Search for: "Herbert Williams" Results 161 - 180 of 492
Sorted by Relevance | Sort by Date
RSS Subscribe: 20 results | 100 results
28 Sep 2014, 9:00 pm by Cody Poplin
Two panels will precede William Burns’s keynote address at 12:30 pm. [read post]
22 Jul 2022, 7:46 pm by Guest Author
*This is the fourth post in a symposium on William Novak’s New Democracy: The Creation of the Modern American State. [read post]
17 Jun 2015, 3:30 am by NCC Staff
The last two Presidents to take office without having any experience in a major elected office were Dwight Eisenhower in 1952 and Herbert Hoover in 1929. [read post]
27 Oct 2011, 12:30 pm by Lucas A. Ferrara, Esq.
., Queens Mark Williams a/k/a Anthony Williams Forest Houses, 1020 Trinity Ave., 8th fl., Bronx Prohibited as of September 28, 2010 Derwin Bruce a/k/a Derwin Owens Farragut Houses, 237 Nassau St., 6th fl., Brooklyn Johan Colon Straus Houses, 224 E 28th St., 20th fl., Manhattan Francisco Cotto Chelsea Houses, 446 W 26th St., 7th fl., Manhattan Andre Credle a/k/a Andre Keene Stuyvesant Gardens Houses, 700 Quincy St., 1st fl., Brooklyn Jamar Credle … [read post]
25 Jul 2022, 2:30 am by Guest Author
*This is the sixth post in a symposium on William Novak’s New Democracy: The Creation of the Modern American State. [read post]
13 Sep 2015, 9:28 pm by Cody M. Poplin
    Herbert Scoville, Jr. [read post]
13 Feb 2016, 8:55 pm by Amy Howe
  With the Senate already adjourned, Eisenhower made a recess appointment of William J. [read post]
17 Mar 2016, 5:43 am by Carter Scott
Then sitting President Dwight Eisenhower made a recess appointment of Justice William J. [read post]
24 Nov 2006, 7:51 am
Carter, a prolific scholar and the William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Law at Yale Law School, offers up a mystery about the death of a judge who narrowly misses becoming a Supreme Court Justice. [read post]
1 Jul 2012, 7:46 am by Karen Tani
Help Me To Find My People: The African American Search for Family Lost in Slavery (University of North Carolina Press), by Heather Andrea Williams, is the subject of great praise in this week's New York Times Sunday Book Review. [read post]