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The Maryland Court of Appeals' slow pace in issuing opinions shows a disregard bordering on disdain for those who have a right to expect better. The 178-day interval between hearing a case and issuing its opinion -- a 15-year high -- is bad enough. But even that is burning rubber compared to some of the cases unearthed by reporter Steve Lash in "Justice Delayed," an investigative package The Daily Record published this week.
...He graduated from Dunbar High School, was attending Morgan State College and working onn his application to Harvard Law School. A lot can happen in five ye...
..., LOS ANGELES UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT. CHRIS BERN, PRESIDENT, ... . Secretary Duncan -- and a graduate of Harvard University -- welcome again to the subcommittee. ... at least the same amount if not more applications in phase two. And this is just one of our competi...
...The University of Michigan Law School (Law School), one of the Nation's top law schools,...'s program was virtually identical to the Harvard admissions program described approvingly by Justic... ethnicity the defining feature of the application. See id., at 317. The Law School engages in a high...
...Evaluating Antibalkanization's Application in Particular Cases C. Colorblind and Race-Conscio...-conscious efforts to ensure integration in school districting and government employment-Parents Invo...A 2003 article in the Harvard Law Review claimed to be the "first serious consid...
Over the past two to three decades economics has played an increasingly important role in the development of U.S. antitrust enforcement and policy. This essay first reviews the major facets of U.S. antitrust enforcement and next reviews the ways in which economics - starting from a low base - has grown in importance in antitrust. The essay then highlights three antitrust areas in which the influence of economics has had the greatest influence: merger analysis, vertical relationships, and predatory pricing. The essay concludes with the identification of four antitrust areas where further economics analysis could have high returns.
... due to the influence of Edward Mason at Harvard (Mason 1939, 1957) and his colleagues and Ph.D. st... on antitrust provided an extensive application of the paradigm to antitrust.13 It is noteworthy t...17 But a "Chicago School" counter-revolution was brewing as well, which arg...
...: Theory, development, assessment, and application at home, school, and in the workplace. San Francis...2002. Primal leadership. Harvard Business School Press: Boston. . Granovetter M. 19...
Law practice and legal education are facing fundamental changes. Many assume that these changes will force law schools to give up on theory and focus more on training students for the practice of law. However, this Essay shows that the future may be more uncertain and complex. The only thing that is certain is that law schools may face, for the first time, the need to provide the type of education the market demands rather than serving lawyers’ and law professors’ preferences. Legal educators must respond to these demands by serving not just the existing U.S. market for legal services but also a global market for legal information. This may call for training in some, but not all, of the theories and disciplines that have been developing in law schools.
... home thanks to a burdensome visa application process." . -- Harvard Law School researcher and d...
...More specifically, the application of the asset or the income test in determining whe...student at Harvard Law School. . This article is designed to give gen...
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