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Articles 1 - 30 of 30
Full-Text Articles in Law
The Development Of Legal Systems: The Ethiopian Experience, Robert Allen Sedler
The Development Of Legal Systems: The Ethiopian Experience, Robert Allen Sedler
Law Faculty Research Publications
A complete, modern legal system must be created in each of the "developing nations" of the world to meet the needs of rapid social and economic growth. The problems experienced in imposing a new legal system upon a "developing" society are frequently similar among the various nations. Professor Sedier discusses these problems of general legal development with respect to several new nations. His detailed analysis of the progress of the Ethiopian legal system brings into focus the common denominators of legal and societal evolution. He is particularly qualified to discuss the Ethiopian experience because of his former position as Assistant …
Book Reviews, Edward W. Kuhn President
Book Reviews, Edward W. Kuhn President
Vanderbilt Law Review
Lawyers and Their Work; An Analysis of the Legal Profession in the United States and England. By Quintin Johnstone and Dan Hopson, Jr. Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1967. Pp. x, 604. $10.
Legal Aid--Lay Control And Organizational Complexity Render Oeo Legal Service Program Unacceptable To New York Court--In Re Community Action For Legal Services, Inc., Michigan Law Review
Legal Aid--Lay Control And Organizational Complexity Render Oeo Legal Service Program Unacceptable To New York Court--In Re Community Action For Legal Services, Inc., Michigan Law Review
Michigan Law Review
The Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO) and the New York City Council Against Poverty approved the organization and the OEO funding of three legal service corporations as part of a comprehensive program to provide legal assistance to New York City's poor. According to the plan, the first corporation, Community Action for Legal Services, Inc. (CALS), was to approve proposed plans for setting up and operating neighborhood law offices with OEO funds and then to supervise and coordinate the agencies that sought to put those plans into operation. These agencies, operating as delegates of CALS, and under subcontracts with it, were …
Attorney's Fees: Where Shall The Ultimate Burden Lie?, James H. Cheek, Iii
Attorney's Fees: Where Shall The Ultimate Burden Lie?, James H. Cheek, Iii
Vanderbilt Law Review
Unfettered access to the courts is the cornerstone of the American concept of justice, yet even today we are far from achieving this ideal. Recently much progress has been achieved in improved legal services for the poor;' but the poor will never have completely free access to the courts unless the American rule that each litigant must bear the burden of paying his own attorney's fees is changed...
Since the first note of protest in 1925, a few writers, recognizing the intimate relationship between attorney's fees and full relief for the wronged party, have urged the adoption of some form …
Plan Changes In Law School, Jean Nance
Plan Changes In Law School, Jean Nance
William Harvey (1966-1971)
No abstract provided.
Right To Counsel In Criminal Tax Investigations, Norvie L. Lay
Right To Counsel In Criminal Tax Investigations, Norvie L. Lay
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Letter To Alumnus, William B. Harvey
Cataldo, Gillam, Kempin, Jr., Stockton, & Weber: Introduction To Law And The Legal Process, Joseph Lazar
Cataldo, Gillam, Kempin, Jr., Stockton, & Weber: Introduction To Law And The Legal Process, Joseph Lazar
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Introduction to Law and the Legal Process By Bernard F. Cataldo, Cornelius W. Gillam, Frederick G. Kempin, Jr., John M. Stockton, and Charles M. Weber.
Supplement--The Class Of 1951, Michigan Law Review
Supplement--The Class Of 1951, Michigan Law Review
Michigan Law Review
Communications between the faculty of the University of Michigan Law School and alumni have improved rather dramatically in recent years. The appearance of Law Quadrangle Notes in 1957 was followed in 1960-1961 by the organization of the Law School Fund and in 1962 by the first meeting of the Committee of Visitors. As a result of these and other activities, the faculty and the alumni are better acquainted. But, as is so often true, a little information seems only to generate the need for more.
In order to test the utility of comprehensive information about graduates, former Dean A. F. …
Ethics Of Advocacy, Alexander Holtzoff
For I.U.'S School Of Law Harvey Tells Of Future Changes, Jeanne Vanatta
For I.U.'S School Of Law Harvey Tells Of Future Changes, Jeanne Vanatta
William Harvey (1966-1971)
No abstract provided.
Prof. Willis Died Jan. 25 In Florida
Prof. Willis Died Jan. 25 In Florida
Hugh Willis (1942-1943 Acting)
No abstract provided.
Censorship Won't Solve Problems, Dean Of Iu's Law School Believes, Ed Moss
Censorship Won't Solve Problems, Dean Of Iu's Law School Believes, Ed Moss
William Harvey (1966-1971)
No abstract provided.
Class Of 1967 Fifteen Year Report, University Of Michigan Law School
Class Of 1967 Fifteen Year Report, University Of Michigan Law School
UMLS Alumni Survey Class Reports
This report summarizes the findings of a questionnaire sent to University of Michigan Law School alumni fifteen years after graduation.
Class Of 1967 Fifteen Year Report Alumni Comments, University Of Michigan Law School
Class Of 1967 Fifteen Year Report Alumni Comments, University Of Michigan Law School
UMLS Alumni Survey Class Reports
This addendum is a compilation of alumni responses to the open-ended comments sections.
Daniel Webster As Tocqueville's Lawyer: The Dartmouth College Case Again, R. Kent Newmyer
Daniel Webster As Tocqueville's Lawyer: The Dartmouth College Case Again, R. Kent Newmyer
Faculty Articles and Papers
No abstract provided.
The Attorney As Plaintiff: Tortious Interference With Contract And The Attorney-Client Relationship, Eugene Mullins
The Attorney As Plaintiff: Tortious Interference With Contract And The Attorney-Client Relationship, Eugene Mullins
Kentucky Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Hugh E. Willis, Former Faculty Member, Dies At 91, Leon H. Wallace
Hugh E. Willis, Former Faculty Member, Dies At 91, Leon H. Wallace
Hugh Willis (1942-1943 Acting)
This memorial resolution for Prof. Hugh E. Willis was written for the Faculty Council of Indiana University by Prof. Leon H. Wallace. An abridged version follows.
Ann Arbor And Legal Aid, James J. White
Ann Arbor And Legal Aid, James J. White
Articles
Since the leasing of its office in August 1965, the Washtenaw County Legal Aid Society has been open nearly 50 hours per week and has been staffed exclusively by second and third-year law students from the University of Michigan Law School. The bulk of the practice has been in family law--divorce, support, custody--but there have been a substantial number of creditor-debtor cases, a handful of misdemeanor defense cases, and a large batch of miscellaneous cases.
Book Review, Mort L. Kaplan
Book Review, Mort L. Kaplan
Cleveland State Law Review
Reviewing Albert Averbach and Charles Price, eds., The Verdicts Were Just: Eight Famous Attorneys Present Their Most Memorable Cases, Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Co., 1966
Women In The Law, James J. White
Women In The Law, James J. White
Articles
IN 1869 Belle A. Mansfield, reputedly the first female lawyer admitted to practice in the United States, was admitted to the state bar of Iowa. Others soon followed her and this dribble of women entering the legal profession has grown to a persistent and continuous trickle in the twentieth century, but it shows no signs of becoming a flood. At last count approximately 7,000 out of America's 300,000 listed lawyers were women. Since the practice of law-even in the most masculine and aggressive Perry Mason style-does not require a strong back, large muscles, or any of the other peculiarly male …
[Review Of] Richard A. Levine & George D. Horning, Jr., Manual Of Federal Practice, Sherman L. Cohn
[Review Of] Richard A. Levine & George D. Horning, Jr., Manual Of Federal Practice, Sherman L. Cohn
Georgetown Law Faculty Publications and Other Works
Today the federal court is becoming increasingly familiar to the average attorney. Gone is the day when federal practice was limited to a select bar in the largest cities. Going is the day when an attorney can economically and realistically limit himself to the state court practice. Social Security, government contract, tax, labor, federal tort matters now bring the federal presence into every hamlet. Every Congress increases that presence and the occasion for federal court litigation-our increasingly mobile society renders a diversity case more and more usual. Yet many attorneys outside the District of Columbia have not the slightest acquaintance …
Criminal Law--Lawyers--Fees--Attorney's Fees For Indigent Criminal Defendants, David Emerson
Criminal Law--Lawyers--Fees--Attorney's Fees For Indigent Criminal Defendants, David Emerson
Kentucky Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Preliminary Notes Toward A Study Of Judicial Notice, E. F. Roberts
Preliminary Notes Toward A Study Of Judicial Notice, E. F. Roberts
Cornell Law Faculty Publications
The author describes the common law as a "machine," with judges and lawyers as its working parts. He explains that its successful operation requires a kind of "intellectual adrenalin" in order to keep it responsive to its changing environment. This is the function of judicial notice. The author next examines the different views of judicial notice and points out that each is a reflection of the era in which it was created. He concludes that judicial notice is not a distinct doctrine like the hearsay rule, but rather is simply the art of thinking as practiced within the legal system.
Trademarks-Successful Plaintiffs In Trademark Infringement Actions Under The Lanham Act May Not Recover Attorney's Fees-Maier Brewing Co. V. Fleischmann Distilling Corp., Michigan Law Review
Trademarks-Successful Plaintiffs In Trademark Infringement Actions Under The Lanham Act May Not Recover Attorney's Fees-Maier Brewing Co. V. Fleischmann Distilling Corp., Michigan Law Review
Michigan Law Review
In an action for trademark infringement under the Lanham Act and for unfair competition, the District Court enjoined the defendant company from further use of the trademark and awarded the plaintiff $60,000 in attorney's fees. On appeal, held, reversed in part. The issuance of the injunction was upheld but the court declared that attorney's fees are not recoverable in trademark infringement cases prosecuted under the Lanham Act since Congress had not expressly provided for such awards.
Attorney-Client-Client's Right To Engage Out-Of-State Attorney For Advice Concerning Federal Claim Is A Privilege And Immunity Of National Citizenship--Spanos V. Skouras Theatre Corp., Michigan Law Review
Attorney-Client-Client's Right To Engage Out-Of-State Attorney For Advice Concerning Federal Claim Is A Privilege And Immunity Of National Citizenship--Spanos V. Skouras Theatre Corp., Michigan Law Review
Michigan Law Review
The state and federal courts, existing side by side within the boundaries of each state, separately control admission to practice law before their respective bars. Although membership in a state bar is generally a prerequisite for admission to the bar of a federal court, the two systems do function under separate and distinct ground rules, and they appear to have done so with a minimum of friction. However, the principal case is indicative of the problems that may arise when state policy on the right to practice law within the state conflicts with federal policy.
Unauthorized Practice Of Law-Union Program Of Hiring Attorneys Is Unauthorized Practice Of Law--Illinois State Bar Ass'n V. United Mine Workers Of America, Michigan Law Review
Unauthorized Practice Of Law-Union Program Of Hiring Attorneys Is Unauthorized Practice Of Law--Illinois State Bar Ass'n V. United Mine Workers Of America, Michigan Law Review
Michigan Law Review
District 12 of the United Mine Workers (UMW) employed an attorney on a salary basis to prosecute members' claims under the Workmen's Compensation Act. Members were free to employ other counsel, but if they sought help from the union lawyer, the union agreed not to interfere with the attorney-client relationship. The attorney prepared his case from filed reports of the accidents, and, generally, his first contact with the union member was when they appeared before the Commission. Since the attorney was compensated by the union, the entire amount received in award or settlement went to the member. The Illinois Bar …
Dueling Over The Dual Practice, Henry G. Burke
Dueling Over The Dual Practice, Henry G. Burke
Maryland Law Review
No abstract provided.