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Articles 1 - 27 of 27
Full-Text Articles in Law
Future Appears Bright To Iu Law School Dean, Robert Rhoades
Future Appears Bright To Iu Law School Dean, Robert Rhoades
Sheldon Plager (1977-1984)
No abstract provided.
Moot Court Successes, Carl Gray Dinner Inaugurate Advocacy Program
Moot Court Successes, Carl Gray Dinner Inaugurate Advocacy Program
Sheldon Plager (1977-1984)
No abstract provided.
The Court Years 1939-1975: The Autobiography Of William O. Douglas (1980), Ralph S. Tyler
The Court Years 1939-1975: The Autobiography Of William O. Douglas (1980), Ralph S. Tyler
Washington Law Review
Few Americans would claim objectivity on the subject of William O. Douglas. He inspired powerful reactions. I start by stating my deeply held admiration for Justice Douglas, a respect nurtured at a distance and from his writings. His writings brought Douglas the man and Douglas the Justice close to many who never met him. His words show him to be a man who cared profoundly about the world, its people, his country, and the law. Decades of American law students, particularly those like me who studied law in the 1960's and 1970's, listened to Justice Douglas, whether he was in …
Mason Ladd--In Memoriam, Ronald L. Carlson
Mason Ladd--In Memoriam, Ronald L. Carlson
Scholarly Works
Mason Ladd's life in the law of evidence will never be stilled. The contributions are too thoughtful, too productive, too filled with impact for that ever to happen. In the galaxy of great figures that includes Wigmore, Clearly, Morgan, Maguire, Weinstein, McCormick, Louisell, and others, Dean Ladd's star shone brightly. The mix of insight, humor, and good will that he brought to teaching and scholarly writing is unmatched. The influence of Mason Ladd is perhaps best summarized by this tribute: You can lose a man like Dean Ladd by your own death, but not by his.
J. Reuben Clark: The Public Years. By Frank W. Fox, Robert E. Riggs
J. Reuben Clark: The Public Years. By Frank W. Fox, Robert E. Riggs
BYU Law Review
No abstract provided.
Dedication To The Honorable Charles Horowitz, Betty B. Fletcher
Dedication To The Honorable Charles Horowitz, Betty B. Fletcher
Washington Law Review
Those of us who have had the privilege to know and work closely with Charles Horowitz are most gratified that the Washington Law Review is dedicating this issue to him. It is particularly fitting from the standpoint of the law school and the law review, for he received his undergraduate degree and his law degree from the University of Washington. In law school he was both the honor graduate of the class of 1927 and president of the student board of editors of the law review (today's counterpart to the "Editor-in-Chief'). Since that time he has continued a close and …
Charles Horowitz: A Memoir, James M. Dolliver
Charles Horowitz: A Memoir, James M. Dolliver
Washington Law Review
To James A. Garfield's aphorism that the best education would be found with the student on one end of a bench and Mark Hopkins at the other I would add that the best education for a new member of the Washington Supreme Court is to have had Charles Horowitz at one end of the bench and the new member on the other. During the 42 years I have been a member of the court, through the implacable rules of seniority, he occupied one end of the bench and I the other. In the conference room, however, I always sat directly …
The Careful Scholarship Of Justice Charles Horowitz, Richard Cosway
The Careful Scholarship Of Justice Charles Horowitz, Richard Cosway
Washington Law Review
How appropriately the editors of this review have elected to dedicate some of its pages to honor a distinguished lawyer and judge whose legal career has closely paralleled the history of the publication itself. The name of Charles Horowitz appears on the masthead of the first two volumes, first as member and then as president of its editorial board. In later years, he has written for the Review, citing and analyzing decisions of the courts on which he later sat. That other Review authors have not always agreed with him will neither shock, wound, nor surprise him. After all, the …
Dedication To The Honorable Charles Horowitz, Betty B. Fletcher
Dedication To The Honorable Charles Horowitz, Betty B. Fletcher
Washington Law Review
Those of us who have had the privilege to know and work closely with Charles Horowitz are most gratified that the Washington Law Review is dedicating this issue to him. It is particularly fitting from the standpoint of the law school and the law review, for he received his undergraduate degree and his law degree from the University of Washington. In law school he was both the honor graduate of the class of 1927 and president of the student board of editors of the law review (today's counterpart to the "Editor-in-Chief'). Since that time he has continued a close and …
Charles Horowitz: A Memoir, James M. Dolliver
Charles Horowitz: A Memoir, James M. Dolliver
Washington Law Review
To James A. Garfield's aphorism that the best education would be found with the student on one end of a bench and Mark Hopkins at the other I would add that the best education for a new member of the Washington Supreme Court is to have had Charles Horowitz at one end of the bench and the new member on the other. During the 42 years I have been a member of the court, through the implacable rules of seniority, he occupied one end of the bench and I the other. In the conference room, however, I always sat directly …
The Careful Scholarship Of Justice Charles Horowitz, Richard Cosway
The Careful Scholarship Of Justice Charles Horowitz, Richard Cosway
Washington Law Review
How appropriately the editors of this review have elected to dedicate some of its pages to honor a distinguished lawyer and judge whose legal career has closely paralleled the history of the publication itself. The name of Charles Horowitz appears on the masthead of the first two volumes, first as member and then as president of its editorial board. In later years, he has written for the Review, citing and analyzing decisions of the courts on which he later sat. That other Review authors have not always agreed with him will neither shock, wound, nor surprise him. After all, the …
David D. Banta's Memorial To John R. Kerr, Blind Printer And Pioneer Editor In Johnson County, Indiana, John V. Bergen
David D. Banta's Memorial To John R. Kerr, Blind Printer And Pioneer Editor In Johnson County, Indiana, John V. Bergen
David Banta (1889-1896)
No abstract provided.
Maurice Holland (Photograph)
Maurice James Holland (1984-1985 Acting; 1986 Acting)
Maurice Holland in his office.
Allan Smith, Robben W. Fleming
Monrad G. Paulsen, Michael I. Sovern
Monrad G. Paulsen, Michael I. Sovern
Faculty Scholarship
Nothing made Monrad happier than bringing together two people he loved whose lives had not previously intersected and seeing a new friendship blossom. I owe some of the most satisfying relationships of my life to that wonderful taste. And I see its fruits all over this room today. Monrad would be overjoyed if he could see us all together.
A Tribute To J. Westwood Smithers, Robert R. Merhige Jr.
A Tribute To J. Westwood Smithers, Robert R. Merhige Jr.
University of Richmond Law Review
The Editorial Board of the University of Richmond Law Review respectfully dedicates this issue to the memory of J. Westwood Smithers, 1909-1981, member of the Law Faculty for thirty years and the first editor of the University of Richmond Law Notes, from which the University of Richmond Law Review developed.
Dedication: Robert I. Stevenson
Dedication: Robert I. Stevenson
University of Richmond Law Review
Robert I. Stevenson will retire from his position as Professor of Law at the University of Richmond School of Law at the end of the 1981-82 academic year. Mr. Stevenson joined the faculty of T.C. Williams in 1974 and since that time has shared his knowledge, his wit and his perspective with countless students who by chance or design enrolled in his courses. To acknowledge our deep appreciation for the contribution which Mr. Stevenson has made to the quality of legal education at T. C. Williams and to express our sense of loss at his impending departure, the Editorial Board …
Tribute: Robert I. Stevenson, B.J. Brabham
Tribute: Robert I. Stevenson, B.J. Brabham
University of Richmond Law Review
Professor Robert I. Stevenson must retire from teaching after this academic year. Students and faculty here at the University of Richmond Law School are saddened by the prospect. Many have gone to him personally, urging him to stay on for just one more year (hoping, without doubt, to see that "one more year" stretch into many more years). All have come away disappointed. Bob Stevenson believes that mandatory retirement, at least in this profession, is a good thing. He has seen too many excellent teachers, judges, and the like, continue on the job long after their excellence has vanished. And …
Tribute: Robert I. Stevenson, Sally Yates Wood
Tribute: Robert I. Stevenson, Sally Yates Wood
University of Richmond Law Review
I remember a fellow T. C. Williams law student turning to me at the end of a school semester and remarking: "I really did learn alot in Mr. Stevenson's Products Liability class, and you know, I swear I don't know how." I certainly had to agree that I, too, had learned alot, and I knew that this had been the case in all the courses I had had under Mr. Stevenson. (While at T. C. Williams, I managed to enroll in every class offered by Mr. Stevenson.) I did chuckle, however, at my friend's bewilderment about how or why he …
A Comment On The Burger Court And "Judicial Activism", Robert F. Nagel
A Comment On The Burger Court And "Judicial Activism", Robert F. Nagel
Publications
No abstract provided.
Alfred F. Conard And Allan F. Smith, Terrance Sandalow
Alfred F. Conard And Allan F. Smith, Terrance Sandalow
Other Publications
I am delighted to be able to participate in honoring Al Conard and Allan Smith, but I confess that I am puzzled as to why I have been invited to speak. I have not had either as a teacher. Moreover, their scholarly contributions are sufficiently removed from my areas of interest that I cannot evaluate the importance of their work. Nor was I in a good position to observe Allan's service as Dean or as Vice President for Academic Affairs.
Potter Stewart, Terrance Sandalow
Potter Stewart, Terrance Sandalow
Articles
In the spring of 958, Justice Harold Burton informed President Eisenhower of his decision to retire at the end of the Term, but, at the President's request, withheld public announcement until the latter was ready to name a successor. In September, Eisenhower appointed Potter Stewart, who became, at age forty-three, the second youngest person to serve on the Supreme Court since the Civil War.
Allan F. Smith—My 'Dean For A Day', Theodore J. St. Antoine
Allan F. Smith—My 'Dean For A Day', Theodore J. St. Antoine
Articles
It has been my good fortune to have served in more different roles in relation to Allan Smith than has any other person in this Law School. I was his student here longer ago than either of us would care to calculate. A decade and a half ago he recruited me for this faculty when he was Dean. Although the prospect of working closely with Allan had a good deal to do with my decision to leave active practice for teaching, that was not to be. The first morning of my return to Ann Arbor, I remember plugging in my …
Alfred Conard, Jeffrey O'Connell
Allan Smith--A Personal History, Lawrence B. Lindemer
Allan Smith--A Personal History, Lawrence B. Lindemer
Michigan Law Review
A tribute to Allan Smith
Alfred Conard, Guido Calabresi
Alfred Conard, Stanley Siegel