2,366 research outputs found

    Testimony of Alvin Bragg Regarding the Repeal of New York Civil Rights Law Section 50-a

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    October 17, 2019 Alvin Bragg, on behalf of the New York Law School Racial Justice Project, respectfully submits the following testimony today regarding the repeal of N.Y. CIV. RIGHTS LAW § 50-a.https://digitalcommons.nyls.edu/rjp_briefs_filings_testimonies/1002/thumbnail.jp

    Utah Law Week 1950

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    Oil portrait of Judge Tillman D. Johnson presented to the College of Law by Johnson Inn of Phi Delta Phi. Artist: Alvin Gittins of the University of Utah College of Fine Art

    Testimony of Alvin Bragg Regarding The Jurisdiction Of The Civilian Complaint Review Board

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    January 13, 2021 Alvin Bragg, on behalf of the New York Law School Racial Justice Project, respectfully submits the following testimony in support of the New York City Civilian Complaint Review Board’s (“CCRB”) authority to investigate allegations of untruthful testimony and written statements made by members of the New York City Police Department (“NYPD”) as well as allegations of sexual misconduct by NYPD officers.https://digitalcommons.nyls.edu/rjp_briefs_filings_testimonies/1000/thumbnail.jp

    Memo from Captain Alvin Sessions, July 27, 1942

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    A memo from Captain Alvin Sessions, Rail Transportation Officer, to the commanding officer. The memo gives a brief description of how train ticket sales will change to increase security.The War Relocation Authority (WRA), together with the Wartime Civil Control Administration (WCCA), the Civil Affairs Division (CAD) and the Office of the Commanding General (OFG) of the Western Defense Command (WDC) operated together to segregate and house some 110,000 men women and children from 1942 to 1945. The collection contains documents and photographs relating to the establishment and administrative workings of the (WDC), the (WRA) and the (WCCA) for the year 1942

    In Memoriam: Alvin R. Allison

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    A memorial for Alvin R. Allison one of the major forces behind the creation of the Texas Tech Law School. Discusses various contributions to the law school that Allison made to ensure that the law school was successful

    A. T. Smith Diary transcript 1845

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    A transcription of a 1845 diary in which Alvin Thompson Smith writes about topics such as his daily life living as a settler on the Tualatin Plains; his tending to daily farmwork and chores; his religious life and reading of the Bible; his work at Joseph Gale's mill and his business dealings with Gale; his business dealings with Mr. Thomas New Banks, Mr. Cornelius Gilliams, Mr. Laframboise, Mr. Geiger, Mr. Owensbys, and Charles McKay; his interactions with "Indians;" his contributing efforts to build a bridge at John B. Mills Creek and David Hills; helping a Mr. Naylor build a bridge; his travels to Willamette Falls, Multnomah Island, and "Sovies" (perhaps refering to the Sauvie Island area); and his religious friends Congregational Minister Harvey L. Clark (or Clarke) and P. B. Littlejohn. On July 26, 1845, Smith describes how he "went over to the east plain to vote for sustaining the old Organic law of the territory." He describes how his friend Harvey Clark became the pastor of the local church in July of that year.Born in Connecticut in 1802, Alvin Thompson Smith, along with his wife Abigail Raymond, was amongst the first Euro-Americans to settle in the area on the Tualatin Plains that became Forest Grove, Oregon in the early 1840s. In his life, Smith was a missionary, a postmaster, a notable participant in the Champoeg Meetings, the builder of a 1856 house in Forest Grove that is today recognized by the National Register of Historic Places as the Alvin T. Smith House, and a contributor to an orphanage that became Tualatin Academy and later developed into Pacific University. Smith died in 1888 at the age of 85. This is one part of a collection of transcriptions of Alvin T. Smith's diaries from the years 1840-1853. The transcriptions, which are likely not identical to the diaries themselves and perhaps summarize some entries, were likely typewritten in the 1970s. The diaries are notable for their near daily entries. The original diaries are held by the Oregon Historical Society (Mss 8)

    Alvin B. Rubin

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    Visiting Federal Appeals Judge Alvin B. Rubin

    Jere Nash Interview with Alvin Bronstein

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    Interview conducted by author Jere Nash with lawyer Alvin Bronstein in the process of writing Mississippi Politics: The Struggle for Power, 1976-2006. Bronstein served as Chief Staff Counsel for the Lawyers\u27 Constitutional Defense Committee from 1964 to 1968, litigating civil rights cases in Mississippi, Alabama, and Louisiana. Topics covered include the Lawyers\u27 Constitutional Defense Committee; other civil rights lawyers in the South during the 1960s; judges, public officials, and civil rights activists in Mississippi; and the reapportionment of the Mississippi Legislature

    Three Models of Tax Reform

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    The Annual George Wythe Lecture presented by Alvin C. Warren on April 10, 1997. The related article is available in the William & Mary Law Review
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