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10 May 2010, 2:52 pm by ALeonard
 Brandeis, Chief Justice Harlan Fiske Stone, Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes, Justice Hugo Black, Justice Felix Frankfurter, Justice William O. [read post]
10 May 2010, 1:29 pm by Steve Hall
May 18 – 6:00 pm: Octavia Books, New Orleans May 25 – 7:00 pm: Jimmy Carter Presidential Library, Atlanta. [read post]
10 May 2010, 5:30 am by Susan Cartier Liebel
As a new solo, you may only have an idea of what your ideal client may be because you haven’t actually serviced your ideal client yet and that is okay. [read post]
9 May 2010, 3:44 pm by Tom Goldstein
  Justice Breyer was nominated on May 13, 1994, and his hearing commenced on July 12. [read post]
9 May 2010, 12:43 pm
The U.S. should not give up the suspects without negotiating serious guarantees that they won’t just be mysteriously “sprung” from a local jail. [read post]
7 May 2010, 10:00 pm by Tom Goldstein
In 2003, she was named the dean of the law school, succeeding Bob Clark, as well as the Charles Hamilton Houston Professor of Law. [read post]
7 May 2010, 10:10 am by Jeff Foust
A witness list has not been posted yet, but MSNBC’s Jay Barbree claims that Neil Armstrong and/or Eugene Cernan “may” testify. [read post]
4 May 2010, 3:50 am by Russ Bensing
  The rest of the crop: Charles Johnstone was, in some ways, a lucky man:  he was one of the few defendants whose identification process was so bad that an appellate court said the trial judge should have suppressed it. [read post]
3 May 2010, 4:20 am
You don’t have to admit adultery, in which case your wife will proceed on the basis of your unreasonable behaviour, and you may not like what she says. [read post]
2 May 2010, 7:33 am by Jeff Foust
The event will be May 25-26 in Galveston, Texas, at the Moody Gardens Hotel. [read post]
29 Apr 2010, 6:51 am by Erin Miller
” At ACSblog, however, Reverend Barry Lynn expresses concern that the ruling might lay the groundwork for a broader ruling; he suggests that several members of the majority were moving toward the position that “[t]he cross, the central symbol of Christianity for two millennia, isn’t necessarily always religious. [read post]