Search for: "Mark Dickens" Results 81 - 100 of 149
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28 Feb 2013, 5:17 am by Steve Cornforth
This is going to have a marked impact on the legal profession. [read post]
28 Jan 2013, 10:08 am
Charles Dickens uses the word in this context several times in the Pickwick Papers (1836-7) and Wilkie Collins employs it in The Moonstone (1868). [read post]
25 Dec 2012, 8:03 am by StephanieWestAllen
”But the authors of a new study on life-changing experiences give author Charles Dickens high marks for his portrayal of Scrooge’s sudden switch to saintliness.Former grad student Jon Skalski and Brigham Young University psychology professor Sam Hardy conducted an in-depth study of 14 people who experienced profound, sudden and lasting change. [read post]
10 Sep 2012, 10:38 pm by Stan
On a side note, I’m glad that Barboza and Duhigg used the term “intern” in quotation marks. [read post]
31 Aug 2012, 6:59 am by pete.black@gmail.com (Peter Black)
Authors like Charles Dickens complained to no avail; not until American literature caught up in quality and appeal could authors like Mark Twain and Harriet Beecher Stowe persuade the US government to enforce copyright. [read post]
5 May 2012, 10:37 am by Mandelman
If that’s “difficult” for our government to gauge, they must be having a dickens of a time fixing the country’s banking institutions. [read post]
23 Apr 2012, 8:15 am by Lovechilde
Observing a free-labor textile mill and a convict-labor one on a visit to the United States, novelist Charles Dickens couldn’t tell the difference. [read post]
16 Apr 2012, 6:01 am by Rebecca Tushnet
  House of Lords accepted copying of trade dress with different word mark. [read post]
3 Apr 2012, 7:51 am
The 200th anniversary of Charles Dickens’ birth has just been marked across the UK and I am reminded of the most famous line from Oliver Twist, “Please Sir, can I have some more? [read post]
27 Mar 2012, 6:15 am by Lucas A. Ferrara, Esq.
Bloomberg at a Public Hearing on Local Laws  (3/26/12): "The next bill before me is Introductory Number 791, sponsored by Speaker Quinn and Council Members Gonzalez, Arroyo, Brewer, Chin, Dromm, Gentile, James, Koppell, Koslowitz, Lander, Lappin, Levin, Recchia, Rose, Seabrook, Vann, Williams, Mark-Viverito, Palma, Vacca, Garodnick, Mendez, Gennaro, Van Bramer, Mealy, Rodriguez, Jackson, Barron, Dickens, Eugene, Koo, Reyna and Weprin. [read post]
7 Feb 2012, 7:11 am by Lisa A. Mazzie
Today marks the 200th anniversary of Charles Dickens’ birth. [read post]
30 Jan 2012, 7:57 am
The legal department of one publisher expected him to get permission for the reproduction of a lengthy quote from Charles Dickens (died 1879), and he also had some fairly vigorous correspondence over the question whether the reproduction of a figurative trade mark in a chapter on trade mark registration constituted a trade mark infringement. [read post]
27 Dec 2011, 10:15 pm by Paul Karlsgodt
Jarndyce will contest in the Dickens novel Bleak House, which had spurred judicial reforms in the UK in the Nineteenth Century. [read post]
29 Nov 2011, 11:30 am by Lucas A. Ferrara, Esq.
Bloomberg at a Public Hearing on Local Laws (11/22/11) "The first of two bills before me today is Introductory Number 656-A, sponsored by Speaker Quinn and Council Members Mark-Viverito, Dromm, Foster, Brewer, Chin, Jackson, Koslowitz, Lappin, Mendez, Palma, Rodriguez, Rose, Barron, Gonzalez, Ferreras, Levin, Comrie, Vann, Cabrera, Dickens, Arroyo, James, Van Bramer, Eugene, Reyna, Seabrook, Sanders, Rivera, Crowley, Koppell, Williams, Lander, Garodnick, Wills, Mealy, Vacca,… [read post]
28 Sep 2011, 7:00 am by Lucas A. Ferrara, Esq.
Bloomberg at a Public Hearing on Local Laws (9/27/11) "The first of five bills before me today is Introductory Number 655-A, sponsored by Council Members Lappin, Brewer, Williams, Mark-Viverito, Vacca, Mendez, Chin, James, Koslowitz, Garodnick, Gonzalez, Dickens, Dromm, Jackson, Weprin, Palma, Barron, Gennaro and Reyna. [read post]
25 Sep 2011, 5:53 am by Lawrence B. Ebert
Charles Dickens, Buffalo Bill Cody, King Edward VII. [read post]
17 Aug 2011, 5:56 pm by Ray
Prescriptivists may protest, but Mark points out that the singular they is widely accepted in written British English, and it is well documented in the works of many great writers, including Auden, Austen, Byron, Chaucer, Dickens, Eliot, Shakespeare, Shaw, Thackeray, and Trollope. [read post]