Search results for: "n" (3654 results)
1935). 97. See Green & Zacharias, supra note 67, at 428 n.178 (noting that federal and state prosecutors might be subject to similar generalized
own ac- tions.”); Barry et al., supra note 32, at 574-76 (stating that “[i]n addition to the direct evi- dence of moral animus in the ADA’s
education was a core component of American 69. See id. at 491 n.6. Warren noted that “in the North segregation in public education has per- sisted in
Role of Arbitrator: Conflicts of Interest, 28 FORDHAM URB. L.J. 915, 920 n.24 (2001). 15. See Sarath Sanga, A New Strategy for Regulating Arbitration
Comment, and the editors of the Yale Law Journal, including Elizabeth Beling, Nellie Conover-Crockett, and Jeremy N. Thomas, for their insightful
not possible in this context: “[N]obody has the slightest idea what may happen next.” Ackerman, supra note 12, at 1886 (emphasis omitted). This
; Paulsen, Making Sense of Religious Freedom, supra note 1, at 1613-14 n.39 (collect- ing arguments and authorities); Paulsen, Lemon Is Dead, supra note
STATUTES: THE NEW AMERICAN CONSTITUTION (2010). 56. See Driver, supra note 48, at 2638 n.101. 57. See David A. Strauss, The Neo-Hamiltonian
and other large-scale violence; or of the collec- tive nature of the crimes . . . .”); Tallgren, supra note 13, at 571 (“[I]n the current project of
Commander, n., defs. 10.a-c, supra note 37. The fifth definition of “Commander in Chief” also offers a narrow sense of the phrase. Id., def. 10.e