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Len Downie joined The Washington Post as a summer intern in 1964. His first major project, an investigation of the Washington area courts, made Downie a Pulitzer Prize finalist before the age of 30. Downie worked in several levels of management at The Post, including the supervision of the paper's Watergate coverage as the Deputy Metropolitan Editor, before being named the executive editor in 1991. Now retired, Downie has come to Arizona to join the staff of Arizona State University's Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and to promote his latest book, "Rules of the Game.
Len Downie joined The Washington Post as a summer intern in 1964. His first major project, an investigation of the Washington area courts, made Downie a Pulitzer Prize finalist before the age of 30. Downie worked in several levels of management at The Post, including the supervision of the paper's Watergate coverage as the Deputy Metropolitan Editor, before being named the executive editor in 1991. Now retired, Downie has come to Arizona to join the staff of Arizona State University's Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and to promote his latest book, "Rules of the Game.
... pursuance of a sentence of condemnation, as prize to the captors, pronounced by the Vice Admiralty C... offenders to come within the reach of our Courts. . The cases of the Exchange,c and the Cassius,d ...
Len Downie joined The Washington Post as a summer intern in 1964. His first major project, an investigation of the Washington area courts, made Downie a Pulitzer Prize finalist before the age of 30. Downie worked in several levels of management at The Post, including the supervision of the paper's Watergate coverage as the Deputy Metropolitan Editor, before being named the executive editor in 1991. Now retired, Downie has come to Arizona to join the staff of Arizona State University's Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and to promote his latest book, "Rules of the Game.
... adherence to the restricted role of courts. These restrictions have been encapsulated in a se... by state legislation, and international prize law. This body of law is at all times subject to m...
On Dec 16, 2005, New York Times reporters James Risen and Eric Lichtblau broke a front-page story, "Bush Lets U.S. Spy on Callers Without Courts," that won them a Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting--and an investigation by the Justice Department for possible unlawful releasing of classified information that may ultimately include charges of violating the 1917 Espionage Act. Hentoff details the 43-page decision in a lawsuit brought by the American Civil Liberties Union, Anna Diggs Taylor, an alumna of the civil rights movement and the first black judge to sit on that Michigan federal court.
... by the court, in the manner usual in prize courts. Without special authority from the court, the wit...
WASHINGTON, Oct. 8 /PRNewswire/ -- "Globalization: The Use of International Human Rights Law by Domestic Courts" will be discussed by a panel led by Arthur Chaskalson, retired Justice of the Constitutional Court of South Africa. Joining Justice Chaskalson on the panel will be 2010 Gruber Justice Prize recipients Michael Kirby, John Dugard and the Indian Law Resource Center, represented by Executive Director Robert Coulter. The symposium, which is open to the public, will immediately follow the presentation of the 2010 Gruber Justice Prize to the three recipients, who will share the $500,000 Prize. The ceremony and presentation, which will also be viewable via webcast, will be held at the George Washington University School of Law in Washington, D.C., on October 11 at 10:30 a.m. This ye...
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