Volume 62: Issue 2

Indiana Law Journal
Volume 62: Issue 2
Spring 1987
INTRODUCTION
Dean’s Introduction
Bryant G. Garth
DEDICATORY ADDRESS
The Legal Profession Today
Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist
BANKRUPTCY
Private Parties and Bankruptcy-Based Discrimination
Douglass G. Boshkoff
CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN LEGAL THEORY
Independent Professional Power and the Search for a Legal Ideology with a Progressive Bite
Bryant G. Garth
CONSTITUTIONAL LAW
The Second Death of Substantive Due Process
Daniel O. Conkle
Observations on the Supreme Court’s Recent Affirmative Action Cases
Julia Lamber
Is There Independent Life in the Indiana Constitution?
Patrick Baude
CRIMINAL LAW
Criminal Procedure in the Rehnquist Court: Has the Rehnquisition Begun?
Craig M. Bradley
Preliminary Screening of Prosecutorial Access to Death Qualified Juries: A Missing Constitutional Link
F. Thomas Schornhorst
THE FEDERAL RULES OF EVIDENCE
Adjudicative Facts, Non-Evidence Facts, and Permissible Jury Background Information
Richard M. Fraher
THE INTERRELATIONSHIP BETWEEN SOCIAL SCIENCE AND THE LAW
Notes Toward a Formal Model of Common Law
M.B. W. Sinclair
Problem Behavior: Pathology, Lawyers, and Referrals
Edwin H. Greenebaum
NOTES
A Separate Classification for Criminal Debt in Chapter 13
Marie Adamson
Striking Down the Clergyman-Communicant Privilege Statutes: Let Free Exercise Govern
Jane E. Mayes
Section 183 of the Internal Revenue Code: The Need for Statutory Reform
Joseph H. Marxer
The Applicability of Civil RICO to Toxic Waste Polluters
David R. McAvoy