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Creator | Title | Description | Subject | Date |
76 |
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Flynn, John J. | Tribute: Daniel J. Dykstra: the Utah Years 1949-1965 | It is with humility and trepidation that I rise to recount Dan Dykstra's years as a teacher, leader, and friend of the University of Utah, its College of Law, his Utah colleagues, and his Utah students. Humility because there are those with us today who are better able to recall those years like his... | Memorial service; Essay; Law, faculty | 2000 |
77 |
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Flynn, John J. | University and human values: introspection | It is reported that Socrates, the patron saint of law professors and many other teachers, was convicted and sentenced to death by the people of Athens on a three-count indictment: for refusing to recognize the gods recognized by the state, for introducing other and new divinities, and for "corrupti... | | 1984 |
78 |
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Firmage, Edwin B. | Utah Supreme Court and the rule of law: Phillips and the Bill of Rights in Utah | The Utah Supreme Court in State v. Phillips denied the applicability of the freedom of speech provisions of the fist amendment (and by dicta any other provision of the Bill of Rights) as a protection of individual rights against state governments by way of the due process clause of the fourteenth am... | Utah Law; Utah Supreme Court; Free speech | 1975 |
79 |
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Firmage, Edwin B. | Violence and the gospel: the teachings of the Old Testament, the New Testament, and the Book of Mormon | A United Nations study estimates that the direct effects of an all-out nuclear exchange-the initial blasts, the consequent radiation, and the ensuing fires-would kill 1.1 billion people.1 Beyond those direct effects, indirect, radiation-related effects would create an unprecedented pandemic that wo... | Warfare; War; Deliverance | 1986 |
80 |
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Firmage, Edwin B. | Vladivostok and beyond: SALT I and the propects for SALT II | The tortuously constricted boundaries within which the Vladivostok agreement can be considered as an advance toward the goal of arms reduction and stability remind us once again that technology unconstrained by law inexorably limits that arena within which we enjoy the capacity to control our own f... | Arms control; SALT I; SALT II; Atomic negotiations | 1975 |
81 |
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Firmage, Edwin B. | War power of Congress and revision of the war powers resolution | The United States Congress enacted the War Powers Resolution to restore its constitutionally mandated control over the war- making process. By forcing the President to seek congressional approval for military activity in volatile situations, Congress hoped to avoid the abuse of the war power by the ... | Control; Delegation; Self-defense | 1991 |
82 |
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Firmage, Edwin B. | War powers and the political question doctrine | A fundamental and potentially healthy tension exists between democratic government, under which the majority ordinarily prevails, and judicial review, by which the judiciary may check unconstitutional actions of the political branches. A balance must be struck between the two concepts, or one could ... | Democratic; Federalism; Judicial | 1977 |
83 |
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Flynn, John J. | Which past is prolog? the future of private antitrust enforcement | For the past four decades, and despite doubts voiced 100 years ago by the principal draftsmen of the Sherman Act,' the primary enforcement of the federal antitrust laws has occurred through private litigation.2 | | 1990 |