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2 May 2014, 5:31 pm by Guest Blogger
TCRR identifies the principal catalysts of the revolution as Lyndon Johnson, Hubert Humphrey, Richard Nixon, Everett McKinley Dirksen, and Dr. [read post]
2 May 2014, 5:31 pm by Guest Blogger
TCRR identifies the principal catalysts of the revolution as Lyndon Johnson, Hubert Humphrey, Richard Nixon, Everett McKinley Dirksen, and Dr. [read post]
14 Feb 2024, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
For the Balkinization symposium on Robert Post,  The Taft Court: Making Law for a Divided Nation, 1921–1930 (Cambridge University Press, 2024).Laura KalmanI’ve never thought him a great President, but I’ve always had a soft spot for William Howard Taft. [read post]
26 Mar 2008, 8:25 am
The following Presidents had no military experience whatsoever:   John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, John Quincy Adams, Martin Van Buren, Grover Cleveland, William Taft, Woodrow Wilson, Warren Harding, Calvin Coolidge, Herbert Hoover, Franklin Roosevelt, and Bill Clinton. [read post]
1 Jun 2007, 11:49 am
I have no idea whether Millard Fillmore or Calvin Coolidge were markedly better or worse for the country than Zachary Taylor or Warren Harding. [read post]
6 Mar 2024, 6:29 am by Jennifer González
Congress designated the first week of May in 1965 as Professional Photography Week, which President Lyndon B. [read post]
5 Sep 2010, 5:34 pm by Danielle Citron
The former are the well-known abolitionists, Frederick Douglas, William Lloyd Garrison, even John Brown; the triumphant and tragic politicians, Abraham Lincoln and Lyndon Johnson, and the relatively neglected Harry Truman; the lone dissenter, the first Justice Harlan, and the great Chief Justice, Earl Warren; the pioneering feminists, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. [read post]
20 May 2014, 6:08 am by Bruce Ackerman
Consider: the same lawyers who parse every word of the great statements by Abraham Lincoln and John Bingham during the First Reconstruction completely ignore comparable speeches by Lyndon Johnson and Hubert Humphrey during the Second Reconstruction. [read post]
12 Oct 2022, 5:01 am by Tyler McBrien
That year marked the founding of President Lyndon Johnson’s National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders, better known as the Kerner Commission after its chair, Illinois Governor Otto Kerner. [read post]
3 May 2022, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
One can only wonder how American history might have been different had the talented politician Lyndon Johnson not succumbed to his personal desires to name his friend Abe Fortas as Chief Justice and then Texas former Representative Homer. [read post]
10 Apr 2019, 6:51 am by Daniel Shaviro
Yesterday at the colloquium, Steve Bank of UCLA Law School (a former Chicago student of mine, way back in the day) presented a tax history paper concerning an interesting episode in modern U.S. tax law: the failed effort by the Kennedy Administration, as part of what became the 1962 tax act, to enact withholding for people’s dividend and interest income, in response to substantial under-reporting (especially for dividends). [read post]
2 May 2013, 9:31 am by Ronald Collins
  Answer: Tom Clark has always intrigued me because he is one of the least studied of the modern Justices, especially when it comes to the members of the Warren Court. [read post]
6 Apr 2014, 9:01 pm by Michael C. Dorf
When he makes his first appearance in Season 1, the simple-living Midwestern billionaire Raymond Tusk is a passable imitation of Warren Buffet. [read post]
9 Mar 2016, 8:10 am by Michael Gerhardt
Second, some people attach importance to the fact that in 1968 President Lyndon Johnson nominated Justice Abe Fortas to replace Earl Warren as Chief Justice and Homer Thornberry to take Fortas’s seat, but the Senate confirmed neither. [read post]
17 Mar 2021, 12:44 pm by Ellis Cose
After World War I, it quickly became clear that the war to make the world “safe for democracy” had not made America safe for equality. [read post]
3 Jun 2021, 9:01 pm by Leslie C. Griffin
The First AmendmentBecause the judges turned from the statute to the First Amendment, saying they had to examine the constitutional issue involved.The opinion was written by James Plemon Coleman, named to the court in 1965 by Lyndon Johnson. [read post]
24 Jul 2014, 9:01 pm by John Dean
During an Oval Office conversation on August 3, 1972, Ehrlichman told the president, “I’m going to talk to [Chief Justice Warren] Burger this week, and I would be inclined to indicate to him that this is to your advantage not to have the Ellsberg case tried until after the election. [read post]