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  1. Lewis Powell served on the United States Supreme Court from January 7, 1972 until June 26, 1987, when he retired. During his tenure on the Supreme Court, Powell was not easily labeled as conservative or liberal, and he often acted as the swing vote in important cases. Among his more liberal stances, Powell voted in favor of legalizing abortion ...

  2. Lewis Thornton Powell (auch bekannt als Lewis Paine oder Payne; * 22. April 1844 in Randolph County, Alabama; † 7. Juli 1865 in Washington, D.C.) war ein US-amerikanischer Mitverschwörer des Lincoln - Attentäters John Wilkes Booth. Hinrichtung Powells (2. v.l.) und der übrigen Verschwörer. Am Abend des 14. April 1865, an dem Booth Lincoln ...

  3. Lewis F. Powell, Jr. Part 09 of 10 View. Lewis F. Powell, Jr. Part 10 of 10 View. Filed under: Supreme Court. Vault Links: FOIA Home. Vault Home. Search Vault. Recently Added. A-Z Index . Categories ( click to retract ) - Administrative Policy Procedures ...

  4. 12. See Mark Tushnet, Justice Lewis F. Powell and the Jurisprudence of Centrism, 93 Mich. L. Rev. 1854, 1856-62 (1995). 13. See id. at 1859-60. Then-Justice Rehnquist responded to Justice Powell's mention of my 1972 Harvard Foreword by expressing "the most serious reservations about the

  5. 16. Juli 2015 · Written in 1971 to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the Lewis Powell Memo was a blueprint for corporate domination of American Democracy. For more, see Greenpeace analyses of how Lewis Powell’s suggestions have impacted the realms of politics, judicial law, communications and education. The full text of the Powell Memo is below or can be ...

  6. 9. Mai 2018 · Lewis F. Powell, Jr. (born 1907) was a corporate lawyer who became a U.S. Supreme Court justice. He became the intellectual leader of the Court's moderate center until his 1987 retirement. Lewis F. Powell, Jr. was born on September 19, 1907, in Suffolk, Virginia, son of a comfortable middle-class family.

  7. The Lewis F. Powell, Jr. Papers, like all of the the manuscript collections held by the Powell Archives, has an XML/EAD encoded finding aid.This was made possible by the Virginia Heritage Project Task Force of the Virtual Library of Virginia (VIVA) and funded in part by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities.