Tag: War

Books

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… 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… More

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… More

Essays

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… 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… More

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… More

Commentary

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… 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… More

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… More

Multimedia

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… 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… More

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… More

Teaching

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… 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… More

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… More