Search for: "Roger Sensing" Results 441 - 460 of 1,515
Sorted by Relevance | Sort by Date
RSS Subscribe: 20 results | 100 results
30 Jul 2020, 3:56 pm by Riana Pfefferkorn
Roger Stone likewise asked for his prison term to be delayed (now a moot point since said criminal President commuted his sentence). [read post]
1 Jun 2017, 6:14 am by Nora Ellingsen
In the most literal sense of the word, it’s almost hard to believe. [read post]
10 Aug 2017, 7:43 am by Rebecca Tushnet
  Detached from sense of what they’re supposed to be measuring. [read post]
13 Aug 2013, 4:15 pm by Lyle Denniston
It makes no sense, Kavanaugh wrote, to interpret the United States v. [read post]
4 Jun 2018, 9:39 am by Rebecca Tushnet
Should frame things in Rogers/Gugliemi terms: how we describe what’s being challenged here. [read post]
2 Aug 2022, 12:41 pm by Florian Mueller
There is so much at stake for the digital economy.In a way, Judge YGR sensed during last year's trial that app developers are at Apple's mercy. [read post]
9 Sep 2014, 12:00 am
Roger Goodell has got to go. [read post]
9 Sep 2014, 12:00 am
Roger Goodell has got to go. [read post]
6 Jun 2019, 9:02 am by Rebecca Tushnet
”Because Ebony is a mark for an expressive work, the court didn’t use Rogers but did use the Polaroid factors with appropriate weight to the First Amendment interests at stake. [read post]
30 Nov 2018, 3:56 am
The account given by Roger Kay is that the term arose when a spokesperson for Intel described opposing counsel in a patent infringement case, the late Raymond Niro (see here for a Kat remembrance of Mr. [read post]
16 Jan 2023, 4:21 am
In fact, those words were used in the 19th-century medicine to refer to physical deformities caused by one's work.Maybe something like a chimney sweeper:Back to the New Yorker article....Any kind of occupational training imparts to its recipients both a sense of mastery and a certain obliviousness to what this mastery costs—namely, the loss of other ways of perceiving the world. [read post]
11 Nov 2021, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
 Rogers Smith  The University of Kansas Press has long published an outstanding series of books on major decisions of the U.S. [read post]