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Salt Equalizer, Vol. 1999, Issue 3, Society Of American Law Teachers Dec 1999

Salt Equalizer, Vol. 1999, Issue 3, Society Of American Law Teachers

SALT Equalizer

Contents of this issue:

Theresa Glennon, SALT Honors Marjorie Shultz, Barney Frank at the Annual Awards Dinner, at 1.

Stephanie M. Wildman & Phoebe A. Haddon, Presidents' Column, at 2.

Ann Shalleck, SALT Members Initiate "First Monday" Programs, at 3.

Joyce Saltalamachia, SALT Board Meets Twice in San Francisco, at 6.

Howard Glickstein, Urgent Call to Keep the SALT Salary Survey Alive, at 7.

Sharon Hom, Joan Howarth, Eileen Kaufman, Madeline Plasencia, Judith Reed & Margalynne Armstrong, SALT's San Francisco Conference Re-Examines the Bar Exam, at 8.

Barbara Aldave, Bar Examinations: A Call for …


Ibpp Research Associates: The Reporters Committee For Freedom Of The Press, The Reporters Committee For Freedom Of The Press Oct 1999

Ibpp Research Associates: The Reporters Committee For Freedom Of The Press, The Reporters Committee For Freedom Of The Press

International Bulletin of Political Psychology

The article is a posting of a press release from The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press regarding the leadership of that organization.


Salt Equalizer, Vol. 1999, Issue 4, Society Of American Law Teachers Aug 1999

Salt Equalizer, Vol. 1999, Issue 4, Society Of American Law Teachers

SALT Equalizer

Contents of this issue:

Stephanie M. Wildman & Phoebe A. Haddon, Presidents' Column, at 1.

Joyce Saltalamachia, SALT's Membership Continues to Grow, at 2.


Salt Equalizer, Vol. 1999, Issue 2, Society Of American Law Teachers Apr 1999

Salt Equalizer, Vol. 1999, Issue 2, Society Of American Law Teachers

SALT Equalizer

Contents of this issue:

Stephanie M. Wildman & Phoebe A. Haddon, Presidents' Column, at 1.

Sue Bryant, Law Professors March to Protest Clinic Restrictions on Representing the Poor, at 1.

Theresa Glennon, SALT Annual Dinner: An Evening of Recognition and Inspiration, at 4.

Joyce Saltalamachia, SALT Board Meets in New Orleans, at 5.

Robert Cover and Trina Grillo Public Interest Law Conferences Inspire Students from New Hampshire to California, at 7.

Francisco Valdes, Shaming "Solomon": Resisting the Return to the De Jure Discrimination, at 11.

Francisco Valdes, Talking Points for "Solomon II" Repeal Letters* …


Salt Equalizer, Vol. 1999, Issue 1, Society Of American Law Teachers Mar 1999

Salt Equalizer, Vol. 1999, Issue 1, Society Of American Law Teachers

SALT Equalizer

Contents of this issue:

Howard A. Glickstein, 1997-98 SALT Salary Survey, at 1.

SALT Membership, at 1.


Austin Owen Lecture: Litigating The Holocaust, Michael J. Bazyler Jan 1999

Austin Owen Lecture: Litigating The Holocaust, Michael J. Bazyler

University of Richmond Law Review

The Austin Owen Lecture was established in honor of the Honorable Austin E. Owen through the generosity of his daughter, Dr. Judith O. Hopkins, W'74, and son-in-law, Dr. Marbry B. Hopkins, R'74. The Honorable Austin E. Owen attended Richmond College from 1946-47 and received his law degree from the University of Richmond School of Law in 1950. During his distinguished career, Judge Owen served as an Assistant U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia; a partner in Owen, Gray, Rhodes, Betz, Smith and Dickerson; and was appointed Judge of the Second Judicial Circuit of Virginia where he served until …


Legal Mechanisms Of Public-Private Partnerships: Promoting Economic Development Or Benefiting Corporate Welfare?, Nick Beermann Jan 1999

Legal Mechanisms Of Public-Private Partnerships: Promoting Economic Development Or Benefiting Corporate Welfare?, Nick Beermann

Seattle University Law Review

This Comment argues that while the public may ultimately benefit economically from public-private partnership development, the legal mechanisms used in public-private partnerships to skirt the constitution violate the public trust by (1) precluding the public from obtaining information regarding these projects; (2) denying the taxpaying public their right to participate in public choices and spending decisions that affect them; and (3) severely impinging on the public's state constitutional right to the referendum process. Furthermore, by allowing these mechanisms to exist, the Washington Supreme Court only furthers the violation of the public's trust, while simultaneously weakening the role of the judiciary …


Welcome, John D. Feerick Jan 1999

Welcome, John D. Feerick

Fordham Urban Law Journal

Welcome speech given by Dean Feerick.


Remarks Jan 1999

Remarks

Fordham Urban Law Journal

Remarks by Rudolph W. Guliani in memory of Bill Tendy.


The Spirit And The Law , Thomas W. Porter, Jr. Jan 1999

The Spirit And The Law , Thomas W. Porter, Jr.

Fordham Urban Law Journal

This Essay asserts that the practice of law is experiencing a spiritual crisis at both the personal and professional level. The Essay seeks to determine the role that the crisis in our paradigms has played in the crisis our personal and institutional lives. Although the crisis in our paradigms are not necessarily responsible for all our problems, our institutions and systems can cause us to be estranged from ourselves and that is what is happening today in the practice of law. We, as a profession, are beginning to see the limitations of our old paradigm, with retributive justice as its …


Honoring The Spirit In The Law: A Lawyer's Confession Of Faith, Melissa M. Weldon Jan 1999

Honoring The Spirit In The Law: A Lawyer's Confession Of Faith, Melissa M. Weldon

Fordham Urban Law Journal

This Essay is a lawyer's public proclamation of her beliefs, using the words of her faith. She explains how her faith permeates through her daily life, and is even relevant to her profession as a lawyer.


A Plumber's Guide To Lawyering, Stephen P. Wink Jan 1999

A Plumber's Guide To Lawyering, Stephen P. Wink

Fordham Urban Law Journal

We accept as the natural way that some must lose if others are to win; that some must go hungry, while others eat fully. But, Jesus taught that there is a third way that can arrest the cycle of violence and domination. A way that strikes a chord at the core of beings so that we may fully hear and see the other person we are dealing with. This is what is sometimes called nonviolent resistance. It springs from a conversation with another -- beyond just talking -- but a dialogue of being with another on a one to one …


The Profession Of Religion And Law, Ted Dotts Jan 1999

The Profession Of Religion And Law, Ted Dotts

Fordham Urban Law Journal

This essay provides definitions for the terms "religion," "law" and "profession." The professional bears the power to bid forth -- to announce, command, tell, declare and make aware. Religion is the power to relate. Law is the power to regulate. The author concludes that religion and law are givens of human living. The question is not whether to have one or the other. The question is how we live with these realities.


Damned To The Inferno? A New Vision Of Lawyers At The Dawning Of The Millennium, Robert J. Cosgrove Jan 1999

Damned To The Inferno? A New Vision Of Lawyers At The Dawning Of The Millennium, Robert J. Cosgrove

Fordham Urban Law Journal

This Article seeks to explain the negative perception the legal profession and lawyers have in the eyes of the American public. Disregarding common answers such as the disproportionate amount of influence lawyers have or high salaries and extravagant lifestyles, this Article argues that a cultural shift has led many Americans to see the law as an arbitrary device. Consequently, this belief is reinforced by lawyers and and perpetuated by law schools, leading to the negative perception of the legal profession. In the process, the Article addresses five main issues: the definition and purpose of the law, the republican theory of …


History Repeating Itself: The (D)Evolution Of Recent British And Antiterrorist Antiterrorism Legislation, Gregory C. Clark Jan 1999

History Repeating Itself: The (D)Evolution Of Recent British And Antiterrorist Antiterrorism Legislation, Gregory C. Clark

Fordham Urban Law Journal

Through a study of historical development, this note compares the current antiterrorism legislation in the United States and the United Kingdom. In Part I, the author first sets out the history of British attempts to counter terrorism looking specifically at Northern Ireland. He then discusses parallel American law noting the numerous civil rights violations that came with the laws of each country. In Part II, the author investigates provisions of the United State’s Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (“AEDPA”), and Britain’s Northern Ireland (Emergency Provisions) Act of 1998 (“EPA”) and Criminal Justice (Terrorism and Conspiracy) Act of …


Roundtable Discussion: The Future Of New York: 1898, 1998, Robert Himmelberg Jan 1999

Roundtable Discussion: The Future Of New York: 1898, 1998, Robert Himmelberg

Fordham Urban Law Journal

In this transcript of a symposium held at Fordham University School of Law on November 16, 1998 on the Future of New York, the six participants addressed the broad subject of what the future can bring as New York celebrated its centennial year. Professor Hammack spoke first. He focused on the future of “Greater New York” by discussing the creation of it, the hopes at the time and the changes that occurred since. Next, Professor Siegel addressed the challenge of the telecommunications revolution as New York faced an economic downturn, and possibly an impending national recession. He recounted some of …


A Lawyer's Mischellany: Scriptural Resources For Christian Lawyers, Joseph Allegretti Jan 1999

A Lawyer's Mischellany: Scriptural Resources For Christian Lawyers, Joseph Allegretti

Fordham Urban Law Journal

This Essay provides resources for spiritual sustenance and to help bridge the gap between what one does as a lawyer and one professes as a Christian. The author provides a dozen passages from Scripture --some from the Hebrew Scriptures, some from the New Testament -- that the author found relevant to the life and work of Christian lawyers. After each quotation, the author includes a few comments to spark further reflection.


Federalism For The New Millennium: Accounting For The Values Of Federalism, Dennis M. Cariello Jan 1999

Federalism For The New Millennium: Accounting For The Values Of Federalism, Dennis M. Cariello

Fordham Urban Law Journal

This Article explores the long and intricate history of federalism, the arrangement between the federal and local governments to serve the people, in the United States. It begins with the beginnings of federalism in pre-colonial times and continues to discuss how recent Supreme Court decisions have failed to articulate a cohesive test for federalism issues. Ultimately, the Article proposes a method for resolving federalism disputes. This method focuses on the sociopolitical and economic benefits of federalism as the Framers intended. Further, it argues that courts should inquire as to the utility of either the federal or local government regulating a …


History Repeating Itself: The (D)Evolution Of Recent British And Antiterrorist Antiterrorism Legislation, Gregory C. Clark Jan 1999

History Repeating Itself: The (D)Evolution Of Recent British And Antiterrorist Antiterrorism Legislation, Gregory C. Clark

Fordham Urban Law Journal

Through a study of historical development, this note compares the current antiterrorism legislation in the United States and the United Kingdom. In Part I, the author first sets out the history of British attempts to counter terrorism looking specifically at Northern Ireland. He then discusses parallel American law noting the numerous civil rights violations that came with the laws of each country. In Part II, the author investigates provisions of the United States’ Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (“AEDPA”), and Britain’s Northern Ireland (Emergency Provisions) Act of 1998 (“EPA”) and Criminal Justice (Terrorism and Conspiracy) Act of …


Identification Of The Unknown Soldier And The Fight For The Right To Anonymity: The Human Genome Project And Implications Of A National Dna Database, Kelly S. Erbes Jan 1999

Identification Of The Unknown Soldier And The Fight For The Right To Anonymity: The Human Genome Project And Implications Of A National Dna Database, Kelly S. Erbes

Cleveland State Law Review

The focus of this writing is the use of DNA for identification purposes and the issues that arise when genetic traits and/or predisposition to physical or mental conditions are linked to the individual specifically, along with the implications of a national DNA database as a system of identification. It has become the general rule that it is not an unreasonable invasion of privacy to take DNA for the purpose of identifying criminal offenders through a DNA database. This writing will examine the potential for nonconsensual inclusion of nearly everyone into such a system, as well as the ramifications in the …