Search for: "Want v. Century Supply Company" Results 41 - 60 of 133
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12 Jun 2012, 5:29 am by David Bernstein
Holmes explained that he thought that requiring train companies to supply first-class cars to African Americans only when it was economically profitable to do so constituted “logically exact” equality. [read post]
16 Sep 2009, 1:47 pm
Rolling Stone Announces More Five-Star Rated Albums And All I Got Was This Lousy Feed Want to know why the music business is broken? [read post]
25 Dec 2022, 2:14 am by Aaron L. Nielson
Papa I don’t want to marry Allan for some time, but I can get all he has, so what use is there in me marring him. [read post]
1 Nov 2022, 10:23 am by David Kopel
Part V addresses Miller and Tucker's claim that the American Founders were unfamiliar with dramatic technological changes in firearms — a claim that is refuted by Dupuy's data. [read post]
22 Jul 2015, 2:18 pm by Rebecca Tushnet
  Google and Samsung: A2K for patents; in ©, intermediaries want A2K but not content providers. [read post]
22 Sep 2023, 7:16 am by Ben Sperry
Supreme Court has alluded to the market for ideas in First Amendment law for more than a century, dating back at least to Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes dissent in Abrams v. [read post]
2 Mar 2016, 4:26 pm by Kevin LaCroix
  However, what’s missing from the discussion is some good old-fashioned common sense, which today’s Stark on IR posting now introduces into this 21st Century technological and legal firestorm. [read post]
6 Feb 2018, 7:24 am
Sparing no modesty for a plan he personally designed with a handful of close advisors, Xi Jinping hailed BRI as the “project of the Century. [read post]
26 Nov 2010, 2:39 am
Employees of the 21st century want a different relationship with their employer and co-workers than that of prior generations. [read post]
8 Feb 2023, 5:39 am
  It is semiotic in the sense that it appears to invest ideas with a corporeality and driving force once reserved to popular politics (captured in an address delivered by a different American president in  19th century here). [read post]