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Colonial records of Virginia. by Virginia.General Assembly.Joint Committee on the State Library.(CARDINAL)876651; Gale Group.(CARDINAL)227718;
The First Assembly of Virginia, held July 30, 1619 -- List of the livinge [sic] and the dead in Virginia, Feb'y 16, 1623 -- A breife [sic] declaration of the plantation of Virginia, during the first twelve years, when Sir Thomas Smith was governor of the company -- A list of the number of men, women and children, inhabitants in the several counties within the Collony [sic] of Virginia, in 1634 -- A letter from Charles II, acknowledging the receipt of a present of Virginia Silk, 1668 -- A list of the parishes in Virginia, 1680 -- Addenda.
Access limited to University of Wyoming-affiliated patrons.
Available copies: 3 / Total copies: 6
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Gerrymanders : how redistricting has protected slavery, white supremacy, and partisan minorities in Virginia / by Tarter, Brent,1948-author.(CARDINAL)136560;
Includes bibliographical references and index.Many are aware that gerrymandering exists and suspect it plays a role in our elections, but its history goes far deeper, and its impacts are far greater, than most realize. In his latest book, Brent Tarter focuses on Virginia's long history of gerrymandering to uncover its immense influence on the state's politics and to provide perspective on how the practice impacts politics nationally. Offering the first in-depth historical study of gerrymanders in Virginia, Tarter exposes practices going back to colonial times and explains how they protected land owners' and slave owners' interests. The consequences of redistricting and reapportionment in modern Virginia--in effect giving a partisan minority the upper hand in all public policy decisions--become much clearer in light of this history. Where the discussion of gerrymandering has typically emphasized political parties' control of the U.S. Congress, Tarter focuses on the state legislatures that determine congressional district lines and, in most states, even those of their own districts. On the eve of the 2021 session of the General Assembly, which will redraw district lines for the Virginia Senate and House of Delegates, as well as for the U.S. House of Representatives, Tarter's book provides an eye-opening investigation of gerrymandering and its pervasive effect on our local, state, and national politics and government. -- Dust jacket flap.1. The gerrymander monster. -- 2. The colonial background. -- 3. Representation in revolutionary Virginia. -- 4. A gerrymander in fact though not in name. -- 5. The Great Gerrymander of 1830. -- 6. The Great Gerrymander revised and disguised. -- 7. Disfranchisement replaces the Great Gerrymander. -- 8. Malapportionment in the twentieth century. -- 9. The Representation Revolution of the 1960s. -- 10. The representation Revolution in Virginia. -- 11. Partisan redistricting. -- 12. The political and legal landscapes in Virginia in 2019.
Subjects: Gerrymandering; Election districts; Political culture;
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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The sinews of peace, post-war speeches / by Churchill, Winston,1874-1965.(CARDINAL)137203;
Demobilisation (22 October 1945) -- The Alamein Dinner (23 October 1945) -- Foreign policy (President Truman's declaration) (7 November 1945) -- Brussels University (15 November 1945) -- Louvain University (15 November 1945) -- A speech to the joint meeting of the Senate and Chamber, Brussels (16 November) -- Conservative Party: Central Council meeting (28 November 1945) -- Government policy (Motion of censure) (6 December 1945) -- Anglo-American loan agreement (Motion for approval) (13 December 1945) -- University of Miami (26 February 1946) -- "The sinews of peace" (5 March 1946) -- A speech to the General Assembly of Virginia (8 March 1946) -- Address to American and British service members, the Pentagon, Washington (9 March 1946) -- A speech at the reception by the Mayor and civic authorities of New York (15 March 1946) -- A speech on receiving the freedom of Westminster (7 May 1946) -- A speech to the States-General of the Netherlands, the Hague (9 May 1946) -- India Cabinet mission (Statement on the adjournmet) (16 May 1946) -- Egypt (treaty negotiations): Motion on the civil estimates (24 May 1946) -- Foreign affairs (5 June 1946) -- A speech at Metz (14 July 1946) -- India (Cabinet mission) (18 July 1946) -- Palestine (1 August 1946) -- A speech at Zurich University (19 September 1946) -- Conservative Party conference at Blackpool (5 October 1946) -- Roosevelt Memorial Bill (11 October 1946) -- Foreign affairs (23 October 1946) -- Debate on the address (12 November 1946) -- Roosevelt Memorial Fund (18 November 1946) -- India (Constitution) (12 December 1946).
Subjects: Speeches.; World politics;
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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The effects of motor vehicle window tinting on traffic safety and enforcement : final report : a report to the Governor and General Assembly in response to Senate Joint Resolution 293, 1993 Session / by Proffitt, Dennis R.(CARDINAL)312216; Virginia Transportation Research Council.(CARDINAL)195142;
Includes bibliographical references (pages 37-38).The 1993 Session of the Virginia General Assembly lessened restrictions relating to the application of aftermarket tinted window films to motor vehicle glass. Effective July 1, 1993, vehicles are allowed to have window tinting treatments that do not reduce the transmittance of light below 35% for rear and rear side windows and 50% for front side windows, but no aftermarket tinting may be applied to windshields. However, the new legislation allows lower transmittance levels for the windows on vehicles used by individuals with a medical waiver. The traffic safety community is concerned that aftermarket window tint film may increase the incidence of traffic crashes by limiting a driver's ability to see out of a vehicle, and it may compromise the safety of police officers by limiting an officer's ability to see into a vehicle that he or she has stopped. The window tinting industry, however, notes the lack of empirical evidence correlating window tinting and traffic crashes or police officer injuries or fatalities. The concerns of industry and the traffic safety community were balanced by the adoption of Senate Joint Resolution 293, which directed the Virginia Departments of Motor Vehicles and State Police to study the issue. The study found that window tinting reduces the ability to detect targets that would be difficult to see through clear glass, and this can be a liability when ambient lighting is low. In addition, the adverse effects of window tinting become increasingly pronounced as transmittance goes below 70%, particularly for people who wear spectacles and for older drivers. There is no evidence, however, that reduced visibility significantly affects drivers' performance during well-illuminated daytime hours. The difficulties are more likely to be manifested at night. Further, by reducing the amount of light transmittance, window tinting reduces the ability of an outside observer to see into a vehicle, which has led to the concerns about the safety of police officers. Although there are only limited optical benefits to be derived from window tinting and there are a number of potential optical detriments, there is no empirical evidence to indicate that the tinting allowed under Virginia's current laws creates a safety hazard in terms of driver performance. Thus, it is recommended that Virginia's new laws on window tinting not be changed unless compelling evidence that the standards compromise safety is found in the future. However, further research is recommended. It is also recommended that federal regulations and/or action by the states to achieve national uniformity be encouraged in order to promote uniformity in laws and regulations concerning aftermarket window tinting.Sponsored by Virginia Department of Transportation, Virginia Department of Motor Vehicles, [and] the University of Virginia, project no.
Subjects: Technical reports.; Automobiles; Automobiles; Traffic accidents; Traffic violations;
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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The making of massive resistance : Virginia's politics of public school desegregation, 1954-1956 / by Gates, Robbins L.(Robbins Ladew),1922-2008.;
Includes bibliographical references (pages 215-218).I. VIRGINIA: its counties, cities and races. 1. Virginia's Black Belt: southside and tidewater counties; 2. The middle ground; 3. The white belt: mountains, valleys, and suburbia; 4. The cities; 5. Which is Virginia? -- II. Partisan and political Virginia. 1. Senator Byrd and the organization; 2. Anti-organization Democrats; 3. Republicans; 4. Negroes, Conservatism, and Politics -- III. THE organization of reaction. 1. The Political Process Gets Underway; 2. The Governor's Select Committee on Public Education; 3. Defenders of State Sovereignty and Individual Liberties; 4. Public Hearing at the mosque -- IV. WHILE THE COMMISSION PONDERED. 1. The Preliminary Reports; 2. Control of the public schools; 3. Defenders, preachers, and the Virginia Council on Human Relations; 4. Negroes and the NAACP; 5. Some individual views; 6. A summary -- V. THE gray plan. 1. Almond v. Day; 2. The Proposed Mechanics of Pupil Assignment and Tuition grants; 3. Special session of the General Assembly -- VI. REFERENDUM-A VIRGINIA CAMPAIGN; 1. The in-betweens; 2. Thirty-six days of campaign; VII. WHO VOTED WHERE AND FOR WHAT. 1. Deviatory counties and cities; 2. Two moderate, two extreme -- VIII. Interposition, now! 1. Virginians Interpose for the First Time, 1798; 2. The Amazing Campaign of James Jackson Kilpatrick; 3. Virginia Interposes a Second Time, 1956 -- IX. THE aftermath of interposition. 1. The General Assembly at Dead Center; 2. Negroes Win in the Federal Courts; 3. Formulation of Massive Resistance; 4. Possible Perils of Moderation and Independent Action -- X. SOME VIEWS OF INDIVIDUALS; 1. J. Barrye Wall; 2. John H. Marion; 3. Oliver W. Hill; 4. T. Justin Moore; 5. Lester Banks; 6. Kathryn H. Stone; 7. Dabney S. Lancaster; 8. Robert Whitehead; 9. Stuart B. Carter; 10. A Black-Belt Legislator; 11. Robert B. Crawford; 12. Colgate W. Darden, Jr.; 13. The Time and the Temper -- XI. ADOPTION of the Stanley Plan. 1. The Issue Rephrased; 2. Maneuver, Delay, and Decision; 3. The Vote on H.B. 1.; 4. Interposition? Massive Resistance? -- XII. SAME SCENE-TEN MONTHS LATER. 1. The Reverend S.L. Massie; 2. A Richmond minister; 3. Armistead L. Boothe; 4. Some questions -- XIII. MAKING of massive resitance 1. Political leadership and political survival; 2. A Matter of values -- AFTERMATH.
Subjects: Education; Segregation in education.;
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A banner in the hills; West Virginia's statehood. by Moore, George Ellis.(CARDINAL)337847;
Bibliography in "Notes": pages 208-223.Western Virginia on the eve of conflict: The meaning of "Western Virginia" ; The land and its people ; Economic activities ; Transportation ; Education ; Religion and culture -- The sectional background: Geographical and ethnic factors ; The scotching of democracy ; The Black and White of sectionalism ; The Reform Convention of 1850 -- Virginia Politics in the critical decade, 1851-1860: The national parties ; Virginia politics ; Effects of John Brown's Raid ; Republicanism in Virginia ; The Campaign of 1860 -- Secession: The genesis of secession ; Garrulous interlude ; The Legislative interval ; The people speak ; Convention personnel ; Early stages of the Convention ; The post Inaugural Period -- Final steps to secession -- Secession implemented: Consummation in the East ; Military beginnings ; Distraction in the West -- The Unionist Movement: The initial reaction ; The May Convention ; The Referendum on Secession -- The appeal to arms: Union military organization ; Preliminaries to action ; The invasion of Western Virginia ; The Battle of Philippi ; Federal consolidation in the Northwest -- The restoration: The June Convention ; Executive problems ; The Restored General Assembly ; The congressional hurdle -- The mountain front: Confederate dispositions ; Federal occupation of the Little Kanawha ; The Rich Mountain Campaign ; Garnett's Retreat ; Effects of the campaign -- The Kanawha Valley: A house divided ; The Kanawha Campaign ; The Confederate advance under Floyd ; The Battle at Carnifex Ferry -- Later campaigns of 1861: Reorganization ; The Cheat Mountain Campaign ; Gauley Bridge and Cotton Hill ; Minor actions -- The Potomac Front: Harpers Ferry ; Patterson's valley campaign ; Autumn campaign - The New State Ordinance: Antidivision sentiment ; The adjourned session ; The Referendum -- The frame of government: The Constitutional Convention ; The name of the state ; The boundary ; Legislative apportionment ; Internal improvements ; Slavery ; General provisions ; Popular and Legislative approval -- The mountain department: Union reorganization ; Jackson, Lincoln, and Frémont ; The New River Campaign ; The Battle of Lewisburg ; End of the mountain department -- The Confederate counterstroke: The Maryland Invasion and Harpers Ferry ; Western Virginia under Pope ; The Jenkins Cavalry Raid ; Lightburn's Retreat ; Confederate occupation of the Kanawha ; Federal reoccupation of the Kanawha -- Midpoint of conflict: The drag of war ; Reappraisal ; Reorganization ; Western military movements ; Again the valley - The Jones-Imboden Raids: Background and planning ; Imboden's Raid ; The Jones Raid ; Federal dispositions ; Later progress of the raiders ; Afterclap in the South ; Results of the raids -- Statehood-the consummation: The admission bill before the Senate ; The West Virginia Bill in the House ; Cabinet opinion on the Bill ; Lincoln's decision ; The recalled session of the Constitutional Convention ; Final steps to statehood.
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Prominent Inhabitants of Warren County: a partial list.
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Mary Chesnut's diary / by Chesnut, Mary Boykin,1823-1886.(CARDINAL)149987; Clinton, Catherine,1952-(CARDINAL)163911;
Includes bibliographical references (pages xxv-xxvi).Introduction / by Catherine Clinton -- Suggestions for further reading -- A note on the text -- Mary Chesnut's diary. Charleston, S.C., November 8, 1860-December 27, 1860. The news of Lincoln's election -- Raising the Palmetto flag -- The author's husband resigns as United States senator -- The Ordinance of Secession -- Anderson takes possession of Fort Sumter -- Montgomery, Ala., February 19, 1861-March 11, 1861. Making the Confederate Constitution -- Robert Toombs -- Anecdote of General Scott -- Lincoln's trip through Baltimore -- Howell Cobb and Benjamin H. Hill -- Hoisting the Confederate flag -- Mrs. Lincoln's economy in the White House -- Hopes for peace -- Despondent talk with anti-secession leaders -- The South unprepared -- Fort Sumter -- Charleston, S.C., March 26, 1861-April 15, 1861. A soft-hearted slave-owner -- Social gaiety in the midst of war talk -- Beauregard as hero and a demigod -- The first shot of the war -- Anderson refuses to capitulate -- The bombardment of Fort Sumter as seen from the housetops -- War steamers arrive in Charleston harbor -- "Bull Run" Russell -- Demeanor of the negroes -- Camden, S.C., April 20, 1861-April 22, 1861. After Sumter was taken -- the jeunesse dorée -- The story of Beaufort Watts -- Maria Whitaker's twins -- The inconsistencies of life -- Montgomery, Ala., April 27, 1861-May 20, 1861. Baltimore in a blaze -- Anderson's account of the surrender of Fort Sumter -- A talk with Alexander H. Stephens -- Reports from Washington -- An unexpected reception -- Southern leaders take hopeless views of the future -- Planning war measures -- Removal of the capital -- Charleston, S.C., May 25, 1861-June 24, 1861. Waiting for a battle in Virginia -- Ellsworth at Alexandria -- Big Bethel -- Moving forward to the battleground -- Mr. Petigru against secession -- Mr. Chesnut goes to the front -- Russell's letters to the London Times -- Richmond, Va., June 27, 1861-July 4, 1861. Arrival at the new capital -- Criticism of Jefferson Davis -- Solders everywhere -- Mrs. Davis's drawing-room -- A day at the Champ de Mars -- The armies assembling for Bull Run -- Col. L.Q.C. Lamar -- Fauquier White Sulphur Springs, Va., July 6, 1861-July 11, 1861. Cars crowded with soldiers -- A Yankee spy -- Anecdotes of Lincoln -- Gaiety in social life -- Listening for guns -- A horse for Beauregard -- Richmond, Va., July 13, 1861-September 2, 1861. General Lee and Joe Johnston -- The Battle of Bull Run -- Colonel Bartow's death -- Rejoicing and funerals -- Anecdotes of the battle -- An interview with Robert E. Lee -- Treatment of prisoners -- Toombs thrown from his horse -- Criticism of the administration -- Paying the soldiers -- Suspected women searched -- Mason and Slidell -- Camden, S.C., September 9, 1861-September 19, 1861. The author's sister Kate Williams -- Old Colonel Chesnut -- Roanoke Island surrenders -- Up Country and Low Country -- Family silver to be taken for war expenses -- Mary McDuffie Hampton -- The Merrimac and the Monitor -- Columbia, S.C., February 20, 1862-July 21, 1862. Dissensions among Southern leaders -- Uncle Tom's Cabin -- Conscription begins -- Abuse of Jefferson Davis -- The battle of Shiloh -- Beauregard flanked at Nashville -- Old Colonel Chesnut again -- New Orleans lost -- The battle of Williamsburg -- Dinners, teas, and breakfasts -- Wade Hampton at home wounded -- Battle of the Chickahominy -- Albert Sidney Johnston's death -- Richmond in sore straits -- A wedding and its tragic ending -- Malvern Hill -- Recognition of the Confederacy in Europe -- Flat Rock, N.C., August 1, 1862-August 8, 1862. A mountain summer resort -- George Cuthbert -- A disappointed cavalier -- Antietam and Chancellorsville -- General Chesnut's work for the army -- Portland, Ala., July 8, 1863-July 30, 1863. A journey from Columbia to southern Alabama -- The surrender of Vicksburg -- A terrible night in the swamp on a riverside -- A good pair of shoes -- The author at her mother's home -- Anecdotes of negroes -- A Federal cynic -- Richmond, Va., August 10, 1863-September 7, 1863. General Hood in Richmond -- A brigade marches through the town -- Rags and tatters -- Two love affairs and a wedding -- The battle of Brandy Station -- The Robert Barnwell tragedy -- Camden, S.C., September 10, 1863-November 5, 1863. A bride's dressing table -- Home once more at Mulberry -- Longstreet's army seen going West -- Constance and Hetty Cary -- At church during Stoneman's raid -- Richmond narrowly escapes capture -- A battle on the Chickahominy -- A picnic at Mulberry -- Richmond, Va., November 28, 1863-April 11, 1864. Mr Davis visits Charleston -- Adventures by rail -- A winter of mad gaiety -- Weddings, dinner-parties, and private theatricals -- Battles around Chattanooga -- Bragg in disfavor -- General Hood and his love affairs -- Some Kentucky generals -- Burton Harrison and Miss Constance Cary -- George Eliot -- Thackeray's death -- Mrs. R.E. Lee and her daughters -- Richmond almost lost -- Colonel Dahlgren's death -- General Grant -- Depreciated currency -- Fourteen generals at church -- Camden, S.C., May 8, 1864-June 1, 1864. A farewell to Richmond -- "Little Joe's" pathetic death and funeral -- An old silk dress -- The battle of the wilderness -- Spottsylvania Court House -- At Mulberry once more -- Old Colonel Chesnut's grief at his wife's death -- Columbia, S.C., July 6, 1864-January 17, 1865. Gen. Joe Johnston superseded and the Alabama sunk -- The author's new home -- Sherman at Atlanta -- The battle of Mobile Bay -- At the hospital in Columbia -- Wade Hampton's two sons shot -- Hood crushed at Nashville -- Farewell to Mulberry -- Sherman's advance eastward -- The end near -- Lincolnton, N.C., February 16, 1865-March 15, 1865. The flight from Columbia -- A corps of generals without troops -- Broken-hearted and an exile -- Taken for millionaires -- A walk with Gen. Joseph E. Johnston -- The burning of Columbia -- Confederate money refused in the shops -- Selling old clothes to obtain food -- Gen. Joe Johnston and President Davis again -- Braving it out -- Mulberry saved by a faithful negro -- Ordered to Chester, S.C. -- Chester, S.C., March 21, 1865-May 1, 1865. How to live without money -- Keeping house once more -- Other refugees tell stories of their flight -- The Hood melodrama over -- The exodus from Richmond -- Passengers in a box car -- A visit from General Hood -- The fall of Richmond -- Lee's surrender -- Yankees hovering around -- In pursuit of President Davis -- Camden, S.C., May 2, 1865-August 2, 1865. Once more at Bloomsbury -- Surprising fidelity of negroes -- Stories of escape -- Federal soldiers who plundered old estates -- Mulberry partly in ruins -- Old Colonel Chestnut last of the grand seigniors -- Two classes of sufferers -- A wedding and a funeral -- Blood not shed in vain.
Subjects: Autobiographies.; Diaries.; Personal narratives.; Chesnut, Mary Boykin, 1823-1886;
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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The U.S. Supreme Court / by Lewis, Thomas T.,(Thomas Tandy),editor.;
Includes bibliographical references and indexes.Abington School District v. Schempp -- Abortion -- Adamson v. California -- Adarand Constructors v. Peña -- Admiralty and maritime law -- Advisory opinions -- Affirmative action -- Age discrimination -- Alito, Samuel -- Allgeyer v. Louisiana -- Americans with Disabilities Act -- Antitrust law -- Appellate jurisdiction -- Assembly and association, freedom of -- Atkins v. Virgnia -- Automobile searches -- Bad tendency test -- Bail -- Baker v. Carr -- Baldwin, Henry -- Bankruptcy law -- Barbour, Philip P. -- Barnes v. Glen Theatre -- Barron v. Baltimore -- Batson v. Kentucky -- Bill of attainder -- Bill of Rights -- Birth control and contraception -- Black, Hugo L. -- Blackmun, Harry A. -- Blair, John, Jr. -- Blatchford, Samuel -- BMW of North America v. Gore -- Boerne v. Flores -- Bolling v. Sharpe -- Boys Scouts of America v. Dale -- Bradley, Joseph P. -- Bradwell v. Illinois -- Brandeis, Louis D. -- Brandenburg v. Ohio -- Brennan, William J., Jr. -- Brewer, David J. -- Breyer, Stephen G. -- Briefs -- British background to U.S. judiciary -- Brown, Henry B. -- Brown v. Board of Education -- Brown v. Mississippi -- Buck v. Bell -- Buildings, Supreme Court -- Burger, Warren E. -- Burton, Harold H. -- Bush v. Gore -- Butler, Pierce -- Byrnes, James F. -- Calder v. Bull -- Campbell, John A. -- Capital punishment -- Capitalism -- Cardozo, Benjamin N. -- Carolene Products Co., United States v. -- Catron, John -- Censorship -- Certiorari, writ of -- Chase, Salmon P. -- Chase, Samuel -- Chicago, Burlington, and Quincy Railroad Co. v. Chicago -- Chief justice -- Chimel v. California -- Chinese Exclusion Cases -- Chisholm v. Georgia.Church of Lukumi Babalu Aye v. Hialeah -- Circuit riding -- Citizenship -- Civil law -- Civil rights and liberties -- Civil Rights Cases -- Civil Rights movement -- Civil War -- Clark, Tom C. -- Clarke, John H. -- Clerks of the justices -- Clifford, Nathan -- Clinton v. City of New York -- Clinton v. Jones -- Cold War -- Comity clause -- Commerce, regulation of -- Common law -- Conference of the justices -- Constitutional interpretation -- Constitutional law -- Contract, freedom of -- Contracts clause -- Counsel, right to -- Court-packing plan -- Cruel and unusual punishment -- Cruikshank, United States v. -- Cruzan v. Director, Missouri Department of Health -- Curtis, Benjamin R. -- Curtiss-Wright Export Corp., United States v. -- Cushing, William -- Daniel, Peter V. -- Darby Lumber Co., United States v. -- Davis, David -- Day, William R. -- Debs, In re -- DeJonge v. Oregon -- Delegation of powers -- Devanter, Willis Van -- Disability of justices -- Dissents -- Diversity jurisdiction -- Double jeopardy -- Douglas, William O. -- Due process, procedural -- Due process, substantive -- Duncan v. Louisiana -- Duvall, Gabriel -- Eighth Amendment -- Elastic clause -- Eleventh Amendment -- Ellsworth, Oliver -- Employment discrimination -- Employment Division, Department of Human Resources v. Smith -- Engel v. Vitale -- Environmental law -- Epperson v. Arkansas -- Equal protection clause -- Espionage acts -- Everson v. Board of Education of Ewing Township -- Evolution and creationism -- Exclusionary rule -- Executive agreements -- Executive privilege -- Federalism -- Fetal rights -- Field, Stephen J. -- Fifteenth Amendment.Fifth Amendment -- First Amendment -- First Amendment speech tests -- Flag desecration -- Florida v. Bostick -- Fortas, Abe -- Fourth Amendment -- Frankfurter, Felix -- Fugitive slaves -- Full faith and credit -- Fuller, Melville W. -- Fundamental rights -- Furman v. Georgia -- Garcia v. San Antonio Metropolitan Transit Authority -- Gender issues -- General welfare clause -- Gerrymandering -- Gibbons v. Ogden -- Gideon v. Wainwright -- Ginsburg, Ruth Bader -- Gitlow v. New York -- Goldberg, Arthur J. -- Grandfather clause -- Gratz v. Bollinger -- Gray, Horace -- Gregg v. Georgia -- Grier, Robert C. -- Griggs v. Duke Power Co. -- Griswold v. Connecticut -- Guarantee clause -- Habeas corpus -- Hammer v. Dagenhart -- Harlan, John M., II Harlan, John Marshall -- Heart of Atlanta Motel v. United States -- Holmes, Oliver Wendell -- Housing discrimination -- Hughes, Charles Evans -- Hunt, Ward -- Hustler Magazine v. Falwell -- Illegitimacy -- Immigration law -- Income tax -- Incorporation doctrine -- Iraq War -- Iredell, James -- Jackson, Howell E. -- Jackson, Robert H. -- Japanese American relocation -- Jay, John -- Johnson and Grahamʼs Lessee v. McIntosh -- Johnson, Thomas -- Johnson, William -- Judicial activism -- Judicial review -- Judicial scrutiny -- Judicial self-restraint -- Judiciary Act of 1789 -- Jury, trial by -- Katz v. United States -- Kelo v. City of New London -- Kennedy, Anthony M. -- Korematsu v. United States -- Lamar, Joseph R. -- Lamar, Lucius Q.C. -- Lee v. Weisman -- Lemon v. Kurtzman -- Libel -- Livingston, Brockholst -- Lochner v. New York -- Lone Wolf v. Hitchcock -- Lopez, United States v. -- Loving v. Virginia.Lurton, Horace H. -- McCleskey v. Kemp -- McCulloch v. Maryland -- McKenna, Joseph -- McKinley, John -- McLean, John -- McReynolds, James C. -- Mapp v. Ohio -- Marbury v. Madison -- Marshall, John -- Marshall, Thurgood -- Matthews, Stanley -- Meyer v. Nebraska -- Michigan Department of State Police v. Sitz -- Military and the Court -- Miller, Samuel F. -- Milligan, Ex parte -- Minton, Sherman -- Miranda rights -- Moody, William H. -- Moore, Alfred -- Moore v. City of East Cleveland -- Munn v. Illinois -- Murphy, Frank -- National Association for the Advancement of Colored People v. Alabama -- National Labor Relations Board v. Jones and Laughlin Steel Corp. -- National security -- National Treasury Employees Union v. Van Raab -- Native American law -- Native American sovereignty -- Native American treaties -- Natural law -- Near v. Minnesota -- Nelson, Samuel -- New Deal -- New York Times Co. v. Sullivan -- New York Times Co. v. United States -- New York v. Ferber -- Ninth Amendment -- Nominations to the Court -- Obscenity and pornography -- OʼConnor, Sandra Day -- Opinions, writing of -- Oral argument -- Palko v. Connecticut -- Paterson, William -- Payne v. Tennessee -- Peckham, Rufus W. -- Penry v. Lynaugh -- Peonage -- Pierce v. Society of Sisters -- Pitney, Mahlon -- Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey -- Plea bargaining -- Plessy v. Ferguson -- Police powers -- Political questions -- Poll taxes -- Powell, Lewis F., Jr. -- Presidential powers -- Printz v. United States -- Privacy, right to -- Privileges and immunities -- Progressivism -- Public forum doctrine -- Race and discrimination.Reconstruction -- Reed, Stanley F. -- Reed v. Reed -- Regents of the University of California v. Bakke -- Rehnquist, William H. -- Religion, establishment of -- Religion, freedom of -- Reporting of opinions -- Representation, fairness of -- Resignation and retirement -- Restrictive covenants -- Review, process of -- Reynolds v. Sims -- Reynolds v. United States -- Right to die -- Roberts, John -- Roberts, Owen J. -- Rochin v. California -- Roe v. Wade -- Roth v. United States; Alberts v. California -- Rule of reason -- Rules of the Court -- Rutledge, John -- Rutledge, Wiley B., Jr. -- Salaries of justices -- San Antonio Independent School District v. Rodriguez -- Sanford, Edward T. -- Scalia, Antonin -- Schechter Poultry Corp. v. United States -- Schenck v. United States -- School integration and busing -- Scott v. Sandford -- Search warrant requirement -- Second Amendment -- Sedition Act of 1798 -- Seditious libel -- Segregation, de facto -- Segregation, de jure -- Self-incrimination, immunity against -- Senate Judiciary Committee -- Separation of powers -- Seriatim opinions -- Shelley v. Kraemer -- Sherbert v. Verner -- Shiras, George, Jr. -- Sixth Amendment -- Slaughterhouse Cases -- Slavery -- Smith Act -- Smith v. Allwright -- Solicitor general -- Souter, David H. -- Speech and press, freedom of -- Standing -- State action -- Statesʼ rights -- Statutory interpretation -- Stevens, John Paul -- Stewart, Potter -- Stone, Harlan Fiske -- Story, Joseph -- Strong, William -- Sunday closing laws -- Sutherland, George -- Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education -- Swayne, Noah H. -- Symbolic speech -- Taft, William H. -- Takings clause.Taney, Roger Brooke -- Tennessee v. Garner -- Tenth Amendment -- Terry v. Ohio -- Texas v. Johnson -- Thirteenth Amendment -- Thomas, Clarence -- Thomas-Hill hearings -- Thompson, Smith -- Time, place, and manner regulations -- Time v. Hill -- Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District -- Todd, Thomas -- Travel, right to -- Treaties -- Trimble, Robert -- Vietnam War -- Vinson, Fred M. -- Virginia, United States v. -- Waite, Morrison R. -- Wallace v. Jaffree -- War and civil liberties -- War powers -- Warren, Earl -- Washington, Bushrod -- Washington v. Glucksberg -- Wayne, James M. -- Webster v. Reproductive Health Services -- West Coast Hotel Co. v. Parrish -- White, Byron R. -- White, Edward D. -- Whittaker, Charles E. -- Wilson, James -- Wisconsin v. Mitchell -- Wisconsin v. Yoder -- Witnesses, confrontation of -- Woodbury, Levi -- Woods, William B. -- Worcester v. Georgia -- Workload -- World War I -- World War II -- Youngstown Sheet and Tube Co. v. Sawyer -- Zoning -- Appendixes: Constitution of the United States, Time Line Glossary, Bibliography, Justicesʼ Careers, Indexes, Index of Court Cases, Subject Index.A comprehensive and up-to-date survey of the history and functioning of the U.S. Supreme Court.
Subjects: United States. Supreme Court;
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