice

Journal Articles

When a ruling of the supreme court meets with Congressional disfavor there are several remedies available to Congress. If the decision is not on a constitutional level, a later statutory enactment will suffice to reverse or modify the ruling. If, however, the Court's decision is an interpretation of a constitutional mandate, such as the requirement of the fourteenth amendment that legislative districts be apportioned according to population, then a statute could not reverse the decision because the statute itself would be subject to that constitutional mandate as defined by the Court.

The obvious method of reversing a Supreme Court interpretation …


Comparative Constitutional Law: Casebooks For A Developing Discipline, Donald P. Kommers Jan 1982

Comparative Constitutional Law: Casebooks For A Developing Discipline, Donald P. Kommers

Journal Articles

Comparative constitutional law is a developing area of legal scholarship. One sign of this development is the recent appearance of two casebooks, both published in 1979. Comparative Constitutional Law: Cases and Materials by Mauro Cappelletti and William Cohen, focuses primarily on the procedural rights of defendants from the United States and nine European jurisdictions. Comparative Constitutional Law. Cases and Commentaries by Walter F. Murphy and Joseph Tanenhaus, examines the constitutional interpretation of a large number of substantive issues in six contemporary constitutional democracies. Reviewing the two books together provides an opportunity not only to compare them as teaching tools but …


On Clandestine Warfare, Robert E. Rodes Jan 1982

On Clandestine Warfare, Robert E. Rodes

Journal Articles

Common moral judgments on many types of clandestine warfare, referred to by some as terrorism, seem to be more nuanced and less severe than our current legal judgments. This paper begins by offering a detailed typology of clandestine operations and measures to combat them, a few general reflections on the laws of war, and a critique of those laws as they now stand. It then proposes a substantial revision of the laws which govern clandestine warfare based on four basic principles of the laws and the morality of just war: the independence of jus in bello from the jus ad …


Moral Theology In Legal Ethics, Thomas L. Shaffer Jan 1982

Moral Theology In Legal Ethics, Thomas L. Shaffer

Journal Articles

I am talking at a Lutheran university and therefore should probably have some theses, some propositions that I could nail to the chapel door. But I'm afraid I have failed Martin Luther: I have only one thesis and it is not ready for a nail. It is still as much a question as a thesis. My question is whether there is any point in including moral theology in the study of legal ethics in the university. Let me be candid: I teach the typical required course in "professional responsibility," and I do a lot of writing on ethics, and I …


Article V And The Proposed Federal Constitutional Convention Procedures Bills, Kenneth F. Ripple Jan 1982

Article V And The Proposed Federal Constitutional Convention Procedures Bills, Kenneth F. Ripple

Journal Articles

Article V of the United States Constitution sets forth the respective powers of the states and Congress in the amendment process. At first blush, the amendment process outlined in article V appears uncomplicated and straightforward. Congress can propose amendments and determine whether ratification will be accomplished by state legislatures or state conventions. Three-fourths of the state legislatures or state conventions must ratify a proposed amendment before it becomes part of the Constitution. The history of the amendment process confirms the apparent simplicity of that provision of article V which empowers Congress to propose amendments. To date, all twenty-six amendments have …


The Legal Ethics Of Servanthood, Thomas L. Shaffer Jan 1982

The Legal Ethics Of Servanthood, Thomas L. Shaffer

Journal Articles

I would like mainly to talk with you about, a consequential question, and that is whether the ethics of the New Testament are of any value in discussing professional morality. Such a question is probably f value to Jews and Christians; the New Testament is mostly about Jesus of Nazareth and (1) professionals to whom Jesus is of ultimate importance might claim to find value for their lives in his life. And (2) the God of Jesus is the God of Israel. The moral principles of Jesus are the moral principles of Israel. The question is of value, too, I …


Symposium Proceedings: Congressional Limits On Federal Court Jurisdiction, Charles E. Rice Jan 1982

Symposium Proceedings: Congressional Limits On Federal Court Jurisdiction, Charles E. Rice

Journal Articles

Judge Sloviter: Professor Rice, your view of the constitutional scheme is that Congress has the power to make surgical excisions to the jurisdictions of the federal courts. I wonder if you would comment on what one of my colleagues might call the worst case scenario. That is, whether Congress could by legislation abolish all inferior federal courts and eliminate all Supreme Court appellate jurisdiction. What then would remain of the judicial power?


Four Issues In The Accreditation Of Law Schools, Thomas L. Shaffer Jan 1982

Four Issues In The Accreditation Of Law Schools, Thomas L. Shaffer

Journal Articles

Four issues that have become prominent in law school accreditation as the profession adjusts to changes in itself, education, and the flow of consumers of legal education are discussed: the demand for new buildings, student faculty ratios, restricting law school admission to "A" and "B" level students, and faculty tenure.


David Hoffman's Law School Lectures, 1822-1833, Thomas L. Shaffer Jan 1982

David Hoffman's Law School Lectures, 1822-1833, Thomas L. Shaffer

Journal Articles

The Baltimore lawyer and teacher David Hoffman (1784-1854), the father of American legal ethics, was also the first of the systematic American legal educators. He held one of the first appointments in this country as a university law professor (at the University of Maryland, 1814-43) and wrote the first American outline of the study of law. Joseph Story, in a contemporary review of the 1817 Course, called Hoffman's work "an honour to our country[,] . . . by far the most perfect system for the study of the law that has ever been offered to the public. " Chancellor James …


President's Page, Roger F. Jacobs Jan 1982

President's Page, Roger F. Jacobs

Journal Articles

Comments by Roger Jacobs, president of the American Association of Law Libraries on the 75th anniversary of the Law Library Journal.