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Lynn Rhode News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

ALJAZAM Your World This Morning January 15, 2016

Just 17 days to go before the iowa president ial caucuses. The gloves have come off, as they say, with two the Top Republican candidates. The bromance between trump and cruz. Rising tensions dominated the forum leaving little time for other candidates to make an impression. The blow by blow. I have spent my entire life defend, the constitution before the u. S. Supreme court, and i will tell you, i am not going to be taking legal advice from donald trump. The long simmering smackdown between ted cruz and donald trump finally, boiled over. The gloves came off when moderators asked cruz if he was qualified to be president even though he was born in canada. I recognize donald is dismayed that his poll numbers are falling in iowa. The facts of the law are clear, under longstanding u. S. Law, the child of a u. S. Citizen born abroad is a natural born citizen. Trump argued it would hang over cruzs head and said cruz was wrong on the polls. He is in iowa and in the last three polls, i am beati

First day of pretrial hearings in JEA corruption case

Fundraiser for Barbato family

Jesse and Stacie Barbato with children Anthony, 13, and Bella, 8, have been Rohnert Park residents in the G section for many years having moved from New York. Both Jesse

Deborah Rhode, Who Transformed the Field of Legal Ethics, Dies at 68

Deborah Rhode, Who Transformed the Field of Legal Ethics, Dies at 68 A Stanford professor, she pushed the legal profession to confront the ways it failed clients and to be more inclusive of women. Deborah Rhode in 1993. She spent over four decades teaching at Stanford and was by far the most-cited scholar in legal ethics.Credit.Chuck Painter/Stanford News Service Published Jan. 18, 2021Updated Jan. 25, 2021 Deborah L. Rhode, a law professor who transformed the field of legal ethics from little more than a crib sheet for passing the bar exam into an empirically rich, morally rigorous investigation into how lawyers should serve the public, died on Jan. 8 at her home in Stanford, Calif. She was 68.

Deborah Rhode, Stanford law professor and authority on legal ethics, dies at 68

Deborah Rhode, Stanford law professor and authority on legal ethics, dies at 68 Harrison Smith © Stanford Law School Deborah L. Rhode became only the second woman to receive tenure at Stanford Law School, where she taught since 1979. As a law student at Yale in the mid-1970s, Deborah L. Rhode worked at a legal aid clinic, helping clients who were unable to afford lawyers for their divorce cases. Local lawyers were charging too much, she recalled $1,000 just to fill out paperwork so she and her colleagues created a “how to” kit for clients interested in representing themselves. Instead of being praised for their initiative, Dr. Rhode and the clinic faced legal threats from the bar association, which threatened to sue for the unauthorized practice of law.

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