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26 Mar 2014, 4:52 am by SHG
It’s not that 38-year-old James M. [read post]
22 Feb 2007, 9:30 am
Convention Delegate; Margie Smith, Member, Roosevelt Island Residents Association (RIRA) Common Council*; Steve Marcus, former President and current Member, RIRA Common Council*; James Whalen, Executive Committee Member, Lenox Hill Democratic Club and Member, RIRA Common Council*; Roslyn Fernandez, 65th A.D. [read post]
8 Oct 2010, 12:18 pm by Kevin Smith
Smith, James Tuttle Thursday, 10/21 9-11am Duke  Perkins Library, Room 217 Open Access Publishing A panel will talk about their experiences with open access publishing and its impact on scholarly communications. [read post]
3 May 2013, 9:00 am by Jeff Foust
“I’m the guy who came into office thinking that James Webb was okay. [read post]
2 Sep 2022, 5:00 am by jonathanturley
Below is my column in the Hill on the latest controversy over President Joe Biden’s unilateral use of executive power. [read post]
14 Feb 2023, 11:44 am by David Newhoff
I think it’s fair to read that as Cambridge Analytica 2.0 and to recognize that the parties who used the Beta version are still around—and many have offices on Capitol Hill. [read post]
7 Nov 2022, 10:38 am by Jonathan Bailey
  According to Sterling, an agency known as Hill + Knowlton Strategies reached out to a colleague of theirs, Laura Kate Dale, offering not just review keys to the game, but “features” that they could run on their site. [read post]
8 Mar 2017, 10:37 am by Jordan Brunner
The witness list includes FBI Director James Comey, NSA Director Mike Rogers, former CIA Director John Brennan, former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, former acting attorney general Sally Yates, and two senior officials from the cybersecurity firm that identified the breach of the DNC as being the work of Russian operatives. [read post]
10 Feb 2015, 4:33 pm by Jeremy Malcolm
Lake McArthur, Yoho Park by James MacDonald James MacDonald of Canada's Group of Seven whose works are in the U.S. public domain. [read post]
1 Jan 2019, 4:07 pm by Kevin LaCroix
James’s Park together in my list of top ten urban parks. [read post]
1 Jan 2019, 4:07 pm by Kevin LaCroix
James’s Park together in my list of top ten urban parks. [read post]
The State Bar of Texas Appellate Section and the Texas Supreme Court Historical Society celebrated its Texas Appellate Hall of Fame 2019 inductees during an Advanced Civil Appellate Seminar in Austin on September 5. The award recognizes judges, attorneys, and court personnel who have made significant contributions to appellate law and who are no longer living. The 2019 inductees: Thomas J. Rusk—The third chief justice of Texas, Thomas Rusk was actually the first to preside over a Supreme Court session and authored its first opinion in 1840. Prior to his life on the bench, Rusk was a signatory to the Texas Declaration of Independence and was also the Texas Republic’s war secretary. He oversaw the burial of Col. James Fannin, who, along with his men, was executed at Goliad under orders from President Gen. Antonio López de Santa Anna. Rusk led the final charge on Santa Anna at San Jacinto. Hortense Sparks Ward—When Hortense Ward passed the Texas bar exam in 1910—the first woman to do so—she set off a string of firsts. Among those milestones: the first female Texan to be licensed to practice before the U.S. Supreme Court; special chief justice of the temporary all-woman Texas Supreme Court (the first state high court of its kind in the country) of January 1925 in a case involving a trustee of a fraternal order of which the all-male Texas Supreme Court were members; and the country’s first female chief justice after being appointed to the latter by Gov. Pat Neff. The opinion issued (in a cause) has been cited numerous times by the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals and Texas appellate courts. John L. Hill Jr.—As the attorney general of Texas, John Hill argued before the U.S. Supreme Court five times. He served as the Texas Supreme Court chief justice from 1984 until 1988 when he resigned to lead an effort to abolish the popular election of judges in the state. Hill, who also served as the Texas secretary of state, is the only person to have held all three titles. In 1997, he received a lifetime achievement award from
6 Sep 2019, 1:14 pm by Eric Quitugua
Hill Jr. [read post]
The State Bar of Texas Appellate Section and the Texas Supreme Court Historical Society celebrated its Texas Appellate Hall of Fame 2019 inductees during an Advanced Civil Appellate Seminar in Austin on September 5. The award recognizes judges, attorneys, and court personnel who have made significant contributions to appellate law and who are no longer living. The 2019 inductees: Thomas J. Rusk—The third chief justice of Texas, Thomas Rusk was actually the first to preside over a Supreme Court session and authored its first opinion in 1840. Prior to his life on the bench, Rusk was a signatory to the Texas Declaration of Independence and was also the Texas Republic’s war secretary. He oversaw the burial of Col. James Fannin, who, along with his men, was executed at Goliad under orders from President Gen. Antonio López de Santa Anna. Rusk led the final charge on Santa Anna at San Jacinto. Hortense Sparks Ward—When Hortense Ward passed the Texas bar exam in 1910—the first woman to do so—she set off a string of firsts. Among those milestones: the first female Texan to be licensed to practice before the U.S. Supreme Court; special chief justice of the temporary all-woman Texas Supreme Court (the first state high court of its kind in the country) of January 1925 in a case involving a trustee of a fraternal order of which the all-male Texas Supreme Court were members; and the country’s first female chief justice after being appointed to the latter by Gov. Pat Neff. The opinion issued (in a cause) has been cited numerous times by the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals and Texas appellate courts. John L. Hill Jr.—As the attorney general of Texas, John Hill argued before the U.S. Supreme Court five times. He served as the Texas Supreme Court chief justice from 1984 until 1988 when he resigned to lead an effort to abolish the popular election of judges in the state. Hill, who also served as the Texas secretary of state, is the only person to have held all three titles. In 1997, he received a lifetime achievement award from
6 Sep 2019, 1:14 pm by Eric Quitugua
Hill Jr. [read post]
12 May 2016, 8:57 am by Karen
Sandymount provided some of the settings for James Joyce’s Ulysses. [read post]
27 Mar 2024, 7:56 am by Janine P. Geske
The name didn’t register with me when the three of us had lunch at Marquette Law School’s Tory Hill. [read post]