Jun 17, 2004 | Notes, Number 4, Print Edition, Volume 37
Every day, members of the public interact with employees of all backgrounds. Many employees have criminal histories. The public must rely on employers’ ability to appropriately hire and retain employees. Efforts to expand employment for ex-criminal offenders...
Jun 17, 2004 | Lead Articles, Number 4, Print Edition, Volume 37
After decades in the wilderness of linguistic abstraction, moral philosophy has at last come home. Through most of the past century, moral philosophers analyzed language in the effort to construct linguistic proofs, or instead to disprove, moral assertions as such. ...
Jun 17, 2004 | Notes, Number 4, Print Edition, Volume 37
In Lindsey v. Normet, the United States Supreme Court reaffirmed that housing is not a fundamental right guaranteed by the Constitution of the United States. More than one-third of the United States population lives in rental housing and may be evicted at any time. ...
Jun 17, 2004 | Notes, Number 4, Print Edition, Volume 37
Federal appellate courts employ particular rules to address certain trial defects known as ”plain errors.” Section 52(b) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, a codification of old statutory and common law, governs modern day plain error appeals. ...
Jun 17, 2004 | Notes, Number 4, Print Edition, Volume 37
This Note will discuss the need for the Supreme Court to revisit the confidentiality issue, and more importantly, the need for a determination that individuals hold a privacy interest in personal, identifiable health and medical information. First, this Note will...
Jun 17, 2004 | Lead Articles, Number 4, Print Edition, Volume 37
Space law is a complex mixture of international and domestic laws that govern a wide spectrum of activities. Such activities can range from the exotic, like creating the institutional framework for an international lunar mining consortium, to the more routine, like...