Word: pennsylvaniaã
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Today, an anti-choice Bob Casey is again making news. But rather than ask what his party can do for him, Bob Casey Jr. asks what he can do for his party. The former governor’s son is now Pennsylvania??s treasurer, and probably the state’s most popular politician...
...University of Pennsylvania??s Wharton School were chosen as the first sites. Wharton also plans to admit 35 players...
...pivotal role in regulating election law, sparking what many scholars have termed the “reapportionment revolution.” Unfortunately, the Court has been reluctant to intervene in cases involving partisan gerrymandering. Last year, in Vieth v. Jubelirer the Court ruled that it would not invalidate Pennsylvania??s highly partisan redistricting scheme, which sent twelve Republicans and only seven Democrats to the House in 2004 from a state that has not supported a Republican presidential nominee in nearly two decades. As the Washington Post lamented, the Supreme Court “examined a fundamental breakdown...
Faust, a tenured history professor at Harvard’s Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) renowned for her own scholarship on females in the American South, is a national figure in the field of women’s studies. She led the University of Pennsylvania??s women’s studies program for nearly five years, and in 2001 she became the first permanent dean of the Radcliffe Institute, a research center focusing on gender issues...
...1920s, a business professor at the University of Pennsylvania??s Wharton School postulated that markets are bullish when hemlines inch upward. And when a team from the old American Football League beats a National Football League squad in the professional gridiron championship, stocks tend to sour...