The story of the famous Narragansett race track row of 1937 is taken as a point of departure for a series of essays on the principal legal problems growing out of it: Was Mr. O\u27Hara guilty of a criminal libel on Governor Quinn? Were the two orders of the racing board, removing Mr. O\u27Hara as manager and suspending the race track\u27s license, properly quashed by the Rhode Island Supreme Court? Was the governor\u27s proclamation of martial law valid? If it was invalid, what are the remedies of the Narragansett Racing Association, which owns and operates the track
The review of a book long out of print, over 110 years old and almost certainlynot soon to be reissu...
The author recommends In The Hands of the People to every high school or college civics instructor a...
It is certainly not surprising that America\u27s Unwritten Constitution is remarkably stimulating, i...
The story of the famous Narragansett race track row of 1937 is taken as a point of departure for a s...
Let no academic pundit recoil from this swift-moving volume because the title parodies a famous film...
Book review: The Constitution, Law, and American Life: Critical Aspects of the Nineteenth Century Ex...
Book review: The Constitution, Law, and American Life: Critical Aspects of the Nineteenth Century Ex...
Book review: The Tempting of America: The Political Seduction of the Law. By Robert H. Bork. New Yor...
This book is avowedly an attempt to reveal the story of political and economic strife which lies hid...
In the two volumes here under review we have a new and important contribution to the history of our ...
This is a scholarly work analyzing the history of the privilege against self-incrimination and its p...
Nebraska Press Association v. Stuart establishes the public’s right to attend criminal trials and th...
The Report of the President\u27s Committee on Civil Rights would rankas a notable document at any ti...
Book reviews by Aaron I. Abell, John W. Curran, Louis Charles Kaplan, Robert T. Molloy, R. W. Mullig...
Book review: Power and Policy in Quest of Law: Essays in Honor of Eugene Victor Rostow. Edited by My...
The review of a book long out of print, over 110 years old and almost certainlynot soon to be reissu...
The author recommends In The Hands of the People to every high school or college civics instructor a...
It is certainly not surprising that America\u27s Unwritten Constitution is remarkably stimulating, i...
The story of the famous Narragansett race track row of 1937 is taken as a point of departure for a s...
Let no academic pundit recoil from this swift-moving volume because the title parodies a famous film...
Book review: The Constitution, Law, and American Life: Critical Aspects of the Nineteenth Century Ex...
Book review: The Constitution, Law, and American Life: Critical Aspects of the Nineteenth Century Ex...
Book review: The Tempting of America: The Political Seduction of the Law. By Robert H. Bork. New Yor...
This book is avowedly an attempt to reveal the story of political and economic strife which lies hid...
In the two volumes here under review we have a new and important contribution to the history of our ...
This is a scholarly work analyzing the history of the privilege against self-incrimination and its p...
Nebraska Press Association v. Stuart establishes the public’s right to attend criminal trials and th...
The Report of the President\u27s Committee on Civil Rights would rankas a notable document at any ti...
Book reviews by Aaron I. Abell, John W. Curran, Louis Charles Kaplan, Robert T. Molloy, R. W. Mullig...
Book review: Power and Policy in Quest of Law: Essays in Honor of Eugene Victor Rostow. Edited by My...
The review of a book long out of print, over 110 years old and almost certainlynot soon to be reissu...
The author recommends In The Hands of the People to every high school or college civics instructor a...
It is certainly not surprising that America\u27s Unwritten Constitution is remarkably stimulating, i...