Search for: "FRANKLIN RICHARDS" Results 201 - 220 of 708
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9 Jan 2018, 2:35 am by NCC Staff
Nixon and Franklin Roosevelt are the only two people to appear on a national presidential ticket five times. [read post]
15 Dec 2017, 1:55 am by NCC Staff
Bill of Rights Day is observed on December 15 each year, as called for by a joint resolution of Congress approved by President Franklin D. [read post]
11 Dec 2017, 4:36 am
The obvious actual example of this is Aretha Franklin singing Otis Redding's "Respect. [read post]
6 Dec 2017, 3:30 am by Cary C. Franklin
Franklin The article that made me think hardest about American constitutional law this year was not a work of legal scholarship. [read post]
4 Dec 2017, 12:54 pm by Scott Bomboy
But Hemel and Posner also cited the constitutional conflict with the concept that no person is above the law, most famously stated in the Supreme Court’s decision that forced President Richard Nixon to release the Watergate tapes. [read post]
4 Dec 2017, 12:04 pm by Steve Lubet
U.S. diplomat oldest member of the Constitutional Convention first Postmaster General of the United States writer of “Poor Richard’s Almanac” started the first free libraries Franklin was a fascinating, multi-talented, and charismatic figure, but he was not really pivotal in U.S. history. [read post]
29 Nov 2017, 4:30 am by Melissa Milewski
I'm back for a final week of blogging about the research in my book Litigating Across the Color Line. [read post]
29 Nov 2017, 4:30 am by Guest Blogger
President Franklin Roosevelt’s ill-fated proposal for “judicial reorganization,” or less euphemistically “Court-packing,” not unlike the Federalist Party’s lame-duck judicial reform of 1801, became an infamous case of political overreach. [read post]
29 Nov 2017, 2:42 am by NCC Staff
The broader use of presidential commissions started under President Theodore Roosevelt, and the Roberts Commission was called by President Franklin Roosevelt to investigate the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. [read post]
27 Nov 2017, 7:30 am by Ilya Somin
A 1937 Washington Post cartoon criticizing President Franklin D. [read post]
27 Nov 2017, 3:00 am by NCC Staff
 The precedent held after the deaths of six Presidents in office – Taylor, Lincoln, Garfield, McKinley, Harding and Franklin Roosevelt. [read post]
26 Nov 2017, 1:42 pm by Guest Blogger
My colleague Curt Bradley and I have recently taken a detailed look at the constitutional debate over Democratic President Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s 1937 proposal to pack the Supreme Court. [read post]
25 Nov 2017, 6:12 am by Garrett Hinck
Richard Betts and Matthew Waxman outlined a proposal to constrain and safeguard the president’s authority to launch a first-use nuclear attack. [read post]
20 Nov 2017, 6:56 am by Joe Rosenbaum
– By Stephen Díaz Gavin In Poor Richard’s Almanack, Benjamin Franklin included his own version of an old proverb : “For the want of a nail the shoe was lost, For the want of a shoe the horse was lost, For the want of a horse the rider was lost, For the want of a rider the battle was lost, For the want of a battle the kingdom was lost, And all for the want of a horseshoe-nail. [read post]