Barrister's Bookshelf

Barrister's Bookshelf

North Dakota Law Review Volume 42 Number 3 Article 12 1966 Barrister's Bookshelf North Dakota Law Review Associate Editors Follow this and additional works at: https://commons.und.edu/ndlr Part of the Law Commons Recommended Citation North Dakota Law Review Associate Editors (1966) "Barrister's Bookshelf," North Dakota Law Review: Vol. 42 : No. 3 , Article 12. Available at: https://commons.und.edu/ndlr/vol42/iss3/12 This Index is brought to you for free and open access by the School of Law at UND Scholarly Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in North Dakota Law Review by an authorized editor of UND Scholarly Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. BARRISTER'S BOOKSHELF A CONSTITUTION FOR THE WORLD, introduced by Elizabeth Mann Borgese. Santa Barbara, California: Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions, 1965. Pp. 112 (paperback). The text of the preliminary draft of a World Constitution as written and published in 194748 is set out in this book. The main portion of the text is taken up by a backward look at the Constitution by Elizabeth Mann Borgese. She concludes that even after twenty years the bulk of the material has maintained an amazing currency, the political analysis was correct, and that many of the predictions based on it turned out to be prophetic. THE BLACK CODES OF THE SOUTH, by Theodore B. Wilson. University, Alabama: University of Alabama Press, 1966. Pp. 192, $5.95. The Black Codes were passed in an attempt to retain the Negroes as agricultural workers. The Laws were severe, but at the same time, they contained some provisions de- signed to protect the recently freed slave and ease the southern conscience. Wilson analyzes the various possible motives of the southern legislatures for adopting the Codes in the light of existing social and economic conditions, weighing the importance of the Black Codes as a possible provocation of Radical Reconstruction. It is a thorough examination of a distressing period in southern history. CRIME AND ITS CORRECTION, by John Conrad. Berkeley, California: University of California Press, 1965. Pp. viii, 312, $7.50. This book is a realistic account of current correctional practices in Europe and the United States as well as an expression of ideas about needed reforms. The basic cor- rectional process, aimed at firm but humane execution of the law, is remarkably similar in the countries studied. However, advanced practices, based on the findings of be- havioral science and aimed at effecting changes of behavior, are found in relatively few institutions. F.B.I. MAN, by Louis Cochran. New York: Duell, Sloan and Pearce, 1966. Pp. xiii, 208, $4.95. Out of his experiences as a Special Agent, Cochran dis- tills the essence of an FBI man's daily life-the background and the training that prepare such men for their jobs. 388 NORTH DAKOTA LAW REVIEW FREEDOM AND THE PUBLIC: PUBLIC AND PRIVATE MORALITY IN AMERICA, by Donald Meiklejohn. Syracuse: Syracuse University Press, 1965. Pp. ix, 163, $4.95. See book review, supra. JUVENILE COURT HEARING OFFICERS TRAINING MANUAL: DELIN- QUENCY AND NEGLECT, edited by Van Doren, Steingold and Downs. Ann Arbor, Michigan: Institute of Continuing Legal Education, 1965. Pp. vii, 433. The material in this book was developed as a training manual for the Juvenile Court Hearing Officers Training Program presented by the Institue of Continuing Legal Edu- cation. The materials will be of considerable value to those whose professional activities bring them into contact with juvenile court matters. SECURITY INTEREST IN PERSONAL PROPERTY by Grant Gilmore. Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1965. Pp. xxxiv, 1508 (2 vol.). In this two volume treatise Professor Gilmore, co-reporter for article nine of the UCC from first draft to completion, points the way to the interpretation which will be given to its provisions by the courts by analyzing the bodies of data most relevant to its construction: The pre-Code law; the deliberations and debates of the reporters and the drafts and redrafts which developed from them; the legislative history, the why of article nine as it emerged in final form; and the growing body of decisions handed down since the Code first was enacted. SEX, PORNOGRAPHY, & JUSTICE, by Albert B. Gerber. New York: Lyle Stuart, Inc., 1966. Pp. 349, $10.00. This is heralded as the first complete and serious study of the subject from the middle ages to today when pornog- raphy seems to be becoming legal. The discussion is totally frank, but it offers a sound solution to the riddle of pornog- raphy without jettisoning the entire doctrine and simply saying "anything goes." TAx FACTS ON LIFE INSURANCE, 1966. Cincinnati: The National Underwriter Co., 1966. Pp. 302 (paperback). Handy questions and answers on federal income, estate and gift taxation as they affect life, health and group in- surance, annuity and endowment contracts. The book in- cludes all pertinent regulations, rulings and court decisions as of January 1, 1966. Kindly mention the REVIEW when ordering these books. INTENTIONAL BLANK INTENTIONAL BLANK INTENTIONAL BLANK INTENTIONAL BLANK NORTH DAKOTA LAW REVIEW Member, National Conference of Law Reviews VOLUME 42 MAY 1966 NUMBER 4 BOARD OF EDITORS ALAN K. GRINDBERG, Editor-in-Chief JEROME L. LARSON, Articles and LEE E. WALL, Developments Editor Book Review Editor JOHN L. SHERMAN, Note Editor EDWIN M. ODLAND, Recent Case Editor ROBERT A. WHEELER, Special Projects Editor Scott Anderson John Graham Edmond Rees James Bailey Lawrence Leclerc Ronald Schwartz Harlan Holly Donald Leonard Garylle Stewart Carlton Hunke Robert Stroup II DALE MOENCH, Business Manager MRS. MARCENE HAVIG, Secretary .* S *, FACULTY ADVISOR DONALD P. SIMET * * * The North Dakota Law Review Is the Journal of the STATE BAR ASSOCIATION OF NORTH DAKOTA ROBERT E. DAHL, President FRANK F. JESTRAB, Vice-President F. JOHN MARSHALL, Seey-Treas. ALFRED C. SCHULTZ, Executive Director Suite 11, Woolworth Building Bismarck, North Dakota The views herein expressed are those of the individual authors and are not necessarily those of the State Bar Association or the University of North Dakota School of Law. THz NORTH DAKOTA LAW REvIEw is published four times a year in November, January, March and May by the University of North Dakota School of Law in co-operation with the State Bar Association of North Dakota. Communications concerning editorial matters and permission to reprint material con- tained herein should be addressed to: Editor, North Dakota Law. Review, University of North Dakota School of Law, Grand Forks, North Dakota 58202. Communications concerning business matters and requests for reprints should be addressed to: Business Manager, North Dakota Law Review, University of North Dakota School of Law, Grand Forks, North Dakota 58202. Subscription $3.50 per volume, $1.00 per issue. Second class postage paid at Grand Forks, North Dakota. Copyright, 1966, by the University of North Dakota School of Law.

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