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143rd University Of Notre Dame Commencement And Mass Program, University Of Notre Dame Aug 1988

143rd University Of Notre Dame Commencement And Mass Program, University Of Notre Dame

Commencement Programs

143rd University of Notre Dame Commencement and Mass Program

Summer


Bulletin Of Information, University Of Notre Dame, The Law School 1989–90, Volume 84, Number 5, University Of Notre Dame Jul 1988

Bulletin Of Information, University Of Notre Dame, The Law School 1989–90, Volume 84, Number 5, University Of Notre Dame

Bulletins of Information

Notre Dame Law School

4 Notre Dame Law School

4 Honor Code

6 Foreign Law Study

7 Graduate Law Program

7 Joint Degree Programs

8 Requirements for Admission and Graduation

10 Fees and Expenses

10 Financial Aid Program

The Law Program

14 Student Activities

17 Curriculum

17 Course Descriptions

Appendix

26 Officers of Administration

26 The Law School Faculty

27 London Faculty

27 Practice Court Judges

28 Faculty Profiles

34 Endowed Chairs

34 The Joseph A. Matson Chair in Law

34 The John N. Matthews Chair in law

34 The William and Dorothy O'Neill Chair in Law

35 The Robert …


143rd University Of Notre Dame Commencement And Mass Program, University Of Notre Dame May 1988

143rd University Of Notre Dame Commencement And Mass Program, University Of Notre Dame

Commencement Programs

143rd University of Notre Dame Commencement and Mass Program including Law School awards


Hoynes Code, The, David T. Link Jan 1988

Hoynes Code, The, David T. Link

Hoynes Code

This code governs legal education at the University of Notre Dame in all programs and in all locations.


Law Library Guide 1988–1989, Kresge Law Library, Research Services Department Jan 1988

Law Library Guide 1988–1989, Kresge Law Library, Research Services Department

Law Library Guide

The Kresge Law Library Guide's informative content includes: library services, policies, and physical layout.


Library Budgeting For Law Librarians: A Selected Bibliography, 1965-1986, Dwight B. King Jan 1988

Library Budgeting For Law Librarians: A Selected Bibliography, 1965-1986, Dwight B. King

Journal Articles

This annotated bibliography of selected books and articles published from 1965-1986 lists sources from the general library literature and law librarianship of methods of budget preparation and presentation, library costs and performance measures as they relate to budgeting, and library bookkeeping and budget management.


Lawyers As Assimilators And Preservers, Thomas L. Shaffer, Mary M. Shaffer Jan 1988

Lawyers As Assimilators And Preservers, Thomas L. Shaffer, Mary M. Shaffer

Journal Articles

The United States, more than most nation-states, has a history of confrontations between one culture and another, and of law as a means of ending cultural confrontations. Again and again in America, our dominant Anglo-Saxon Protestant culture has dealt with an alien culture and, as the story is usually told, overcome it. The dominant culture has used the law to bring the vulnerable culture into conformity to what we have referred to as "the American way."

We want to suggest that such a legal figure has two ways of using his legal power to deal between cultures—ways that are different …


The Article Iii Judiciary In Its Third Century, Kenneth F. Ripple Jan 1988

The Article Iii Judiciary In Its Third Century, Kenneth F. Ripple

Journal Articles

Tonight we celebrate the memory of one of the great American jurists of this century, Robert A. Ainsworth, Jr. In this bicentennial year of our Constitution, it seems most appropriate that we honor the memory of Judge Ainsworth by reflecting on that part of the Constitution to which he exhibited so much devotion—article III, the judicial article.


Fisheries Management And Development In The Eez: The North, South, And Southwest Pacific Experience, William O. Mclean, Sompong Sucharitkul Jan 1988

Fisheries Management And Development In The Eez: The North, South, And Southwest Pacific Experience, William O. Mclean, Sompong Sucharitkul

Journal Articles

The establishment of Exclusive Economic Zones (EEZ's) has generated modifications of existing institutional arrangements and creations of new regional bodies to promote international cooperation in the conservation, management, and development of living resources of the sea. The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (the "Convention") has affected fisheries management by authorizing coastal States to extend their sovereign rights over living and non-living resources seaward up to the outer limits of 200-nautical-mile off-shore areas, measured from their coastlines which could be drawn as straight baselines. On a global basis, the areas within the exclusive economic zones of coastal …


Rule 11 In The Constitutional Case, Gary J. Saalman, Kenneth Ripple Jan 1988

Rule 11 In The Constitutional Case, Gary J. Saalman, Kenneth Ripple

Journal Articles

The 1983 amendments to the Rules of Civil Procedure arose from concern over the flood of litigation in recent years and its high costs to both litigants and the court system. Although the causes of this litigation explosion and the remedies are both many and complex, the pretrial stage of litigation and the standards governing attorney responsibility were considered major contributors to the problem and prime areas for reform. The drafters of the 1983 amendments sought to streamline the litigation process by increasing judicial oversight and deterring abusive or dilatory tactics by the bar. Some of the most significant changes …


Faith In The Republic: A Frances Lewis Law Center Conversation, Thomas L. Shaffer, Stanley Hauerwas, Sanford Levinson, Mark V. Tushnet, Harlan R. Beckley, Lewis H. Larue, Ann M. Massie, David K. Millon, R. Neville Richardson, O. Kendall White Jan 1988

Faith In The Republic: A Frances Lewis Law Center Conversation, Thomas L. Shaffer, Stanley Hauerwas, Sanford Levinson, Mark V. Tushnet, Harlan R. Beckley, Lewis H. Larue, Ann M. Massie, David K. Millon, R. Neville Richardson, O. Kendall White

Journal Articles

This is a spontaneous conversation discussing Hauserwas’ singular political theology in response to Levinson and Tushnet’s constitutional jurisprudence. It developed into a highly interesting debate concerning constitutional faith. This conversation was recorded at Washington and Lee’s Law Center on December 11, 1987.


Law Enforcement And The Separation Of Powers, Gerard V. Bradley Jan 1988

Law Enforcement And The Separation Of Powers, Gerard V. Bradley

Journal Articles

The underlying theory and internal coherence of separation of powers is examined. It is noted that the classic rationale for the separation of power is to prevent tyranny by placing execution of the laws in hands independent from those of the legislature. The author summarizes various opinions that contradict this rationale. For example, Synar stated that the legislature and the Executive were directly accountable to the people if they neglected interbranch checks between them. The separation of powers theory, which justifies the claimed enforcement prerogative, is examined from a constitutional perspective. The author also reports on the consequences of federalism. …


Dedication: Dean John O. Mudd, Thomas L. Shaffer Jan 1988

Dedication: Dean John O. Mudd, Thomas L. Shaffer

Journal Articles

Professor Shaffer writes this dedication to honor our former Dean Mudd. He highlights Dean Mudd’s contribution to the legal profession and public interest, as well as his ability to look around at what was going on around him and create change.


American Contract Law At The Turn Of The Century, Walter Pratt Jan 1988

American Contract Law At The Turn Of The Century, Walter Pratt

Journal Articles

Today, courts are finding agreements to be a contract that historically would have been found to be unenforceable. During the past century, when America became a modern urban society, contract law has underwent a major transformation. Economic expansion led to a new contracting practice of reduced specificity in the terms of the agreements. The judges recognized that the doctrines of the past were no longer adequate for the new commercial world, and modified the court doctrines to embrace this greater uncertainty in terms. This Article looks to the emergence of the doctrine of ‘good faith’ as the key to understanding …


Schiavone: An Un-Fortune-Ate Illustration Of The Supreme Court's Role As Interpreter Of The Federal Rules Of Civil Procedure, Joseph P. Bauer Jan 1988

Schiavone: An Un-Fortune-Ate Illustration Of The Supreme Court's Role As Interpreter Of The Federal Rules Of Civil Procedure, Joseph P. Bauer

Journal Articles

Let me identify the two basic theses of this paper. First, I believe that in the recent Schiavone v. Fortune case, the Supreme Court gave the Federal Rule of Civil Procedure under consideration there, Rule 15(c), an unduly restrictive reading. In this, the fiftieth year of the effective date of the Rules, it is particularly unfortunate to see any of the Rules given an unnecessarily grudging interpretation. My second assertion is that as a general matter, in interpreting the Federal Rules, courts should recognize that their role is different from the one they play in interpreting statutes or in applying …


The Catholic Tradition, Thomas L. Shaffer Jan 1988

The Catholic Tradition, Thomas L. Shaffer

Journal Articles

If you stand in the road near one of the on-campus Roman Catholic university law schools in the United States, you can probably see a church spire. You can squint past whatever fire wall or battlement or gothic tower there is on the law building and see the campus church. You can do this at Notre Dame, St. Louis, Creighton, San Francisco, Boston College, and San Diego. If you go inside one of these law buildings, you may find crucifixes, chapels, holy-water fonts, or a statute of Thomas More. But none of these things will tell you what those law …


Of Time Limits, Worksharing And Deferral: An Analysis Of Eeoc V. Commercial Office Products Co., Barbara J. Fick Jan 1988

Of Time Limits, Worksharing And Deferral: An Analysis Of Eeoc V. Commercial Office Products Co., Barbara J. Fick

Journal Articles

This article previews the Supreme Court case EEOC v. Commercial Office Products Co., 486 U.S. 107 (1988). The author expected the Court to address the following issue: When a state civil rights agency decides to defer processing an employment discrimination charge to the EEOC, has the agency "terminated" its proceedings so that the charge will be deemed filed with the EEOC for purposes of calculating the statute of limitations?


Unique, Novel, And Unsound Adversary Ethic, Thomas L. Shaffer Jan 1988

Unique, Novel, And Unsound Adversary Ethic, Thomas L. Shaffer

Journal Articles

The dominant ethic in the American legal profession in 1988 is the adversary ethic. The adversary ethic, in the words of the late Justice Abe Fortas, claims that "[l]awyers are agents, not principals; and they should neither criticize nor tolerate criticism based upon the character of the client whom they represent or the cause that they prosecute or defend. They cannot and should not accept responsibility for the client's practices." This ethic is the principal—and often the only—reference point in professional discussions. Although it is embedded in our professional codes, our cases, and our law offices, this Article argues that …


Christian Theology For Roman Catholic Law Schools, Thomas L. Shaffer, Robert E. Rodes Jr. Jan 1988

Christian Theology For Roman Catholic Law Schools, Thomas L. Shaffer, Robert E. Rodes Jr.

Journal Articles

Roman Catholic universities maintain law schools for theological purposes. This Article discusses the five steps to explaining the theological answer to why there are Catholic law schools—first, the presence of the law school is the presence of the church; second, the presence of the law school is the presence of service; third, the presence of the law school is a presence in the world; fourth, the presence of the law school in the world is enacted vicariously; and fifth, the presence of the law school in the world is a searching presence that reaches into the world to find out …


Actual Minds, Possible Worlds (Book Review), Thomas L. Shaffer Jan 1988

Actual Minds, Possible Worlds (Book Review), Thomas L. Shaffer

Journal Articles

Book review of: Actual Minds, Possible Worlds, by Jerome Bruner; Time, Narrative, and History, by David Carr; Law, Freedom, and Story: The Role of Narrative in Therapy, Society, and Faith, by John C. Hoffman; and Narrative and Morality, by Paul Nelson.


Reliance Interest In Marriage And Divorce, Margaret F. Brinig, June Carbone Jan 1988

Reliance Interest In Marriage And Divorce, Margaret F. Brinig, June Carbone

Journal Articles

The first part of this article examines the changing nature of reliance on marriage as the relationship between the spouses and the role of the family has changed. The second section defines the ‘reliance interest,’ as that term has been used to describe contract damages, discusses its application to marriage, and examines the implications for the role of ‘fault’ in the financial allocations to be made upon divorce. The third section describes the varying state reactions to the adoption of no fault divorce and assesses the ability of existing law to protect the reliance interest in marriage. Finally, this article …


The Legal Ethics Of Belonging, Thomas L. Shaffer Jan 1988

The Legal Ethics Of Belonging, Thomas L. Shaffer

Journal Articles

Socrates went around Athens telling law teachers and law students that their highest concern should be to be good people. And, he said, the next and consequent concern of the profession should be to show the citizens of Athens how to be good people. For Socrates, as for virtually all of classical moral philosophy and much of Jewish and Christian moral theology, ethical discussion is discussion about the good person. When we talk about Aristotle's man of practical wisdom, or when we talk about heroes, saints, role models, paragons, or professional examplars, it is the good person we are talking …


Implications Of The Coming Retreat From Roe V. Wade, Charles E. Rice Jan 1988

Implications Of The Coming Retreat From Roe V. Wade, Charles E. Rice

Journal Articles

In Thornburgh v. American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, the Supreme Court held unconstitutional Pennsylvania statutes which required that (1) pregnant women give "informed consent" to an abortion and that they be provided information as to the characteristics of their unborn child, the nature and risks of abortion and the availability of alternatives to abortion; (2) the attending physician must file detailed reports on abortions and the reports be made available to the public for copying, even though this could lead to public identification of the woman having the abortion; (3) that in post-viability abortions, the physician use the care …