John P. LaVelle’s Compendium of Exhibits From the Papers of Supreme Court Justices

Here:

John P. LaVelle, Compendium of Exhibits From the Papers of Supreme Court Justices, 88 Mont L. Rev. Online (2025).

Salon on Ward Churchill Verdict

From Salon:

Last week, a Denver jury found that Ward Churchill, the former head of the ethnic studies department at the University of Colorado, had been improperly fired and awarded him $1 in damages. A judge must now decide whether Churchill should be reinstated in his job or receive back wages. The verdict was justified, but Churchill’s victory offers scant cause for celebration. To put it mildly, Churchill was not an ideal poster child for the cause of academic freedom. If right-wing critics of the university had set out to create a perfect caricature of a tenured radical who sacrifices scholarship for advocacy, they couldn’t have come up with a better one than Churchill. The Churchill case was a train wreck pitting the First Amendment against academic standards in a zero-sum game.

The debacle began the day after the 9/11 attacks, when Churchill, a widely read and influential activist scholar who specializes in American Indian issues, published an essay, “Some People Push Back: On the Justice of Roosting Chickens.” Churchill argued that the 9/11 attacks were payback for America’s ongoing “crusade” against the Arab-Muslim world, an onslaught manifested in such actions as the decade-long sanctions against Iraq that are estimated to have cost the lives of 500,000 Iraqi children.

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Singing Law Profs

NPR’s story on the singing law prof at BU — a dude who simply cannot sing — should be expanded to include a real singing law prof, John LaVelle of New Mexico, a Santee Sioux member. As any relatively recent alumnus of PLSI can tell you, John (a torts prof) is a fantastic singer. A good singer would have been a better story.