On November 12, 1975, Mr. Justice Douglas resigned as an active Associate Justice of the Supreme Court. Thus ended not only the longest but, in the minds of many, the most lustrous period of service on the Court. Racked with pain in an arm and leg resulting from a stroke suffered almost a year before, he had characteristically hung on in the hope that his remarkable will and recuperative powers would win out as they have so many times before. But the demands of the Court\u27s business could not wait for nature\u27s healing powers, and realist that he is, he stepped aside
Retirement celebrations are odd events. They are a mixture of joy and sadness, and that is emphatica...
Who can believe it? ‘The great dissenter’, the judge with a Facebook site dedicated to him,1 the per...
At its core, this project involves important questions concerning the allocation of political power....
JUSTICES MURPHY AND RUTLEDGE died, were buried, were mourned-and were replaced. Justice Douglas was ...
Supreme Court justices, by and large, are a pretty dull and anonymous lot to the average man. An occ...
Conceiving of a Supreme Court without Douglas, J. dissenting is almost like trying to ring a clapper...
Mr. Justice David Josiah Brewer died in March, 1910, after twenty years of service on the Supreme Co...
Justice Mary Muehlen Maring spent her last day at work at the North Dakota Supreme Court Friday, De...
The decision of the University of Washington Law Review to commemorate the twenty-fifth anniversary ...
Of 107 Justices in 205 years, only twelve have served longer than thirty years, and every long-servi...
Justice Mary Muehlen Maring, who has served as a Justice of the North Dakota Supreme Court for more...
FIVE CHIEFS: A SUPREME COURT MEMOIR. By John Paul Stevens. New York: Little, Brown \u26 Co. 2011. 29...
Few Americans would claim objectivity on the subject of William O. Douglas. He inspired powerful rea...
The Nebraska Law Review takes great honor in dedicating this issue to the memory of the late Mr. Jus...
During his thirty-five years of service on the Supreme Court of theUnited States, Justice Douglas ha...
Retirement celebrations are odd events. They are a mixture of joy and sadness, and that is emphatica...
Who can believe it? ‘The great dissenter’, the judge with a Facebook site dedicated to him,1 the per...
At its core, this project involves important questions concerning the allocation of political power....
JUSTICES MURPHY AND RUTLEDGE died, were buried, were mourned-and were replaced. Justice Douglas was ...
Supreme Court justices, by and large, are a pretty dull and anonymous lot to the average man. An occ...
Conceiving of a Supreme Court without Douglas, J. dissenting is almost like trying to ring a clapper...
Mr. Justice David Josiah Brewer died in March, 1910, after twenty years of service on the Supreme Co...
Justice Mary Muehlen Maring spent her last day at work at the North Dakota Supreme Court Friday, De...
The decision of the University of Washington Law Review to commemorate the twenty-fifth anniversary ...
Of 107 Justices in 205 years, only twelve have served longer than thirty years, and every long-servi...
Justice Mary Muehlen Maring, who has served as a Justice of the North Dakota Supreme Court for more...
FIVE CHIEFS: A SUPREME COURT MEMOIR. By John Paul Stevens. New York: Little, Brown \u26 Co. 2011. 29...
Few Americans would claim objectivity on the subject of William O. Douglas. He inspired powerful rea...
The Nebraska Law Review takes great honor in dedicating this issue to the memory of the late Mr. Jus...
During his thirty-five years of service on the Supreme Court of theUnited States, Justice Douglas ha...
Retirement celebrations are odd events. They are a mixture of joy and sadness, and that is emphatica...
Who can believe it? ‘The great dissenter’, the judge with a Facebook site dedicated to him,1 the per...
At its core, this project involves important questions concerning the allocation of political power....