Search for: "SMALL v. NORTH CAROLINA A&T STATE UNIVERSITY" Results 61 - 80 of 142
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8 Mar 2018, 2:37 am by Ben
The website is run on servers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and is classified as a non-profit charity organisation under American law. [read post]
4 Dec 2017, 9:01 pm by Joanna L. Grossman
The law didn’t have a chance of being upheld given the Supreme Court’s abortion jurisprudence. [read post]
29 Mar 2017, 5:09 am by SHG
My college years at American University in Washington, DC were far from “turbulent. [read post]
31 Dec 2016, 12:05 am by Jeffrey May
There also have been a number of convictions in Alabama, Georgia, and North Carolina. [read post]
3 Aug 2016, 9:30 pm by Dan Ernst
  Mandy Cooper, Duke University, “A House of Cards: Familial Economic Networks and the State in Antebellum North Carolina. [read post]
3 Dec 2015, 6:00 am by Administrator
In 1876, lawyer and legal publisher Carl Jahn published the first issue of the Weekly Cincinnati Law Bulletin, a precursor of the Ohio State Bar Journal, and solicited Ohio lawyers to submit “law points of general interest. [read post]
26 Jun 2015, 1:08 pm by John Elwood
It asks whether “the Fourth Circuit contravene[d] § 2254 (d)(1) when it granted habeas relief on the ground that the North Carolina state courts unreasonably applied ‘clearly established’ law when they held that third-party religious discussions with jurors did not concern ‘the matter[s] pending before the jury[.] [read post]
19 Jun 2015, 12:13 pm by John Elwood
Haven’t we already had enough of cases captioned Johnson v. [read post]
12 Jun 2015, 9:29 am by John Elwood
But you don’t have to be an American Pharoah to taste victory. [read post]
5 Jun 2015, 7:32 am by John Elwood
University of Texas at Austin. [read post]
29 May 2015, 2:24 pm by John Elwood
” The relists aren’t the only ones stuck on repeat. [read post]
4 May 2015, 4:47 pm by Ken White
But Wise and Landay found someone to raise questions: There are two exceptions from the constitutional right to free speech – defamation and the doctrine of “fighting words” or “incitement,” said John Szmer, an associate professor of political science and a constitutional law expert at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. [read post]