2,503 research outputs found
Lewis F. Powell Jr. to John D. Feerick
Letter from Supreme Court Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr. (1972-1987) to Dean John D. Feerick, regarding his scholarly article on presidential inability.https://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/twentyfifth_amendment_correspondence/1016/thumbnail.jp
Reception and Dinner Honoring Lewis Franklin Powell, Jr.
Reception and Dinner Honoring Lewis F. Powell Jr. hosted by Virginia State Chamber of Commerce, The Marshall Room and Grand Hall of The Hotel John Marshall, Richmond, Virginia. Event took place following Justice Powell\u27s confirmation to the Supreme Court of the United States but before he was sworn-in as Associate Justice
Lewis F. Powell, Jr.
For Roger F. Jacobs,
With admiration and best wishes,
Lewis F. Powell, Jr.
1985https://scholarship.law.nd.edu/jacobs_sup_court/1007/thumbnail.jp
1972: Lewis F. Powell, Jr.
Lewis F. Powell Jr. is an Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court.https://scholarship.law.wm.edu/mwmedallion/1005/thumbnail.jp
1972: Lewis F. Powell, Jr.
Lewis F. Powell Jr. is an Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court.https://scholarship.law.wm.edu/mwmedallion/1005/thumbnail.jp
Political Warfare
Lewis F. Powell Jr. prepared this paper and submitted it to President Richard M. Nixon on a confidential basis while Powell served as a member of the President\u27s Blue Ribbon Panel on National Defense
Dean Steinheimer greets Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr.
Supreme Court of the United States Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr. greets Dean of the Washington and Lee University School of Law, Roy L. Steinheimer Jr., c. 1972. Person far left is unidentified. Location and photographer unknown.https://scholarlycommons.law.wlu.edu/steinheimer_photos/1005/thumbnail.jp
In Memoriam: Lewis F. Powell, Jr.
At the time of his resignation, Justice Lewis F. Powell, Jr. was justly praised as a moderate, flexible jurist - open-minded, suspicious of ideology, most often found at the center of a divided Supreme Court. Yet Justice Powell was a man of deeply conservative instincts. Suspicious of invitations to expand the scope of individual constitutional rights, he was a participant and even a leader in the Court\u27s reassertion of a federalism that emphasized deference to states and in its reinvigoration of restrictions on access to federal courts. His jurisprudence was all of a piece. Justice Powell\u27s reluctance to expand federal court protection of constitutional rights coexisted with an unusually personal sensitivity to the situations of individual litigants. He sought, by counseling federal judicial restraint, to acknowledge with respect and encourage the vitality of state and local communities, where he thought people could most richly flourish
In Memoriam: Lewis F. Powell, Jr.
At the time of his resignation, Justice Lewis F. Powell, Jr. was justly praised as a moderate, flexible jurist - open-minded, suspicious of ideology, most often found at the center of a divided Supreme Court. Yet Justice Powell was a man of deeply conservative instincts. Suspicious of invitations to expand the scope of individual constitutional rights, he was a participant and even a leader in the Court\u27s reassertion of a federalism that emphasized deference to states and in its reinvigoration of restrictions on access to federal courts. His jurisprudence was all of a piece. Justice Powell\u27s reluctance to expand federal court protection of constitutional rights coexisted with an unusually personal sensitivity to the situations of individual litigants. He sought, by counseling federal judicial restraint, to acknowledge with respect and encourage the vitality of state and local communities, where he thought people could most richly flourish
Justice Lewis F. Powell and the Jurisprudence of Centrism
A Review of Justice Lewis F. Powell, Jr by John C. Jeffries, Jr
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