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19 Aug 2011, 4:00 am by Tomiko Brown-Nagin
Section B stresses trade-offs, especially concerning course books’ purposes and scope; Section C stresses opportunities the digital format offers, highlighting the appeal of digital methods to produce supplements, maintain a work’s currency, and facilitate skills training; and Section D discusses matters of presentation that creators of print and digital materials alike must address to promote usefulness – and calls for vigilance against associated risks. [read post]
5 Apr 2011, 10:17 am by Lawrence Cunningham
Section B stresses trade-offs, especially concerning course books’ purposes and scope; Section C stresses opportunities the digital format offers, highlighting the appeal of digital methods to produce supplements, maintain a work’s currency, and facilitate skills training; and Section D discusses matters of presentation that creators of print and digital materials alike must address to promote usefulness – and calls for vigilance against associated risks. [read post]
10 Sep 2010, 8:07 am by Bexis
Farnsworth, 965 P.2d 1209, 1220 (Alaska 1998), has not imposed an alternative design element, Maines v. [read post]
16 May 2010, 5:47 am by Lawrence Solum
  A word, phrase, sentence, or clause is ambiguous if it has more than one sense: for example, the word "cool" is ambiguous because it can mean (a) hip, (b) of low temperature, or (c) of even temperament. [read post]
29 Apr 2010, 5:28 am by Maxwell Kennerly
If the plain meaning rule fails, then: [C]ourts often treat ambiguity as a kind of gateway consideration when they interpret a statute. [read post]
1 Jan 2010, 10:41 am by Lawrence Solum
DudziakAmbiguity About Ambiguity: An Empirical Inquiry into Legal Interpretation by Ward Farnsworth, Dustin F. [read post]
14 Dec 2009, 2:00 pm
A corollary may well be that one becomes a professor of (a) sociology; (b) psychology, (c) economics; (d) law, precisely because one does not have a knack for those things that make up the common-sense parts of the discipline. [read post]
8 Feb 2009, 7:55 am
  A word, phrase, sentence, or clause is ambiguous if it has more than one sense: for example, the word "cool" is ambiguous because it can mean (a) hip, (b) of low temperature, or (c) of even temperament. [read post]
27 Aug 2008, 11:24 pm
c) Do the tests need to be approved by the AOAC or other equivalent certifying body? [read post]
15 Mar 2007, 8:03 am
Last month we examined some pre-Roman beginnings of modern admiralty doctrine, starting from pre-history through the Greek city states. [read post]
13 Dec 2006, 7:17 pm
Gura, Joseph Gustafson, Michael Halasz, Brent Halbert, Andria Haldas, Barbara Haller, Shawn Halverson, Manouela Ham, Ann Hamill, Dan Hammans, Gaylene Hamor, Chad Hansen, David C Hansen, Elizabeth R. [read post]