Search for: "Noble v. Yorke" Results 61 - 80 of 201
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15 Sep 2008, 12:37 pm
Last week, PCAOB member Charles Niemeier addressed a New York State Society of CPAs conference. [read post]
18 Mar 2014, 1:43 am by rhapsodyinbooks
This noble ideal cannot be realized if the poor man charged with crime has to face his accusers without a lawyer to assist him. [read post]
22 Nov 2016, 8:44 pm
Noah Feldman argues it is not in this editorial at the New York Times. [read post]
22 Oct 2019, 8:58 am by Jill L. Rosenberg
A Southern District of New York Court recently addressed these issues on a motion to compel filed by the plaintiff in Demos Parneros v. [read post]
13 Jul 2012, 5:09 am by OBABL Staff
In an interesting op-ed in the New York Times, Syracuse law professor, Kevin Noble Maillard, breaks down the problems inherent in bringing interracial romance to the campaign trail. [read post]
3 Jul 2022, 4:43 am by SHG
Thanks in part to two Supreme Court justices who have been credibly accused of abusive behavior toward women, Roe v. [read post]
31 Aug 2015, 3:26 am by Peter Mahler
  The Florida intermediate appellate court’s ruling in Froonjian makes for a fascinating contrast with New York case law represented most prominently by the Second Department’s 2010 decision in Chiu v Chiu holding that, absent express authorization in the LLC’s operating agreement, a member’s involuntary expulsion is not permitted. [read post]
6 Oct 2015, 8:29 am by Aaron Rubin and Daniel A. Zlatnik
This was essentially the implementation at issue in a 2012 case from the Southern District of New York, Fteja v. [read post]
1 Feb 2012, 11:53 am by Staci Zaretsky
The law is supposed to be a noble profession — how is that noble in any way, shape, or form? [read post]
19 Mar 2013, 5:15 pm
Regardless of the outcome of the case between Capitol Records and ReDigi (Capitol Records, LLC v. [read post]
17 Jul 2019, 4:04 am by Edith Roberts
” Additional coverage comes from Linda Greenhouse for The New York Times, Kevin Daley at The Daily Caller, David Cohen at Politico, and Nina Totenberg at NPR, who notes that Stevens, “[o]ften called a judge’s judge,” was “something of a throwback to a less rancorous era, when, as one writer put it, law and politics were a noble pursuit, not a blood sport. [read post]