Word: patel
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Many have begun to note that talking with well-known weirdo Erica M. Patel ’04 is a Vietnam-style quagmire. “Pretty soon I was up to my shoulders in the swamp with no exit strategy,” said Jamal B. Rusk ’04 of a Saturday night encounter with Patel. Rusk was saved only when wingman Paul K. Marlow ’04 boated upriver and terminated the conversation with extreme prejudice?...
...elect responsible and peace-loving leaders. We must never forget the words of Mohandas Gandhi: an eye for an eye will make the whole world blind. We should learn to live in a manner to make our lives and those of others more enjoyable on Planet Earth. NAREN PATEL Hickory...
...prisoner before a judge; the prosecution must make the case for holding the prisoner or let him go. On June 12, Newman submitted a petition for a writ of habeas corpus to Judge Mukasey, and that day he appointed a co-counsel to help Newman handle the workload: Andrew Patel, 50, a genial veteran with a hearty laugh who is no stranger to controversial clients. In 1997 he defended El Sayyid Nosair, a convicted assassin suspected of masterminding the 1993 World Trade Center bombing from prison. Together Newman and Patel spent a week beefing up her original petition...
Newman and Patel were developing an enormously effective legal chemistry. They share a gluttonous appetite for work, and they make a natural good cop-bad cop team. "Our personalities fit together. He's the nice one," she admits. "I'm very aggressive. He calms me down." They worked out a division of labor, splitting up the petition into chunks according to who had expertise in what, swapping drafts and editing each other's work. "We've pulled some fairly close to all-nighters," says Patel. "Things where we say, 'We just have to do X, and we don't leave...
...page reply to the government's motion to dismiss, defending Newman's status as Padilla's representative and her right to name President Bush--since he is the one who ordered Padilla put away, Newman and Patel argued, Bush is the only one who can set Padilla free. As for whether the court has power over the President, Newman and Patel argued that "to hold otherwise would be to recognize an imperial Presidency that our Constitution was designed to prevent." Newman added a charge of "forum shopping"--that the government had deliberately moved Padilla to a jurisdiction where he will...