3837 Results
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WATCH WEBCAST: Trends in Crime and Punishment

March 18, 2003

Alfred Blumstein, a member of Carnegie Mellon's faculty and the director of the National Consortium on Violence Research, will address "Some Recent Trends in Crime and Punishment." He will speak on April 3 at noon in Room 118 of the College of Law. UC Streaming Media will also webcast the lecture, which is part of the Seasongood College Visitor program and co-sponsored by the Urban Justice Institute.

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Race Judicata In Home Stretch To Third Annual Event

March 4, 2004

Smoothing the way for law students to be of service to the community is the ultimate goal for the third annual Race Judicata, a 5k walk/run that serves as the chief fund-raiser for the UC College of Law's Public Interest Law Group. The March 14 race helps fund stipends that law students use so they can work in unpaid positions that benefit the public, the poor and the underserved.

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UC Law To Host Inaugural Symposium On Women's Work

March 23, 2004

The joint degree program in Law and Women's Studies at UC will sponsor its first-ever symposium on April 8 on the balance women maintain between work and family responsibilities. "Woman's Work Is Never Done: Employment, Family and Activism" will feature UC experts and guests from American University, the University of Florida and the University of Iowa discussing what happens legally when a woman's other roles in society create conflicts with the demands of her employer. The event is free and open to the public and can be viewed through a UC Webcast.

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Final Day Approaches For Law's Military Care Package Campaign

December 7, 2004

The UC Law Library and a number of other groups from the college are promoting a care package campaign this holiday season for members of our military serving overseas. If you're interested in helping out, hurry, because the final day for donations is Dec. 9.

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Innocence Project Marks First Successful Prisoner Release

December 15, 2004

An man imprisoned for the last 25 years in Ohio has earned his parole, thanks in large part to new evidence developed by UC law students working on the Ohio Innocence Project that raises major doubts as to whether he had any involvement in the crime in the first place.