Summary of Noah Feldman s Scorpions
43 pages
English

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Summary of Noah Feldman's Scorpions , livre ebook

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43 pages
English

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Description

Please note: This is a companion version & not the original book.
Sample Book Insights:
#1 Felix Frankfurter was a brilliant, passionate lawyer who argued with everyone, while Roosevelt was a socialite who attended the most exclusive clubs. They had completely different upbringings, yet they ended up in the same place.
#2 Felix Frankfurter was a brilliant, passionate lawyer who argued with everyone, while Roosevelt was a socialite who attended the most exclusive clubs. They had completely different upbringings, yet they ended up in the same place.
#3 Felix Frankfurter, a brilliant, passionate lawyer, argued with everyone, while Roosevelt was a socialite who attended the most exclusive clubs. They had completely different upbringings, yet they ended up in the same place.
#4 Franklin Roosevelt, the future president, was introduced to Felix Frankfurter, a brilliant, passionate lawyer, by a mutual friend. They did not become friends in New York.

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Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 13 octobre 2022
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9798350029512
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 1 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0200€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

Insights on Noah Feldman's Scorpions
Contents Insights from Chapter 1 Insights from Chapter 2 Insights from Chapter 3 Insights from Chapter 4 Insights from Chapter 5 Insights from Chapter 6 Insights from Chapter 7 Insights from Chapter 8 Insights from Chapter 9
Insights from Chapter 1



#1

Felix Frankfurter was a brilliant, passionate lawyer who argued with everyone, while Roosevelt was a socialite who attended the most exclusive clubs. They had completely different upbringings, yet they ended up in the same place.

#2

Felix Frankfurter was a brilliant, passionate lawyer who argued with everyone, while Roosevelt was a socialite who attended the most exclusive clubs. They had completely different upbringings, yet they ended up in the same place.

#3

Felix Frankfurter, a brilliant, passionate lawyer, argued with everyone, while Roosevelt was a socialite who attended the most exclusive clubs. They had completely different upbringings, yet they ended up in the same place.

#4

Franklin Roosevelt, the future president, was introduced to Felix Frankfurter, a brilliant, passionate lawyer, by a mutual friend. They did not become friends in New York.

#5

Roosevelt and Frankfurter, two men with completely different upbringings and lifestyles, ended up in the same place.

#6

Felix Frankfurter was a brilliant, passionate lawyer who argued with everyone, while Roosevelt was a socialite who attended the most exclusive clubs. They had completely different upbringings, yet they ended up in the same place.

#7

Felix Frankfurter was a brilliant, passionate lawyer who argued with everyone, while Roosevelt was a socialite who attended the most exclusive clubs. They had completely different upbringings, yet they ended up in the same place.

#8

In the six months following the bombing of his home, Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer and his assistant, J. Edgar Hoover, ordered hundreds of raids arresting thousands of suspected radicals. The majority of those arrested and held without trial were immigrants.

#9

Felix Frankfurter, a brilliant and passionate lawyer, argued with everyone, while Roosevelt was a socialite who attended the most exclusive clubs. They ended up in the same place.

#10

In May of 1920, two Italian anarchist were arrested for the South Braintree heists, and it was later found out that they were friends with the men who blew up the attorney general’s house.

#11

The Sacco and Vanzetti case was a Nationalist Socialist show trial in which the two Italian immigrants were railroaded for their radical political views, which were blamed for the robbery in which Palmer’s house was bombed.

#12

After graduating from Harvard Law School, the newly married Glendower went to work in a prominent Boston firm. He died suddenly, leaving Elizabeth in funds but without direction. Her friends encouraged her to become a trustee of an industrial school.

#13

Felix Frankfurter, a brilliant and passionate lawyer, argued with everyone, while Roosevelt was a socialite who attended the most exclusive clubs. They ended up in the same place.

#14

Felix Frankfurter, a brilliant and passionate lawyer, argued with everyone, while Roosevelt was a socialite who attended the most exclusive clubs. They ended up in the same place.

#15

The Sacco and Vanzetti case was a Nationalist Socialist show trial in which the two Italian immigrants were railroaded for their radical political views, which were blamed for the robbery in which Palmer’s house was bombed.

#16

Felix Frankfurter, a brilliant and passionate lawyer, argued with everyone, while Roosevelt was a socialite who attended the most exclusive clubs. They ended up in the same place.

#17

The Sacco and Vanzetti case was a Nationalist Socialist show trial in which the two Italian immigrants were railroaded for their radical political views, which were blamed for the robbery in which Palmer’s house was bombed. The two were scheduled for execution, but their lawyers made a last-ditch attempt to save them. Brandeis, appointed to the Supreme Court by Woodrow Wilson in 1916, was their only hope.

#18

Felix Frankfurter, a brilliant and passionate lawyer, argued with everyone, while Roosevelt was a socialite who attended the most exclusive clubs. They ended up in the same place.

#19

Brandeis and Frankfurter were two of the greatest lawyers in the country, and they ended up in the same place.

#20

Felix Frankfurter, a brilliant and passionate lawyer, argued with everyone, while Roosevelt was a socialite who attended the most exclusive clubs. They ended up in the same place.

#21

Felix Frankfurter was a brilliant and passionate lawyer who argued with everyone, while Roosevelt was a socialite who attended the most exclusive clubs. They ended up in the same place.

#22

The period beginning with Franklin Roosevelt’s election as vice president in 1920 was extremely difficult for him. His promising political future was cut short when he was stricken with polio.

#23

The period beginning with Franklin Roosevelt’s election as vice president in 1920 was extremely difficult for him. His promising political future was cut short when he was stricken with polio.

#24

Roosevelt’s obsession with improvement can be interpreted as a form of denial. He refused to accept the fact that improvement is impossible.

#25

Roosevelt and Frankfurter’s relationship grew naturally because they had similar interests and goals, and they needed each other.

#26

The relationship between Roosevelt and Frankfurter was similar to that between Holmes and Laski—two brilliant men who needed one another.

#27

Roosevelt’s obsession with improvement was a form of denial. He refused to accept the fact that improvement is impossible.

#28

Roosevelt’s obsession with improvement was a form of denial. He refused to accept the fact that improvement is impossible.

#29

Jackson’s relationship with Roosevelt was similar to that between Holmes and Laski. They had similar interests and goals, and they needed each other.

#30

Jackson’s relationship with Roosevelt was similar to that between Holmes and Laski. They had similar interests and goals, and they needed each other.

#31

Jackson was a successful lawyer in a small regional city, and his legal career grew with the industrialization of upstate New York. He never graduated from law school, but he was the last Supreme Court justice who had never been graduated from law school.

#32

Jackson’s relationship with Roosevelt was similar to that between Holmes and Laski. They had similar interests and goals, and they needed each other.

#33

Roosevelt’s obsession with improvement was a form of denial. He refused to accept the fact that improvement is impossible.

#34

Jackson was a successful lawyer in a small regional city, and his legal career grew with the industrialization of upstate New York. He never graduated from law school, but he was the last Supreme Court justice who had never been graduated from law school.

#35

Franklin Roosevelt had known both Frankfurter and Jackson when they were young men, relationships that laid the groundwork for their later intimacy. He proposed to limit the workweek to thirty hours in any business that shipped its products across state lines or out of the country. The labor unions enthusiastically supported this bill, but Roosevelt knew that the more ambitious plans he had in mind needed to remain secret.

#36

Black was a successful lawyer in a small regional city, and his legal career grew with the industrialization of upstate New York. He never graduated from law school, but he was the last Supreme Court justice who had never been graduated from law school.

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