Search for: "William N Hawkins" Results 1 - 20 of 33
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17 Apr 2020, 2:00 am by Christopher Tyner
  Over last weekend, Charles Richard Rootes, Gary Edward Nixon, and Andre Williams died from complications caused by the virus. [read post]
6 Dec 2010, 5:38 am by Amanda Beck
Both sides expect to weather vigorous questioning from a three-judge panel featuring Ninth Circuit judges Stephen Reinhardt, Michael Hawkins, and N. [read post]
6 Dec 2010, 5:38 am by Amanda Beck
Both sides expect to weather vigorous questioning from a three-judge panel featuring Ninth Circuit judges Stephen Reinhardt, Michael Hawkins, and N. [read post]
16 Jun 2021, 3:30 am by SHG
Corey Hawkins, who plays Nina’s love interest and an employee of her father’s cab service, is Black but not Latino (some also criticized the filmmakers for removing a plot point, which had existed in the musical, in which Hawkins’s character says Nina’s father doesn’t think he’s good enough for her). [read post]
25 Jul 2017, 12:25 pm by Guest Blogger
Similarly, movement conservative suspicion of academia is at least as old as a young William F. [read post]
3 May 2016, 10:50 am by Patrick
  Jessica Gabel Cino Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins Rachel takes the same commuter train every morning. [read post]
20 Aug 2019, 7:31 pm by Josh Blackman
Hoyt, 3 Wheat. 246, 310 (1818) (Story, J.); 2 William Hawkins, A Treatise of the Pleas of the Crown 77 (1721)); see also Janus v. [read post]
30 Oct 2021, 12:18 pm by Stephen P. Halbrook
William Hawkins, in Pleas of the Crown (1716), wrote that “no wearing of arms is within the meaning of the statute [of Northampton] unless it be accompanied with such circumstances as are apt to terrify the people…” New York quotes the rest of the sentence but ignores that part, as if no one would notice. [read post]
6 May 2016, 10:50 am by Patrick
  Jessica Gabel Cino Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins Rachel takes the same commuter train every morning. [read post]
22 Jan 2020, 5:06 am by Randy Beck, John Langford
William Hawkins’s influential 18th-century treatise on “Pleas of the Crown” denied the need to plead injury to the informer in a qui tam or “popular” action “because every Offence, for which such Action is brought, is supposed to be a general Grievance to every Body. [read post]