Search for: "John Doe Gilbert" Results 1 - 20 of 215
Sorted by Relevance | Sort by Date
RSS Subscribe: 20 results | 100 results
26 Oct 2009, 4:21 am
Brooks did not give the proper credit, namely, to John Doris (Wash U) and Gilbert Harman (Princeton), for raising these issues, as Appiah (who is cited) himself does. [read post]
25 Oct 2011, 8:27 am by Adam Kolber
Recently, Gilbert Harman has suggested that Marc Hauser's book, Moral Minds, relied on the work of John Mikhail to a much greater extent than is acknowledged in the book itself. [read post]
22 Feb 2007, 12:13 am
Held: This claim fails for the same reasons as does Henderson's Title VII claims. [read post]
16 Jun 2014, 10:10 am by Joseph D. Kearney
Then Dean Pauly became Provost Pauly in 2008, and so for five years I reported to him, although that phrasing does not convey all the support that Provost Pauly gave to the Law School and to me as dean. [read post]
6 Jan 2010, 7:11 am by Jon Hyman
While a D.C. grand jury considers whether to indict Arenas, he tweets that he is the new John Wayne. [read post]
17 Apr 2013, 5:14 pm by Mary Whisner
 As Isabel Wilkerson’s The Warmth of Other Suns did for the story of America’s black migration, Gilbert King’s Devil in the Grove does for this great untold story of American legal history, a dangerous and uncertain case from the days immediately before Brown v. [read post]
26 Jun 2011, 5:14 pm by David Friedman
 Almost everyone ends up paired off, most of them unsuitably, although the plot does manage to free them at the end. [read post]
12 May 2014, 8:59 am by John J. Pauly
Partisanship, especially these days, does not want for defenders. [read post]
17 Nov 2007, 3:59 am
Plaintiffs-appellants John Does II-III appeal the district court's order dismissing their challenge to the constitutionality of Michigan's Setting Aside Convictions Act ("SACA"), Mich. [read post]
15 Nov 2013, 1:02 am by rhapsodyinbooks
Library of Congress photo of the only surviving fragment of the broadside of the Declaration of Independence printed by John Dunlap and sent on July 6, 1776, to George Washington by John Hancock, President of the Continental Congress in Philadelphia. [read post]