Search for: "Michael R. Mills v. State" Results 1 - 20 of 94
Sort by Relevance | Sort by Date
RSS Subscribe: 20 results | 100 results
25 Feb 2023, 6:50 pm by admin
The school lost its accreditation in 1946, and closed.[19] After receiving this degree, Selikoff continued his efforts to return to Scotland, to complete his “triple qualification” for medical licensure in Scotland, which would allow him to sit for the licensing examination in one of the United States. 1943 – 1944. [read post]
7 Sep 2022, 5:23 am by Eugene Volokh
New York State Liquor Authority[15] involved a New York law under which liquor distillers could not sell to wholesalers in New York except in accordance with a monthly price schedule that affirmed that prices in New York were no higher than the lowest prices charged in other states.[16] Healy v. [read post]
18 Jul 2022, 2:22 am by INFORRM
Europe The European Data Protection Board published an opinion on data transfers between EU member states and Russia. [read post]
4 Nov 2021, 5:37 am by Eugene Volokh
And if the case is seen as run-of-the-mill within its category, then allowing pseudonymity would imply that other cases in the category should be pseudonymized as well. [read post]
1 Feb 2019, 12:44 pm
Sara Dezalay & Simon Archer, By-passing sovereignty: Trafigura lawsuits (re Côte d’Ivoire) Song Mao, Alex Mills, Hisashi Harata & Oona Le Meur, Indigenous norms and judicial anthropology Franck Latty, Non-state authority: FIFA Ralf Michaels & Ludovic Hennebel, Informal Codes: Nike v Kasky François-Xavier Licari, Sandrine Brachotte & Nathalie Najjar, Arbitration and religion: Jivraj v Hashwani Darren Rosenblum,… [read post]
20 Dec 2018, 9:22 am by Schachtman
The school lost its accreditation in 1946, and closed.16 After receiving this degree, Selikoff continued his efforts to return to Scotland, to complete his “triple qualification” for medical licensure in Scotland, which would allow him to sit for the licensing examination in one of the United States. 1943 – 1944. [read post]
24 Oct 2018, 4:33 pm by Kevin LaCroix
John Reed Stark Most readers are undoubtedly familiar with the concept of “insider trading” – that is, the purchase or sale by company insiders of their personal holdings in company shares based on material non-public information. [read post]