Should Rodino Go to Court?
– New Republic (June 8, 1974).How Might Mr. Nixon Defend Himself?
– New Republic (June 1, 1974).On Mr. Jaworski’s Quarrel with Mr. Nixon
– New York Times (May 23, 1974).Excerpt: Special prosecutor Leon Jaworski’s complaint to the Senate Judiciary Committee that the White House is threatening his independence naturally reminds everyone of the quarrel the White House picked with Archibald Cox, Mr. Jaworski’s… More
Pornography, Censorship and Common Sense
– Reader's Digest (February 18, 1974).Commentary
– In Watergate, Politics, and the Legal Process. American Enterprise Institute (1974).Watergate and the Legal Order
– Commentary (January 1974).Excerpt: Months ago, when the scandals of the Nixon administration were fewer and relatively simpler, there was some self-serving talk of a commonalty of error among the Watergate perpetrators, as the arresting officers might have called them, and the radical… More
Impeachment
– New Republic (November 10, 1973).What Now?
– New Republic (November 3, 1973).The Tapes, Cox, Nixon
– New Republic (September 29, 1973).Education in a Democracy: The Legal and Practical Aspects of School Busing
– Human Rights 3 (1973).The Press and Government: Adversaries without Absolutes
– Freedom at Issue (May-June 1973).Reconsideration: Edmund Burke
– New Republic (March 17, 1973).The Overworked Court: A Reply to Arthur Goldberg
– New Republic (February 17, 1973).Civil Disobedience and the Duty to Obey
– Gonzaga Law Review 8, no. 2 (Spring 1973).Abstract: “At what point,” asks John Rawls in his celebrated recent book, A Theory of Justice, to which I shall make further reference, “does the duty to comply with laws enacted by a legislative majority . . . cease to be binding in view of… More
Citizenship in the American Constitution
– Arizona Law Review 15 (1973).Abstract: In the view both of the ancients and of modern liberal political theorists, the relationship between the individual and the state is largely defined by the concept of citizenship. It is by virtue of his citizenship that the individual is a member of… More
The “Uninhibited, Robust, and Wide-Open” First Amendment: From “Sullivan” to the Pentagon Papers
– Commentary (November 1972).Excerpt: In 1964, the Supreme Court decided New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, an important and novel decision of great consequence in the law of the First Amendment. Among other things, the Court declared the Sedition Act of 1798 unconstitutional, better than a… More
More on Quotas
– New Republic (October 28, 1972).Untangling the Busing Snarl
– New Republic (September 30, 1972).Will the Democrats Survive Miami?
– New Republic (July 15, 1972).The Constitution and the War
– Commentary (July 1972).Excerpt: It is frightening when out of the privacy of the Oval Room or of Camp David a decision emerges to invade Cambodia, bomb Laos or North Vietnam, or, as most recently, mine the harbor at Haiphong and risk a clash with the Russian navy. Made privately,… More
Powell’s Day
– New Republic (June 10, 1972).What’s Wrong with Nixon’s Busing Bills?
– New Republic (April 22, 1972).The Need for a War-Powers Bill
– New Republic (January 22, 1972).Commentary
– In Federal Regulation of Campaign Finance: Some Constitutional Questions, by Albert J. Rosenthal. Citizen's Research Foundation (1972).Sharing Responsibility for War
– New Republic (September 25, 1971).Review of “Justice Joseph Story and the Rise of the Supreme Court”
– New York Times Book Review (May 30, 1971).Book Review of Justice Joseph Story and the Rise of the Supreme Court, by Gerald T. Dunne (1971). Excerpt: To generations of American lawyers, Joseph Story has been an unavoidable but shadowy figure (shadowy in part because overshadowed by his contemporary,… More
The New Supreme Court: Prospects and Problems
– Tulane Law Review 45, no. 2 (1971).Excerpt: “The judiciary,” said Hamilton in the 78th Federalist, “has no influence over either the sword or the purse; no direction either of the strength or of the wealth of the society; and can take no active resolution whatever.” It… More
Congress, The President, and the Power to Wage War
– Chicago-Kent Law Review 48, no. 2 (1971).Excerpt: When the Constitutional Convention was debating allocation of the war power within the federal government George Mason of Virginia said that he “was against giving the power of war to the Executive, because not safely to be trusted with it; or… More
Judging the Chicago Trial
– Commentary (January 1971).Excerpt: Julius Hoffman, Thomas Foran, William Kunstler, Tom Hayden, David Dellinger, Rennie Davis, Bobby Seale, Abbie Hoffman, Jerry Rubin—these are, like Spiro Agnew, household names we owe to the benighted summer of 1968, though we have acquired them… More
On Pornography: Concurring and Dissenting Opinions
– with Stanley Kauffman, Wilson Carey McWilliams, and Marshall Cohen; Public Interest (Winter 1971).Excerpt: The civil libertarian position on obscenity is that if we forget about it, it will go away. We aren’t told to admire the king’s beautiful cloak. We are told not to care whether he has one on or not. Walter Berns is the little boy who said… More
The Courts: Need for Change
– New York Times (October 22, 1970).Excerpt: Nothing, at least nothing that is secular, changes more slowly than the ways of courts. Judges are traditionalists, and they ought to be. After all, the continuity of the society’s commitments is substantially in their keeping.
The Revolution of Unreason
– New Republic (October 17, 1970).We’ve Shouted Down Our Sense of Balance
– Washington Post (June 14, 1970).Excerpt: Among academics and other intellectuals, let alone “poets, yeggs and thristies,” it is not merely fashionable, it is required to speak apocalyptically of the country in crisis.
The Tolerance of Violence on the Campus
– New Republic (June 13, 1970).Review of “Justice: The Crisis of Law, Order and Freedom in America”
– New Republic (April 18, 1970).Book Review of Justice: The Crisis of Law, Order and Freedom in America, by Richard Harris (1970).
The Debate over School Desegregation: A Reply
– New Republic (March 21, 1970).Desegregation: Where Do We Go from Here?
– New Republic (February 7, 1970).Mr. Taft Rehabilitates the Court
– Yale Law Journal 79, no. 1 (November 1969).Abstract: Mr. Justice David Josiah Brewer died in March, 1910, after twenty years of service on the Supreme Court. On May 31, 1910, in accordance with a custom almost uniformly observed, there were proceedings in his memory in open court. It was the last day… More
Does It Stand Up?
– New Republic (November 1, 1969).What Is Happening to Morality Today?
– Yale Alumni Magazine (November 1969).Student Demands and Academic Freedom
– New Republic (September 20, 1969).How to Beat Crime
– New Republic (August 30, 1969).Close of the Warren Era
– New Republic (July 12, 1969).Mr. Justice Fortas
– New Republic (May 17, 1969).Wait a Minute!
– New Republic (May 10, 1969).Is Electoral Reform the Answer?
– Commentary (December 1968).Excerpt: For the first time since the Progressive era of sixty years ago, the American political system may be at a point of significant mutation. The Progressive era gave us women’s suffrage and the popular election of senators, without which the… More
Review of “The End of Obscenity”
– Commentary (November 1968).Book Review of The End of Obscenity, by Charles Rembar (1968). Excerpt: “Permissive decisions by the Supreme Court in obscenity cases constituted one of the main issues in the struggle over confirmation of Associate Justice Abe Fortas as Chief Justice. So… More
Pornography and the Courts
– Commentary (November 1968).Review of The End of Obscenity: The Trials of Lady Chatterley, Tropic of Cancer, and Fanny Hill, by Charles Rembar. Excerpt: “Permissive decisions by the Supreme Court in obscenity cases constituted one of the main issues in the struggle over confirmation… More
Fortas, Johnson, and the Senate
– New Republic (September 28, 1968).The Kennedy Cause
– New Republic (July 20, 1968).Review of “A Citizen’s Dissent”
– New Republic (June 22, 1968).Book Review of A Citizen’s Dissent, by Mark Lane (1968).
Crime, the Courts, and the Old Nixon
– New Republic (June 15, 1968).Senate Judiciary’s Abominable Crime Bill
– New Republic (May 25, 1968).The Belated Civil Rights Legislation of 1968
– New Republic (March 30, 1968).Review of “After the Assassination: A Positive Appraisal of the Warren Report”
– New Republic (March 23, 1968).Book Review of After the Assassination: A Positive Appraisal of the Warren Report, by John Sparrow (1967).
Spock-Coffin Case
– New Republic (March 2, 1968).Review of “Roosevelt and Frankfurter: Their Correspondence 1928-1945”
– New Republic (February 3, 1967).Book Review of Roosevelt and Frankfurter: Their Correspondence 1928-1945, edited by Max Freedman (1967).
Frankfurter and Friend
– New Republic (February 3, 1968).Supreme Court: Internal Security Cases
– New Republic (January 6, 1968).Supreme Court and Political Democracy
– F.R.D. 44 (1968).Review of “Six Seconds in Dallas”
– New Republic (December 23, 1967).Book Review of Six Seconds in Dallas, by Josiah Thompson (1967).
Return to Dallas
– New Republic (December 23, 1967).Premature Verdict on Warren
– New Republic (October 7, 1967).Lawyers and More Lawyers
– New Republic (September 23, 1967).Death Penalty Litigation
– New Republic (August 19, 1967).CBS and the Warren Report
– New Republic (July 15, 1967).Skelly Wright’s Sweeping Decision
– New Republic (July 8, 1967).Obscenity Cases
– New Republic (May 27, 1967).Antitrust Slowdown?
– New Republic (May 20, 1967).Review of “The Death of a President”
– New Haven Register (April 9, 1967).Book Review of The Death of a President, by William Manchester (1967).
Law and Prudence in the Powell Case
– New Republic (February 25, 1967).The Case for the Electoral College
– New Republic (January 28, 1967).Reexamining the Warren Report
– New Republic (January 7, 1967).Failure of the Warren Report
– Commentary (October 1966).Excerpt: The Warren Commission (known formally as the President’s Commission on the Assassination of President John F. Kennedy) was born of rampaging suspicions and worldwide controversy. It was charged “to evaluate all the facts and circumstances”… More
Is the Warren Court Too “Political”?
– New York Times Magazine (September 25, 1966).Excerpt: Earl Warren became Chief Justice of the United States on Oct. 5, 1953, by appointment of President Eisenhower. It was a sudden succession. Chief Justice Warren’s predecessor, Fred M. Vinson of Kentucky, had died unexpectedly that summer.
Civil Rights’ Dim Prospects
– New Republic (September 17, 1966).LBJ’s Civil Rights Bill
– New Republic (May 21, 1966).Forcing Desegregation through Title VI
– New Republic (April 9, 1966).Making the Best Use of the Police Force
– New Republic (March 12, 1966).After the Arrest: Interrogation and the Right to Counsel
– New Republic (February 12, 1966).The Voting Rights Cases
– Supreme Court Review (1966).Excerpt: Very few statutes can ever have been drafted with a warier eye to the prospect of litigation, or a keener intention to ward it off as long as possible, than the Voting Rights Act of 1965. It was enacted, indeed, as a substitute for litigation, which… More
Justice and Protection
– Mississippi Law Journal 37 (1966).Excerpt: The problem of law enforcement in the South, or in a current and not inaccurate phrase, “Jim Crow justice,” has come to be symbolized by a number of well-publicized killings in recent years. Medgar Evers, head of the NAACP in Jackson,… More
Judicial Review of Police Methods in Law Enforcement: The Role of the Supreme Court of the United States
– Texas Law Review 44 (1966).Excerpt: I have read my share of opinions in criminal cases-more, I have often thought, than my just share-and I have pored over my share of records, darting from witness to witness, from ambiguous question to incomplete answer-one such record seems fully… More
Review of “Invitation to an Inquest”
– Commentary (January 1966).Book Review of Invitation to an Inquest, by Walter and Miriam Schneir (1965). Excerpt: United States v. Julius and Ethel Rosenberg wasn’t the Dreyfus, the Mooney, the Sacco-Vanzetti case of the early 1950’s. But much has been written as if it… More
Homosexuality as Crime in North Carolina
– New Republic (December 12, 1965).Fighting Crime
– New Republic (September 18, 1965).Impeach Judge Cox
– New Republic (September 4, 1965).House and Senate Voting Bills
– New Republic (July 24, 1965).Liberals and John Lindsay
– New Republic (July 3, 1965).Voting Rights Bill–Third Edition
– New Republic (May 22, 1965).Speeding Up School Integration
– New Republic (May 15, 1965).Amending the Voting Rights Bill
– New Republic (May 1, 1965).Congress and the Poll Tax
– New Republic (April 24, 1965).The Voting Rights Bill Is Tough
– New Republic (April 3, 1965).Felix Frankfurter 1882-1965
– New Republic (March 6, 1965).Registering Negro Voters in the South
– New Republic (February 20, 1965).What Has Been Done Is Prologue: Carrying Out the Civil Rights Act
– New Republic (January 9, 1965).Felix Frankfurter
– Harvard Law Review 78 (1965).Excerpt: Since the beginning, nearly 100 men have been Justices of the Supreme the Court of the United States. Of these, a dozen–no more–have made their mark, so that their distinctive work is part of the American Constitution. Among the moderns,… More
Discrimination in Education
– In Discrimination and the Law, edited by Vern Countryman. University of Chicago Press (1965).Case of New York
– New Republic (December 26, 1964).Is the Federal Government Helpless?
– New Republic (December 26, 1964).Justice and the Franchise
– New Republic (October 31, 1964).Barry Fights the Court
– New Republic (October 10, 1964).Much More than Law Is Needed
– New York Times Magazine (August 9, 1964).Excerpt: If Americans are not convinced that the Civil Rights Act is just and moral, then it will go the way of prohibition and other laws violated, ignored and unenforceable. The first returns on the effectiveness of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 are in.… More
Battle over Brandeis
– New Republic (August 8, 1964).Civil Rights Act of 1964
– Commentary (August 1964).Excerpt: At a news conference in 1962, John F. Kennedy coined the phrase, “sound public constitutional policy.” It was an entirely original conception, a hybrid of constitutional law and public policy. Constitutional law is produced by the Supreme Court.… More
Supreme Court Fissures: Seeds of Discord in the New Majority
– New Republic (July 11, 1964).Reapportionment and the Courts
– New Republic (June 27, 1964).The Meaning of the Civil Rights Act
– In Civil Rights, edited by Grant S. McClellan. Hw Wilson Co. (June 1964).Integrated Cohabitation
– New Republic (May 30, 1964).After a Civil Rights Act
– New Republic (May 9, 1964).A Panel: The Proper Role of the United States Supreme Court in Civil Liberties Cases
– with D. Dorsen, P. Bator, C. Foote, and C. Reich; Wayne Law Review 10, p. 473 (1964).Bobby Baker’s Silence: Back to the Fifth
– New Republic (March 21, 1964).The Court Intervenes
– New Republic (March 14, 1964).Sleepers in the Civil Rights Bill
– New Republic (February 29, 1964).The Decade of School Desegregation – Progress and Prospects
– Columbia Law Review 64, no. 2 (February 1964).Excerpt: It is now nearly a decade since the Supreme Court handed down its first opinion in Brown v. Board of Education, the School Segregation Cases. Southern disaffection to the side, there are abroad in the land, by and large, two sets of attitudes about… More
Beyond Tokenism
– New Republic (January 4, 1964).Applied Politics and the Science of Law: Writings of the Harvard Period
– in Felix Frankfurter: A Tribute, edited by W. Mendeson, 1964.Liberals and Civil Rights
– New Republic (December 28, 1963).Civil Rights as Amended
– New Republic (November 16, 1963).Review of “A Commentary on the Constitution of the United States”
– Columbia Law Review 63 (November 1963).Book Review of A Commentary on the Constitution of the United States, by Bernard Schwartz (1963).
Civil Rights and the New Congress
– New Republic (August 3, 1963).Civil Rights Act of 1963
– New Republic (July 6, 1963).Civil Rights Boil-Up
– New Republic (June 8, 1963).Reapportionment & Liberal Myths
– Commentary (June 1963).Excerpt: In the decade since Earl Warren became Chief Justice of the United States, the Court over which he presides has embarked on three major enterprises of social reform—a number higher than the historical average for comparable periods, to say the… More
Crime and Reapportionment
– New Republic (April 6, 1963).The New Court
– New Republic (March 16, 1963).Review of “Portrait of a Philosopher: Morris R. Cohen in Life and Letters”
– Law Library Journal 56 (1963).Book Review of Portrait of a Philosopher: Morris R. Cohen in Life and Letters, by Leonora Cohen Rosenfield (1962).
Civil Rights: The Kennedy Record
– New Republic (December 15, 1962).The Great Apportionment Case
– New Republic (April 9, 1962).Democracy and the Private Citizen
– New Republic (February 5, 1962).Portrait of Justice Holmes
– New Republic (November 6, 1961).Integration–The Seven Lean Years
– New Republic (September 25, 1961).Communist Cases
– New Republic (June 19, 1961).Philosophy of a Legal Realist
– New Republic (April 24, 1961).Robert F. Kennedy: The Case against Him for Attorney General
– New Republic (January 9, 1961).The Durability of Colegrove v. Green
– Yale Law Journal 72 (1962).Excerpt: A certain tendency to animism affects lawyers when they talk about cases, and they communicate it to interested laymen. Animated cases rise, struggle, and conquer, or are vanquished by, other cases. And so Baker v. Carr is thought to have vanquished… More
Foreword: The Passive Virtues
– Harvard Law Review 75 (1961).Excerpt: The volume of the Supreme Court’s business is steadily on the rise. It seems to be, quite simply, a direct function of the birth rate. But the number of important and far-reaching issues offered up for decision in any single Term is, in some… More
Next President and Civil Rights
– New Republic (October 13, 1960).What the Founders Believed
– New Republic (July 18, 1960).Mr. Justice Black
– New Republic (March 14, 1960).Justices on Display
– New Republic (September 14, 1959).Court-Curbing Time
– New Republic (May 25, 1959).Review of “The Supreme Court from Taft to Warren”
– Journal of Legal Education 12 (1959).Book Review of The Supreme Court from Taft to Warren, by Alpheus Thomas Mason (1958).
Congressional Review of Passport Policy
– New Republic (December 29, 1958).Law and Reason
– New Republic (November 3, 1958).Inexplicable Document
– New Republic (September 29, 1958).Judicial Restraint and the Bill of Rights
– New Republic (May 12, 1958).The Court: An Indictment Analyzed
– New York Times Magazine (April 27, 1958).Abstract: The American people have always had a consuming and not very sympathetic curiosity about confidential advisers to their high officers of government. The real or supposed influence of such advisers — from Amos Kendall and the other members of… More
Review of “Mr. Baruch”
– Yale Law Journal 67 (1958).Book Review of Mr. Baruch, by Margaret L. Coit (1957).
Mr. Justice Frankfurter at Seventy-Six
– New Republic (November 18, 1957).Brownell’s Departure
– New Republic (November 11, 1957).A Communication: “Paths to Desegregation by Charles L. Black, Jr.”
– New Republic (November 4, 1957).Letter to the editor.
Legislative Purpose and the Judicial Process: The Lincoln Mills Case
– with Harry H. Wellington; Harvard Law Review 71, no. 1 (November 1957).Abstract: Section 3o1 of the Taft-Hartley Act, contend the authors, confers upon the federal courts responsibilities which are beyond the normal institutional capacities of those courts. Thus the proper disposition of Textile Workers Union v. Lincoln Mills,… More
The Hearts of Men
– New Republic (October 7, 1957).Eisenhower, Faubus, and the Court
– New Republic (September 30, 1957).Review of “The Legacy of Holmes and Brandeis” and “The Brandeis Reader”
– New England Quarterly 30 (June 1957).Book Reviews of The Legacy of Holmes and Brandeis, by Samuel J. Konefsky (1956); and The Brandeis Reader, by Ervin H. Pollack (1956).
Review of “Mr. Justice Holmes”
– Harvard Law Review 70 (April 1957).Book Review of Mr. Justice Holmes, edited by Allison Dunham and Philip B. Kurland (1956).
Passion and Patience
– New Republic (November 12, 1956).Integration: The Second Year in Perspective
– New Republic (October 8, 1956).Strathearn S. S. Co. v. Dillon — An Unpublished Opinion by Mr. Justice Brandeis
– Harvard Law Review 69, no. 7 (May 1956).Excerpt: When in 1927 Augustus N. Hand was elevated from the district court, where he had already earned an enviable reputation, and began his great career on the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, Brandeis wrote him a congratulatory note.… More
Ninety-Six Congressmen versus the Nine Justices
– New Republic (April 23, 1956).Chief Justice Warren and the Presidency
– New Republic (January 23, 1956).The Original Understanding and the Segregation Decision
– Harvard Law Review 69, no. 1 (1955).Excerpt: Before setting out on the direct and noble march to the Court’s conclusion in the Segregation Cases, Chief Justice Warren took care to post a rear guard. The history of the adoption of the fourteenth amendment, to which reargument in these… More
Judge and Jury – Inconsistent Verdicts in the Federal Courts
– Harvard Law Review 63 (1950).Excerpt: A prior conflict among the circuit courts over whether to enter judgment of guilty on one count pursuant to a verdict which is necessarily inconsistent with a verdict of not guilty on another count was settled in 1932 by Dunn v. United States. The… More
Doctrine of Forum Non Conveniens as Applied in the Federal Courts in Matters of Admiralty
– Cornell Law Quarterly 35, no. 1 (Fall 1949).Excerpt: Courts and commentators, in dealing in the past three decades with the increasingly topical doctrine of forum non conveniens in the Federal courts, have sought support for their advocacy of its application in actions at law from what they considered… More