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Daniel D. Blinka is a practicing trial lawyer and law professor at Marquette University Law School in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. As a scholar, Blinka focuses primarily on evidence law, criminal procedure, and American history. He teaches evidence, trial advocacy, criminal law, constitutional criminal procedure, ethics, and American history.
The review was established in 1920 [1] by students and faculty of the law school. The first issue was published in October 1920. [2] In 1935, the journal became entirely student-edited. [3] The first faculty editor-in-chief was "legendary" law professor William Herbert ("Herbie") Page, [1] who taught at the school from 1917 [4] until his death ...
Spencer L. Kimball – dean of law, University of Wisconsin–Madison and former professor of law, University of Chicago; James E. Krier – professor of law at the University of Michigan, Harvard University, Oxford University, Stanford University, and UCLA [5] Stacy Leeds – dean of the University of Arkansas School of Law [6]
In 2011, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel said Prosser is a "reliable judicial conservative, but he's also independent", [18] citing an August 2010 Wisconsin Law Journal analysis which concluded "Prosser voted with no justice more than 85% of the time, though he generally combined with three other conservative justices (Michael Gableman, Patience ...
[2] [3] He was elected to the Wisconsin Supreme Court in 1983 and reelected in 1993. [4] While serving his first term on the Wisconsin Supreme Court, Bablitch earned a master of laws degree in the appellate process from the University of Virginia School of Law in 1987. Bablitch retired at the end of his second ten-year term on July 31, 2003.
In 1853, a separate Wisconsin Supreme Court was created with all members elected state-wide. Initially the court was three members; it grew to five justices in 1878, and to its current size of seven seats in 1907.
The Stevens Point Journal was founded in 1853 as the Wisconsin Lumberman.It was renamed the Stevens Point Journal in 1872. [1] [2]In 1997, the newspaper was sold to the Thomson Corporation, at the time a major national publisher of newspaper which owned six other newspapers in Wisconsin. [3]
Pope John Paul II was the subject of three premature obituaries.. A prematurely reported obituary is an obituary of someone who was still alive at the time of publication. . Examples include that of inventor and philanthropist Alfred Nobel, whose premature obituary condemning him as a "merchant of death" for creating military explosives may have prompted him to create the Nobel Prize; [1 ...