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Articles 1 - 4 of 4

Full-Text Articles in Law

Bad News And Good News, John W. Reed Jan 1975

Bad News And Good News, John W. Reed

Other Publications

Law schools do one thing superbly well: they teach the intellectual skills of reasoning, of distinction drawing, of deductive and inductive logic, of anlysis and synthesis. These are heavily verbal skills, at least in the context in which lawyers employ them, and students are tested for their mastery of these skills by written examinations. If one does well, he or she is placed on the law review, where these particular skills are honed even further.


Substantive Use Of Prior Inconsistent Statements Under The Federal Rules Of Evidence, Walker Jameson Blakey Jan 1975

Substantive Use Of Prior Inconsistent Statements Under The Federal Rules Of Evidence, Walker Jameson Blakey

Kentucky Law Journal

No abstract provided.


Res Gestae And The Excited Utterance: An Explanation Of The Kentucky Approach, Henry L. Stephens Jan 1975

Res Gestae And The Excited Utterance: An Explanation Of The Kentucky Approach, Henry L. Stephens

Kentucky Law Journal

No abstract provided.


Kentucky Law Survey: Evidence, Robert G. Lawson Jan 1975

Kentucky Law Survey: Evidence, Robert G. Lawson

Law Faculty Scholarly Articles

This article provides a survey of Kentucky case law on evidence. The author discusses: the “Cotton” doctrine, hearsay and the reported testimony exception, learned treatises, and the best evidence rule.