Search for: "Organ v. Pa. State Police" Results 61 - 80 of 123
Sort by Relevance | Sort by Date
RSS Subscribe: 20 results | 100 results
7 Dec 2014, 3:10 pm
But none of this matters here, because the University of Virginia is a public university, and like other public entities — police departments, government-run ski resorts, cities, counties, states or the federal government itself — it cannot take advantage of the libel claims that are available to nongovernmental organizations. [read post]
5 Sep 2014, 11:29 am
(This, of course, is part of the reason that police officers often carry both kinds of weapons.) [read post]
23 May 2014, 11:37 am by The Book Review Editor
The first guerrilla organizers were dissident army officers, appalled by their country’s subservience to U.S. interests, and then university intellectuals, shut out of electoral politics by state repression of the left. [read post]
17 Oct 2013, 8:59 am by Eric P. Robinson
Some police departments (Philadelphia, Pa., Mobile County, Ala. and Maricopa County, Ariz., for example) also post their mugshots online. [read post]
29 Apr 2013, 9:36 am by INFORRM
A workshop organized by HKBU and Tsinghua University, Communication & Visual Arts Building, Hong Kong Baptist University. [read post]
26 Apr 2013, 9:03 am by Rebecca Tushnet
  Take laws that are readily, easily on their face similar—California, NJ, maybe NY and Pa. and Florida—that’s effectively nationwide without the trouble of states that don’t add much to the mix and create tremendous issues. [read post]
15 Apr 2013, 7:56 am by INFORRM
A workshop organized by HKBU and Tsinghua University, Communication & Visual Arts Building, [read post]
25 Mar 2013, 7:05 am
Northwest claimed immunity as an international organization. [read post]
3 Sep 2012, 4:52 pm
It’s a Florida criminal case like something out of the Godfather – a 79-year-old suspected organized crime boss finally surrenders to police after nearly two decades on the run. [read post]
4 Aug 2012, 5:22 am by Max Kennerly, Esq.
The Philadelphia Police Department and Fire Department are both state governmental employers, so the NLRA doesn’t apply. [read post]