Search results for: "IF" (3032 results)
York Stock Exchange.6 Yet if a corporation had the fore- sight to include arbitration provisions in its governing documents, some have suggested
that the police can otherwise follow without a warrant in the status quo—is harmless from a privacy perspective. After all, if cops can tail a
qual- ify as “disabled” under the statute if she is “regarded as having such as impair- ment.”295 In 2008, Congress passed the Americans with
individual words comprised therein.8 And if a hypothetical constitutional provision were to embody language that was widely understood by the ratifying
is intended to clar- ify—not change—the legal standard for undue hardship under Title VII . . . . [T]here is little if any daylight between the
shows like CSI, young people are applying to forensic science programs in increasing numbers. And consider the consequences: If jurors had this level of
shift in enforcement priorities more generally. One study estimates that this shift, if “strictly implemented,” coupled with the deferred action
settings. But if we focus only on major technical flaws, we might miss the fundamental fact that race-blind districting would devastate minority
Court struck down in Clinton v. City of New York. This time the law is constitutional, if only because it isn’t really binding. The proposal, passed last
if fiction would do as well, but because they too embody a performance: a rising to the challenge of having a life to lead. Justice Scalia had a life