Search for: "In re Thomas (1982)" Results 121 - 140 of 197
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27 Sep 2018, 4:00 am by Administrator
As Emmett Macfarlane has argued, [1] Harper’s skepticism pierced a bipartisan “Charter regime” that had existed from 1982 until 2006. [read post]
8 Dec 2021, 5:21 am
But the Summit also provided a convenient backdrop against which Chinese authorities might more effectively re-focus their energies on the deeper conceptualization and projection outward of their own imaginaries of legitimate constitutional systems. [read post]
8 Nov 2021, 8:26 am
  This becomes more important in times of tension,l especially when two or more opposing systems seek advantage in their contests for re-adjusting the nature of the relationship between them. [read post]
29 Nov 2023, 7:55 am
Ravitch Restricted access  Chapter 12: The view: propertizing the visibility of distance  Sarah Marusek and Anne Wagner Restricted access  Chapter 13: Semiotic insecurity and fake news law  Ahmad Pakatchi Restricted access  Chapter 14: Beware of (bad and dangerous) metaphors: remarks made at the intersection of cognitive linguistics and law  Angela Condello Restricted access  Chapter 15: Semiotics of international law  Michael Salter Restricted… [read post]
24 Aug 2011, 6:58 am
  On August 17th, Philadelphia attorney Larry Coben filed a lawsuit against the NFL on behalf of the following seven former NFL players against the league, all of whom claim significant brain injury as a result of their time as NFL players:  Jim McMahon (QB; multiple teams, 1982-96); Charles Ray Easterling (DB; Atlanta Falcons; 1972-79), Wayne Radloff (OL; Atlanta Falcons; 1985-89); Joseph “Joey” Thomas (DB; multiple teams; 2004-10); Gerald Feehery (OL;… [read post]
12 Jan 2011, 11:36 am by Roshonda Scipio
. : Carolina Academic Press, c2009.Criminal Procedure(RES)KF9619 .W43Wharton's criminal procedure. [read post]
8 Aug 2020, 4:23 am by Schachtman
Beshada’s refusal to consider the industrial context of asbestos claims, with the usual involvement of sophisticated employers charged with providing a complex safety program for its workers, became the judicial norm in many decisions in state and federal courts. [read post]
17 Oct 2013, 5:00 am by Bexis
  The learned intermediary rule could be Bob Dylan (I know, we’re showing our age, here). [read post]
24 Apr 2024, 11:27 am by admin
Another multi-district litigation (MDL) has hit a jarring speed bump. [read post]
23 Jul 2020, 4:00 am by Jon L. Gelman
The rapid emergence of COVID-19 creates new challenges for the nation’s patchwork of state run workplace benefit delivery systems. [read post]
8 May 2014, 9:01 pm by Vikram David Amar
The key decision in this line of authority is the intuitively attractive yet controversial and somewhat confounding 1982 ruling in Washington v. [read post]
12 Sep 2019, 1:02 pm
(Pix Credit Here: Carnival Cruises Faces More Lawsuits over Cuba Trips)It has been only several months since the Trump Administration announced that it would no longer suspend the U.S. law provisions that allow lawsuits in U.S. courts against foreign companies in Cuba that use properties confiscated from Cuban Americans and other U.S. citizens after 1959 (discussed here: The Pivot Toward the Caribbean: Announcement of Permission to Sue Anyone Using American Property Confiscated by Cuba and the… [read post]
25 Jun 2020, 9:05 pm by Max Masuda-Farkas
Writing for The Atlantic in 1982, George L. [read post]
9 Feb 2022, 9:52 am by Chris Castle
For example he said: The number one thing that we’re stretched for at the moment is more inventory. [read post]
18 Apr 2011, 2:29 pm by David Kopel
So was Missouri Democrat Harold Volkmer, who passed away on April 16, one of the greatest of America’s Second Amendment heroes.Born in 1931, Volkmer got his start in politics helping his mother campaign in Jefferson City, Missouri, for the re-election of President Franklin Roosevelt. [read post]
27 Dec 2008, 10:19 am
. * 1660: Thomas Urquhart, Scottish aristocrat, polymath and first translator of Rabelais into English, is said to have died laughing upon hearing that Charles II had taken the throne. * 1671: François Vatel, chef to Louis XIV, committed suicide because his seafood order was late and he couldn’t stand the shame of a postponed meal. [read post]
16 Nov 2012, 1:50 pm by Bexis
App. 1989) (“hospitals a[re] providers of professional medical services rather than producers or marketers of products”; hospital room furnishings not sued for medical purposes were exception); Hector v. [read post]