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when he attended Later he joined American Academy of Dramatic Arts and got certified in 1986. After graduation, he served as a cosmetician.
Danny DeVito: Professional Life and Career
He played the reprising role of Martini in the 1975 film ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest’ and continued acting in the hit TV show ‘Taxi’ where he played the role of Louie De Palma. He starred in ‘Romancing the Stone’ alongside Michael Douglas and Kathleen Turner.
Danny played in ‘Ruthless People’ in 1986 and made his feature-directing debut in the dark comedy ‘Throw Momma from the Train’ in 1987. He united with Turner and Douglas and directed and co-starred in ‘the War of the Roses’ and later appeared in ‘Tin Men’, ‘Natman Returns’, ‘Matilda’, ‘The Rainmaker’, ‘Hoffa’, ‘Jack the Bear’, ‘TheBig Kahuna and Heist’, etc.
He made a partnership with Morgan Freeman’s company ‘Clickstar’ and hosted a documentary channel ‘Jersey Docs’. Danny made his West End debut from the ‘The Sunshine Boys’ in April 2012, and later produced ‘Garden State’, ‘Pulp Fiction’, ‘Get Shorty’, ‘Erin Brockovich’. He also played in comedy series like ‘Reno 911! And Reno 911!: Miami’.
He debuted directing form ‘The Rating Game’ in 1984 which was followed by ‘The War of the Roses’, ‘Matilda’, Death to Smoochy’, ‘Duplex’ and ‘Queen B’.
Danny gave his voice of John DeAppoliso in the ‘Starsky and Hutch’ and in ‘My Little Pony: The Movie’ in 1986. He also gave his voice of Philoctetes in ‘Hercules’.
What are Danny DeVito’s Awards?
He was nominated for Emmy Award in 2004 for his outstanding guest role | {
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of Rodriguez's cervical
spine. The MRI results revealed signs of degenerative disk disease and a herniated disk
asserting pressure on the nerves in his neck. Based on the MRI, Dr. Johnson referred
Rodriguez to Dr. Luiz Cesar, a neurosurgeon in Amarillo. Dr. Cesar reviewed the MRI
results on October 8, 2003. He immediately confirmed the disk herniation and observed
other signs of "chronic wear and tear." He also observed narrowing in the spinal canal. To
alleviate Rodriguez's problems, he recommended surgery to repair the herniated disk and
alleviate the compression on the spinal cord. The surgery was performed on November
3, and Rodriguez was discharged three days later. Despite the surgery, Rodriguez was
left with a permanent decrease in mobility in his neck.
Rodriguez subsequently sued BFIalso evidence that Rodriguez had previously sought medical treatment for
complications similar to those alleged to have been caused by the falling dumpster lid. Dr.
Johnson testified that Rodriguez had come to his office prior to September 2003
complaining of pain in his right shoulder and numbness in his hand. Rodriguez was
subsequently diagnosed with osteoarthritis. Dr. Johnson also testified, and Rodriguez
acknowledged, that he occasionally suffered from bouts of back pain, sleep apnea,
dizziness, and headaches. Rodriguez, however, claims that none of these ailments
prevented him from performing his employment duties, and he was never restricted from
working.
"Zero Damages Rule"
To further support his position, Rodriguez implicitly asks us to invoke the legal
principle commonly referred to as the "zero damages rule." This "rule" provides that when
there is | {
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THE BEST
WESTERN GRAN HOTEL SEVILLA.
DIRECTION TO THE PROPERTY FROM NORTH -
TAKE AVENUE HIDALGO SOUTH TO TAMPICO S HISTORIC
DOWNTOWN. TURN LEFT AT CALLE ALTAMIRA NINE BLOCKS, TURN
RIGHT AT CALLE JUAREZ, FOUR BLOCKS TO PLAZA DE LA
LIBERTAD TO THE BEST WESTERN GRAN HOTEL SEVILLA.
DIRECTION TO THE PROPERTY FROM SOUTH -
TAKE TAMPICO BRIDGE, TURN RIGHT AT BOULEVARD ADOLFO
LOPEZ MATEOS SOUTH TO TAMPICO S HISTORIC DOWNTOWN, AT
FIDEL VELAZQUEZ BOULEVARD TURN RIGHT TWO BLOCKS. AFTER
THE BRIDGE TURN LEFT AT CALLE JUAREZ TEN BLOCKS TO
PLAZA DE LA LIBERTAD TO THE BEST WESTERN GRAN HOTEL
SEVILLA.
DIRECTION TO THE PROPERTY FROM WEST -
TAKE BOULEVARD ADOLFO LOPEZ MATEOS SOUTH TO TAMPICO S
HISTORIC DOWNTOWN. AT FIDEL VELAZQUEZ BOULEVARD TURN
RIGHT TWO BLOCKS, AFTER BRIDGE TURN LEFT AT CALLE
JUAREZ, TEN BLOCK TO PLAZA DE LA LIBERTAD TO THE BEST
WESTERN GRAN HOTELFlorida Couple Accused of Abducting Children Found in Cuba
(CNN) — The smallest boat moored at the Hemingway Marina in Havana may hold the most intrigue.
Hunkered down inside a blue 25-foot sailboat named Salty are Josh Hakken and his wife, Sharyn, and their two boys, 2-year-old Chase and 4-year-old Cole.
Theirs is no ordinary visit to the historic port, where they have eluded capture but where CNN found them Tuesday.
Josh and Sharyn Hakken have been on the lam after they allegedly snatched the two boys from their grandmother’s home in Florida. The couple lost custody of their children last year.
There is an international manhunt for this family, and here they are, blending in among the other boats.
Josh Hakken glared through his sunglasses at the CNN reporter who found him, and | {
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Condensed|Saira Stencil One|Salsa|Sanchez|Sancreek|Sansita|Sarabun|Sarala|Sarina|Sarpanch|Satisfy|Sawarabi Gothic|Sawarabi Mincho|Scada|Scheherazade|Schoolbell|Scope One|Seaweed Script|Secular One|Sedgwick Ave|Sedgwick Ave Display|Sevillana|Seymour One|Shadows Into Light|Shadows Into Light Two|Shanti|Share|Share Tech|Share Tech Mono|Shojumaru|Short Stack|Shrikhand|Siemreap|Sigmar One|Signika|Signika Negative|Simonetta|Single Day|Sintony|Sirin Stencil|Six Caps|Skranji|Slabo 13px|Slabo 27px|Slackey|Smokum|Smythe|Sniglet|Snippet|Snowburst One|Sofadi One|Sofia|Song Myung|Sonsie One|Sorts Mill Goudy|Source Code Pro|Source Sans Pro|Source Serif Pro|Space Mono|Special Elite|Spectral|Spectral SC|Spicy Rice|Spinnaker|Spirax|Squada One|Sree Krushnadevaraya|Sriracha|Srisakdi|Staatliches|Stalemate|Stalinist One|Stardos Stencil|Stint Ultra Condensed|Stint Ultra Expanded|Stoke|Strait|Stylish|Sue Ellen Francisco|Suez One|Sumana|Sunflower|Sunshiney|Supermercado 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Oppel
Anastasia Krupnik by Lois Lowry
Apollo 13 by James Lovell and Jeffrey Kluger
Arilla Sun Down by Virginia Hamilton
Artimis Fowl
The Bat-Poet by Randall Jarrell
Been Clever Forever by Bruce Stone
Belle Prater's Boy by Ruth White
Bud, Not Buddy by Christopher Curtis
Carry on, Mr. Bowditch by Jean Lee Letham
Carver: A Life in Poems by Marilyn Nelson
Children of the Atom by Wilmar Shiras
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time by Mark Haddon
Deliver Us From Normal by Kate Klise
Do Hard Things: A Teenage Rebellion Against Low Expectations by Alex and Brett Harris
Einstein: A Life in Science by John Gribbin and Michael White
Ella Enchanted by Gail Carson Levine
Emma-Jean Lazarus Fell Out of a Tree by Lauren Tarshis
Encyclopedia Brown, Boy Detective by Donald Sobol
The Facts and Fictions of Minna Pratt by Patricia MacLachlan
Fairest by GailCarson Levine
Forever Changes by Brenden Halpin
Geeks: How Two Lost Boys Rode the Internet Out of Idaho by Jon Katz
Gifted by Nikita Lalwani
Gifted Hands: The Ben Carson Story by Ben Carson
Good Enough by Paula Yoo
The Great Brain by John Fitzgerald
Harriet the Spy by Louise Fitzhugh
Harry Potter books by J.K.Rowling
A Hope in the Unseen: An American Odyssey fro the Inner City to the Ivy League by Ron Suskind
Ida B:... and Her Plans to Maximize Fun, Avoid Disaster, and (Possibly) Save the World by Katherine Hannigan
Jonathan Livingston Seagull by Richard Bach
Kids Inventing! A Handbook for Young Inventors by Susan Casey
The Know-It-All: One Man's Humble Quest to Become the Smartest Person in the World by A.J. Jacobs
Leonardo's Notebooks by Leonardo da Vinci (edited by Anna Suh)
Letters From Rapunzel by Sara Lewis Holmes
Libby | {
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that he did not call the police because he was too
afraid to make an anonymous phone call.
Appellant told Detective Waters that Barber was Adeathly afraid@ of her
ex-husband and that the ex-husband had just gotten out of prison. However, Detective Waters later learned that
Barber=s ex-husband was still in prison at the time of Barber=s death. Detective Waters
testified that she confronted appellant about the inconsistencies in his story
because Athings did not add up.@ During her investigation,
Detective Waters found out that Rhonda Tealer, one of the prostitutes that had
been staying with appellant, was in jail and interviewed her.
On October 6, 2003, Detective
Waters obtained a search warrant to look for Barber=s property, bloody clothing, and a knife, and she went to the South
Oaks Inn, where Tealer told her that appellant hadrented a room. She stated that she found a pair of blue jean
shorts that appeared to have blood on them in a dresser drawer. Detective Waters also took bedding and
another pair of blue jean shorts from the motel room.
Detective Waters testified
that after learning from Tealer that appellant had pawned some jewelry and a
stereo at a Cash America Pawn, she went to the store and obtained a pawn ticket
for a watch, rope chain, and a ring. She
also got the September 22, 2003 video surveillance tape from the store. At trial, Detective Waters pointed out
appellant on the tape carrying a stereo speaker and a turntable. The store also had surveillance video of the
parking lot, which showed that appellant was driving Barber=s car. The pawn store manager
told Detective Waters that | {
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stronger story against him. Finally,
the prosecutor urged the members of the jury to convict Auch
because if they failed to do so Auch "would . . . laugh[] all the
way to the bank."
DISCUSSION
I. References to Matters Not in Evidence
Auch's first and most serious ground for appeal concerns
the prosecutor's repeated references to a separate crime--the
Hudson robbery--during the presentation of the government's
evidence. Auch argues that the references to this independent
crime, in combination with the prosecutor's earlier statement that
Auch was friends with government witnesses, implicated Auch in the
violent and well-publicized Hudson robbery and unfairly prejudiced
the jury against him.
Before we turn to the meritscomments
were part of a deliberate pattern. The record also demonstrates
that the district court sustained Auch's objections to the
prosecutor's questions regarding the Hudson robbery and instructed
the prosecutor, in front of the jury, to stick to the case at hand.
Finally, and most importantly, however, we cannot say
that the prosecutor's misguided tactic in this case could have
affected the outcome of the trial. The evidence the government
adduced against Auch at trial overwhelmingly demonstrated his guilt
on the charges at hand. Tracy testified at length and in detail
regarding Auch's participation in the robbery, and the government
bolstered his testimony with corroborating evidence. Particularly
damning to Auch's case was the government's introduction of Auch's
tape-recorded statements, made to Connolly, boasting about his
participation as the "wheelman" in the Charlestown robbery. In the
face of such | {
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Citation Nr: 1602626
Decision Date: 01/28/16 Archive Date: 02/05/16
DOCKET NO. 13-06 432 ) DATE
)
)
On appeal from the
Department of Veterans Affairs Regional Office in Winston-Salem, North Carolina
THE ISSUES
1. Entitlement to service connection for a psychiatric disorder, to include posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
2. Entitlement to an evaluation in excess of 10 percent for recurrent dermatitis.
REPRESENTATION
Veteran represented by: Disabled American Veterans
WITNESS AT HEARING ON APPEAL
The Veteran
ATTORNEY FOR THE BOARD
L. Jeng, Counsel
INTRODUCTION
The Veteran served on active duty in the United States Army from January 1963 to January 1965.
This case comes before the Board of Veterans' Appeals (the Board) on appeal from January 2011 and March 2013 rating decisions of the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Regional Offices (ROs) in Montgomery, Alabama and Winston-Salem, North Carolina, respectively.
In Decemberclaims remains denied, a supplemental statement of the case must be provided to the Veteran and his representative. After the Veteran and his representative have had an adequate opportunity to respond, the appeal must be returned to the Board for appellate review.
The Veteran has the right to submit additional evidence and argument on the matters the Board has remanded. Kutscherousky v. West, 12 Vet. App. 369 (1999).
This claim must be afforded expeditious treatment. The law requires that all claims that are remanded by the Board of Veterans' Appeals or by the United States Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims for additional development or other appropriate action must be handled in an expeditious manner. See 38 U.S.C.A. §§ 5109B, 7112 (West 2014).
_________________________________________________
K. MILLIKAN
Veterans Law Judge, | {
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stating what she had
seen and heard at the scene. Vela also identified appellant in a photo lineup as the "black
guy" she saw fighting with the "white guy" in room 115.
John Thomas Hornsby, the supervisor of the forensics department of the Corpus
Christi Police Department, testified concerning blood splatters and other topics. Hornsby
noted that, based on his blood-splatter analysis, some of the blood stains in room 115
occurred while Gray was in a kneeling or "slouched over" posture. Hornsby also
demonstrated how the refrigerator was placed on top of Gray, based on a fingerprint on
the right edge of the freezer door and a blood stain on the right side of the refrigerator.
Hornsby agreed that the blood splatters in room 115 were consistent with "some sort of
blunt force trauma"applied to Gray.
Ray Fernandez, M.D., a medical examiner in Nueces County, Texas, testified
regarding the cause of Gray's death. He stated that Gray died from "cardiac dysrhythmia"
due to blunt trauma to the head and "asphyxia component-type death" due to the
refrigerator being placed on top of Gray.
Yezenia Banuelos, a crime scene technician with the Corpus Christi Police
Department, testified that she was dispatched to room 115 at the Ranch Motel. Upon
entering the room, she noticed that Gray's body was still lying underneath the refrigerator.
After photographing the scene, Banuelos processed the area for fingerprints. She also
collected an empty soda can on a table near the entrance to room 115.
Katrina Aggelopoulos, a latent fingerprint examiner with the Corpus Christi Police
Department, evaluated the prints taken from room 115. | {
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of this appalling crime, but our thoughts are with them and their families.
Warner Bros. Pictures’ and Legendary Pictures’ "The Dark Knight Rises" is the epic conclusion to filmmaker Christopher Nolan’s Batman trilogy. The screenplay is written by Christopher Nolan and Jonathan Nolan, story by Christopher Nolan & David S. Goyer. The film is produced by Emma Thomas, Christopher Nolan and Charles Roven, who previously teamed on “Batman Begins” and the record-breaking blockbuster "The Dark Knight." The executive producers are Benjamin Melniker, Michael E. Uslan, Kevin De La Noy and Thomas Tull, with Jordan Goldberg serving as co-producer. The film is based upon characters appearing in comic books published by DC Comics. Batman was created by Bob Kane.
STARRING:
Christian Bale as Bruce Wayne/Batman
Michael Caine as Alfred
Gary Oldman as Commissioner JimGordon
Morgan Freeman as Lucius Fox
Tom Hardy as Bane
Anne Hathaway as Selina Kyle/Catwoman
Joseph Gordon-Levitt as John Blake
Marion Cotillard as Miranda Tate
Josh Pence as Ra's Al Ghul
RELEASE DATE: July 20th, 2012
Earlier today, it was reported that 24-year-old gunman James Holmes walked into a midnight screening of(clad in body armour and a gas mask) in Aurora, Colorado and opened fire on those in attendance. While there have been conflicting reports as to exactly how this all went down, we do know that 12 people have lost their lives and 59 are injured (some critically). The tragic events led Warner Bros. to consider removing the film from North American theatres this weekend - something they later decided against - with newtworks taking all adverts for the film off TV and radio. Christopher | {
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with Romero and apologized. Later that day, Appellees
were given Acounseling sheets,@ a form of discipline. On April 16, 1999, Appellees
were suspended. On April 28, 1999, Appellees were terminated by letter, which listed the
reasons for termination as immorality, insubordination, fraud, failure to
comply with Board policies, and reasons constituting good cause.
After learning that at least six
other female employees of the District were involved in similar incidents but
received less severe discipline, Appellees filed suit
alleging that their gender was a motivating factor in the District=s decision to terminate them. Appellees
specifically filed suit under Section 21.051 of the Texas Labor Code, which
prohibits employment discrimination. The
case was tried to a jury and at the close of Appellees= evidence, the District moved for
directed verdict, which was denied. The
District re-urged the motion at the closedid, yet those female
employees were not fired. Armendariz, who is also an employee of the District,
testified that in some instances, the females were not even disciplined for
clocking-in other employees. While she
received a reprimand for punching another female employee=s card, the employee whose card she
punched did not receive a reprimand.
Another
female employee of the transportation department, Celia Aguilar, testified that
she clocked-in for other employees in the presence of her coordinator, Jerry
Venable. Aguilar testified that she was
not told that clocking-in for other employees was a violation of the District
policy, nor was she reprimanded for doing so.
She also stated that she witnessed female employees on more than one
occasion clock-in for others and that none of those female employees were
terminated or suspended.
Also, Ofelia
Gallegos, another employee of the transportation department, frequently
clocked-in for | {
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Counsel, were on
brief for intervenor-appellant, the Bipartisan Legal Advisory Group
of the U.S. House of Representatives.
Stuart F. Delery, Acting Assistant Attorney General, Civil
Division, Department of Justice, with whom Tony West, Assistant
Attorney General, Carmen M. Ortiz, United States Attorney, Robert
E. Kopp, Michael Jay Singer, August E. Flentje and Benjamin S.
Kingsley, Appellate Staff, Civil Division, Department of Justice,
were on brief for the federal defendants.
Anthony R. Picarello, Jr., Jeffrey Hunter Moon, Michael F.
Moses, U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, Von G. Keetch,
Alexander Dushku, R. Shawn Gunnarson, Kirton & McConkie and Carl H.
Esbeck, Legal Counsel, Office of Governmental Affairs, National
Association of Evangelicals, on brief for U.S. Conference of
Catholic Bishops; National Association of Evangelicals; The Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints; The Ethics and Religious
LibertyCommission of the Southern Baptist Convention; The Lutheran
Church-Missouri Synod; The Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations
of America; The Massachusetts Catholic Conference; The Brethren in
Christ Church; The Christian and Missionary Alliance; The
Conservative Congregational Christian Conference; The Evangelical
Free Church of America; The Evangelical Presbyterian Church; The
International Church of the Foursquare Gospel; The International
Pentecostal Holiness Church; The Missionary Church; Open Bible
Churches [USA]; The United Brethren in Christ Church; The Wesleyan
Church, Amici Curiae.
John Anthony Simmons, Sr. and David Ramos on brief for
American College of Pediatricians, Amicus Curiae.
Lawrence J. Joseph on brief for Eagle Forum Education & Legal
Defense Fund, Amicus Curiae.
Paul Benjamin Linton, Special Counsel, Thomas More Society,
Thomas Brejcha, President & Chief Counsel, Thomas More Society, and
Christopher M. Gacek, | {
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THE DALLAS FUEL IN THIS
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MADE
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MADE FOR
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BEATING THE DALLAS FUEL IN THIS
MADE FOR TV EVENT TO DECIDE
MADE FOR TV EVENT TO DECIDE
MADE FOR TV EVENT TO DECIDE
WHICH
MADE FOR TV EVENT TO DECIDE
WHICH TEAM
MADE FOR TV EVENT TO DECIDE
WHICH TEAM FROM
MADE FOR TV EVENT TO DECIDE
WHICH TEAM FROM TEXAS
MADE FOR TV EVENT TO DECIDE
WHICH TEAM FROM TEXAS IN
MADE FOR TV EVENT TO DECIDE
WHICH TEAM FROM TEXAS IN THE
WHICH TEAM FROM TEXAS IN THE
WHICH TEAM FROM TEXAS IN THE
OVERWATCH
WHICH TEAM FROM TEXAS IN THE
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WHICH TEAM FROM TEXAS IN THE
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WHICHa rich sound that lingers in the mind.
Last Charge of the Light Horse, a band best known for their versatile music, is out with a new album, Race to the Sound. It features the track, "What If," which is a gorgeous song. The band started off in 2004, meant to be for singer Jean-Paul Vest's unique sound. It currently consists of Vest, Shawn Murray (drums), Bob Stander (lead guitar), and Pemberton Roach (bass). They have an interesting sound that never grows dull, as they're always experimenting to create new and dynamic music.
The song starts off, with Vest singing almost immediately- while I love well-established intros, as a person who is easily enamoured with lyrics, this is something I tend to prefer. Vestís voice is soft and easy to | {
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in
a sports betting ring operating from the 1980s up to at least 2005. Others
figuring in the case were Joseph, Nicholas and Rick fiorenza, Charles Purin,
Frank Giardono, Nick Provenzano Joseph W. Saladino and John Frisella. Frank
Saladino named as unindicted co-conspirator
Salisbury, Dennis
L. -
*born in Rockford in 1950
*arrested as member of John Leumbroni drug ring in 1982
Salvaggio, Alex -
*arrested in 1924 on bootlegging charges with among others
Sam Caltagerone and Sam Capriola
Sandona, Reno –
*born March 12, 1916, in Rockford
*member
*arrested in August 1962 on gambling charges, together with
William Morris
*held interest in Northern Illinois Music Company with
Chicago mobsters William Daddano Jr. and Anthony A. Cardamone, and Rockford
residents William F. and William V. Morris
*died March 19, 2002, in Rockford
SanFilippo,
Anthony Joseph
–
*born June 30, 1911, in Wisconsin
*son of Pietro
*arrested with among others his father for his alleged
involvementof a huge alcohol distilling plant. Others arrested were Tony
LoMonaco, Michael Licari of Madison, Charles Samsera and Thomas Adams
*arrested in October 1934 on counterfeiting charges, with
among others his brother Jerome
*arrested in March 1935 on theft charges, with his brother
Jerome
*died January 6, 1956, in San Diego, California
SanFilippo,
Antonina
“Anna” -
*wife of Peter, mother of Anthony and Jerome
*arrested on bootlegging charges with Peter and 21 others on
Thanksgiving Day 1924
SanFilippo, Jerome
Joseph –
*born November 12, 1913, in Wisconsin
*son of Pietro
*arrested in 1934 on counterfeiting charges
*arrested in March 1935 on theft charges, with his brother
Anthony
*died April 12, 1981, in San Diego, California
SanFilippo, Pietro “Peter SanFilippo” –
*born September 18, 1884, in San Giuseppe Iato
*alleged member
*father of Jerome and Tony
*before going to Rockford (around 1920) lived in Madison,
Wisconsin
*arrested in December 1920 for grand larceny (alleged to
have stolen | {
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it comes to immigration, Flake is the best Republican friend of Luis Gutierrez (D-IL), the leader of the nation's most radical open-borders activists.
During his six terms in the U.S. House, Rep. Flake has co-sponsored five amnesties, including being the chief original sponsor with Rep. Gutierrez for the infamous STRIVE amnesty.
Flake wasn't always the lead House Republican for the amnesty lobby. For years, he was the open-borders assistant to Rep. Chris Cannon (R-Utah). But Utah's Republican delegates finally threw Cannon out of his office and replaced him with a pro-enforcement, anti-amnesty congressman, moving Flake into the No. 1 GOP Amnesty Champion role in the House.
For a short time, the top GOP pro-amnesty champion in both the House and the Senate were from Arizona.
But Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) had toand angular guitars". Guy Blackman of The Age called the Hudson's vocals "unashamedly accented" but said it was "almost refreshing to hear an Australian sing in a thick British brogue rather than the usual faux-American twang".
Following the release of Addicted Romantic, Faker toured around Australia, supporting New York band The Bravery. The concert saw them "blow... [The Bravery] off stage" according to The Courier Mails Patrick Lion.
Track listing
"Bodies"
"Quarter to Three"
"Love for Sale"
"Volumes"
"Kids on Overload"
"Fucking the Exhibits"
"Teenage Werewolf"
"Seizures"
"Hurricane"
"The Familiar"
"Enough"
"Ghosts"
Personnel
Nathan Hudson – vocals
Phil Downing – guitar
Nick Munnings – bass guitar
Paul Berryman – drums
Stefan Gregory – guitar
Additional personnel
Lindsay Gravina – production
References
Category:2005 albums
Category:Faker (band) albums | {
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Since the US-led invasion in 2003 more than 4,300 coalition soldiers have died - over 4,000 of them Americans.
A study released in 2008 by the RAND Corp. estimates that 300,000 U.S. troops are suffering from depression or post-traumatic stress.
But it is unclear how many Iraqi lives have been lost. The Iraqi government does not keep precise records. Health ministry estimates in November 2006 ranged from 100,000 to 150,000 dead.
This contrasts sharply with a survey of Iraqi households in the Lancet, which suggested about 655,000 Iraqis had died in the war by July 2006.
(The Lancet is a weekly subscription journal publishing mostly medical and scientific research material. In other conflicts the Lancet's methodology has been regarded as the most reliable).
A survey published by a UK-based polling agency Opinion Research'malese (latino, Singapore)'
ms_Latn: 'malese (latino)'
ms_MY: 'malese (Malesia)'
ms_SG: 'malese (Singapore)'
mg: malgascio
mg_MG: 'malgascio (Madagascar)'
mt: maltese
mt_MT: 'maltese (Malta)'
gv: manx
gv_IM: 'manx (Isola di Man)'
mr: marathi
mr_IN: 'marathi (India)'
mn: mongolo
mn_Cyrl_MN: 'mongolo (cirillico, Mongolia)'
mn_Cyrl: 'mongolo (cirillico)'
mn_MN: 'mongolo (Mongolia)'
nd: 'ndebele del nord'
nd_ZW: 'ndebele del nord (Zimbabwe)'
ne: nepalese
ne_IN: 'nepalese (India)'
ne_NP: 'nepalese (Nepal)'
'no': norvegese
no_NO: 'norvegese (Norvegia)'
nb: 'norvegese bokmål'
nb_NO: 'norvegese bokmål (Norvegia)'
nb_SJ: 'norvegese bokmål (Svalbard e Jan Mayen)'
nn: 'norvegese nynorsk'
nn_NO: 'norvegese nynorsk (Norvegia)'
nl: olandese
nl_AW: 'olandese (Aruba)'
nl_BE: 'olandese (Belgio)'
nl_BQ: 'olandese (Caraibi Olandesi)'
nl_CW: 'olandese (Curaçao)'
nl_NL: 'olandese (Paesi Bassi)'
nl_SX: 'olandese (Sint Maarten)'
nl_SR: 'olandese (Suriname)'
or: oriya
or_IN: 'oriya (India)'
om: oromo
om_ET: 'oromo (Etiopia)'
om_KE: 'oromo (Kenya)'
os: ossetico
os_RU: 'ossetico (Federazione Russa)'
os_GE: 'ossetico (Georgia)'
ps: pashto
ps_AF: 'pashto (Afghanistan)'
fa: persiano
fa_AF: 'persiano (Afghanistan)'
fa_IR: 'persiano (Iran)'
pl: polacco
pl_PL: 'polacco (Polonia)'
pt: portoghese
pt_AO: 'portoghese (Angola)'
pt_BR: 'portoghese (Brasile)'
pt_CV: 'portoghese (Capo Verde)'
pt_GW: 'portoghese (Guinea-Bissau)'
pt_MZ: 'portoghese (Mozambico)'
pt_PT: 'portoghese (Portogallo)'
pt_MO: 'portoghese (RAS di Macao)'
pt_ST: 'portoghese (São Tomé e Príncipe)'
pt_TL: | {
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Sage Publications. Laudan, Larry 1977. Progress and Its Problems, Berkeley: University of California Press. Lewontin, R.C. 1986. "How Important is Genetics for an Understanding of Evolution?" American Zoologist 26: 811–20. Mayr, Ernst 1959/1994. "Typological versus Population Thinking.," in B.J. Meggers, ed., Evolution and Anthropology. Washington: The Anthropological Society of America, 409–12. Reprinted in Elliott Sober, ed., Conceptual Issues in Evolutionary Biology, Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 1994, 325–28. ---. 1982. The Growth of Biological Thought, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. McMullin, E. 1970. "The History and Philosophy of Science: A Taxonomy," Minnesota Studies in the Philosophy of Science 5: 12–67. Morris, S.W. 1994. "Fleeming Jenkin and The Origin of Species: AReassessment," British Journal for the History of Science 27: 313–43. BENCE NANAY616 Musgrave,Alan 1983. "Facts and Values inScience Studies," in Home, RoderickWeir, ed., Science under Scrutiny: The Place of History and Philosophy of Science, Dordrecht: Reidel, 49–80. Nanay, Bence forthcoming a. "Population Thinking as Trope Nominalism," Synthese. ---. forthcoming b. "Popper's Darwinian Analogy," Perspectives on Science. Palmer, E. 1993. "Lakatos's 'Internal History' as Historiography," Perspectives on Science 1: 603–26. Popper, Karl R. 1959/2002. The Logic of Scientific Discovery, London Routledge. ---. 1963. Conjectures and Refutations, London Routledge. ---. 1972. Objective Knowledge, Oxford: Clarendon. ---. 1975/1996. "The Rationality of Scientific Revolutions," in R. Harré, ed., Problems of Scientific Revolutions, Oxford: Clarendon, 72–101. Reprinted in Popper, Karl, R.: The Myth of the Framework. London: Routledge, 1996. ---. 1978. "Natural Selection and the Emergence of Mind," Dialectica 32: 339–55. Richardson, Alan 2006. "Rational Reconstruction," in The Philosophy of | {
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Smith told the Department that she was planning to stay with
a couple who had agreed to let her and K.N.S. live with them. The husband had a criminal record
from a 1996 escape from jail following his incarceration for unauthorized use of a motor vehicle.
The wife denied that she had a criminal record, but the Department learned that she had been
untruthful and had been jailed in 2008 for domestic violence. The Department alleged that charges
were still pending against Smith and that she had three other children who were not in her custody. (2)
K.N.S. was released from the hospital when she was about a week old and placed with a foster
family, with whom she stayed for the duration of the Department proceeding. The fosterparents
wanted to adopt K.N.S. should Smith's parental rights be terminated.
Smith was out of police custody from late November 2008 until April 2009, when
she entered into a plea agreement and was given a six-year prison sentence. During that time, she
agreed to a number of conditions set by the Department, including attending counseling, but the
therapist dismissed Smith when she missed two sessions. Smith was unenrolled from a parenting
class because she had to be hospitalized for surgery, and she once tested positive for methadone.
Smith was granted visitation, but very few visits occurred before Smith was hospitalized and then
incarcerated. In April 2010, a CASA report was filed stating that K.N.S. was thriving in her foster
home and that CASA had not heard from Smith since she wrote | {
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to their questions was
consistent with her claims.
In
addition, one of the State=s witnesses, Detective Silva, who was also the outcry
witness, presented a negative view of appellant, who made incriminating and
suspect statements when confronted with the allegations against him. Detective
Silva said appellant was cocky and very defensive during his interview. His
first comment to her, after she had told him of the accusations against him was
AYou=re not going to pin this on me.@ They then discussed the
circumstances at the house. Appellant said A.C., who was between six and
eight, would wear skimpy clothes and dance in front of him. He said Ashe tries to be sexy.@ He also said AHe couldn=t help it,@ but the record was a little unclear
exactly what he meant by this comment. He also acknowledged that sometimesnotice was adequate, as it was
given at least fourteen days before trial, informed appellant the State would
introduce outcry testimony, gave a description of the testimony, and identified
a witness. However, thirteen days before the jury was sworn, but fourteen days
before evidence was first received, the State changed its notice and corrected
the identity of the outcry witness. Originally, the State had listed Aimee
McAndrews as the outcry witness. The updated notice correctly listed Detective
Silva as the outcry witness.
Both
notices gave substantially the same information, though worded differently.
Both sufficiently informed appellant of what testimony would be offered. Yet,
there is a clear problem. The first notice was deficient to notify who the
correct outcry witness would be. Therefore, the second, updated notice needed
to comply with the statute=s requirements on its own. Because the State did | {
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do when I draw it, that I get to experience the paintings in a different way, really studying them, each part from top to bottom. By the end I thought I could have lived under those floating colored puffs of air gliding above the man in red and blue. She also gave to me one of the beautiful catalogues she had made with a grant she received from The John Simon Guggenheim Foundation, with photographs and images of her sculptures and paintings, an amazing work of art in its own right. I so enjoyed getting to talk to Kathy and hearing all of her stories. Our conversations were as rich as the visuals. I strongly encourage you to go see her solo exhibition, to get lost like IThe Song of Brotherhood, and Other Verses
The Song of Brotherhood, and Other Verses (1896) is the first poetry collection by Australian poet J. Le Gay Brereton.
The collection sold well enough at the time of its release for The Sydney Mail to report on 22 August 1896 that a second edition had been ordered by the publishers.
Contents
"Apologia"
"The Song of Brotherhood"
"For a Woman"
"Absence"
"The Sunrise"
"The Street"
"Love's Invitation"
"Kit Marlowe"
"To Olive Schreiner"
"Drinking Song"
"Hill and Dale"
"The Black Art"
"Dream - Gold"
"The End"
"After"
"Maiden with the Marvellous Lute"
"A Song of Friendship"
"The Last Quest"
"The Watching of the Sparrow-Hawk"
"Storm"
"For My Sister"
"Serenade"
"The Presence of the Bush"
"The Picture"
"Fulfilment"
"Sonnet"
"Rouge et Noir"
"We Meet"
"The Unfading | {
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PROBABLY NEVER KNOW BUT AND HE SAYS WE'LL PROBABLY NEVER KNOW BUT HE AND HE SAYS WE'LL PROBABLY NEVER KNOW
BUT HE KNOWS AND HE SAYS WE'LL PROBABLY NEVER KNOW BUT HE KNOWS HE'S AND HE SAYS WE'LL PROBABLY NEVER KNOW BUT HE KNOWS HE'S IN PROBABLY NEVER KNOW BUT HE KNOWS HE'S IN PROBABLY NEVER KNOW BUT HE KNOWS HE'S IN THIS PROBABLY NEVER KNOW
BUT HE KNOWS HE'S IN THIS POSITION PROBABLY NEVER KNOW BUT HE KNOWS HE'S IN THIS POSITION FOR PROBABLY NEVER KNOW BUT HE KNOWS HE'S IN THIS POSITION FOR A BUT HE KNOWS HE'S IN THIS POSITION FOR A BUT HE KNOWS HE'S IN THIS POSITION FOR A REASONAS BUT HE KNOWS HE'S IN THIS POSITION FOR A REASONAS THE BUT HE KNOWS HE'SAND SEEM TO FIT THE GROWING SENSE OF GRIEF AND SEEM TO FIT THE GROWING SENSE OF GRIEF AND PAIN SEEM TO FIT THE GROWING SENSE OF GRIEF AND PAIN AS SEEM TO FIT THE GROWING SENSE OF GRIEF AND PAIN AS DAYS SEEM TO FIT THE GROWING SENSE OF GRIEF AND PAIN AS DAYS CARRY SEEM TO FIT THE GROWING SENSE OF GRIEF AND PAIN AS DAYS CARRY ON SENSE OF GRIEF AND PAIN AS DAYS CARRY ON SENSE OF GRIEF AND PAIN AS DAYS CARRY ON SOMEONE SENSE OF GRIEF AND PAIN AS DAYS CARRY ON SOMEONE WHO SENSE OF GRIEF AND PAIN AS DAYS CARRY ON
SOMEONE WHO UNDERSTANDS PAIN AS DAYS CARRY ON SOMEONE WHO UNDERSTANDS PAIN AS DAYS CARRY ON SOMEONE WHO UNDERSTANDS THAT | {
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a cooperative, law-abiding
citizen, who was eager to work in conjunction with police to curb the drug trafficking activities in his
neighborhood. The hearsay offered by the State was a statement made by Appellant's sister in the
course of the same conversation that she did not want her brother putting up signs on the property
because he was "selling that stuff too." Appellant's sister's statement, as well as Page's testimony
regarding his reaction to that statement, enabled the jury to fully understand the nature of the
conversation between Appellant, his sister and Page. Appellant testified that he intended to turn the
crack cocaine over to the police and attempted to bolster this testimony with a recent history of
cooperation with police, as evidenced by the aforementioned testimony. A statement to the effectPremier League 2014-15 Season Review: Tottenham Hotspur
Tottenham Hotspur had a very indifferent season. With Pochettino coming in to replace Tim Sherwood, they looked to be heading in the right direction while playing an attractive brand of football, however their league position hasn’t progressed. One progression they did make however was reaching the final of the Capital One Cup; despite losing to London rivals Chelsea, their young squad showed real quality and maturity in getting to Wembley in the first place. Tottenham began their season by doing seemingly very well in the transfer market, shifting on players like Livermore, Falque, Dawson and Sandro for substantial money and replacing them with more youthful players.
The acquisitions of Ben Davies, Eric Dier and DeAndre Yedlin show that Tottenham are looking to the | {
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legally respon-
sible, knowingly and while on mandatory su-
pervised release, possessed a handgun on or
about his person after having previously
[been convicted of a felony]."
The information did not name the specific location where the
alleged offense occurred other than simply, "at Bloomington."
However, this case came to the State's attention following a
dispute in the parking lot outside Winner's Lounge in Bloomingto-
n, Illinois, during the late-night hours of March 8, and the
early-morning hours of March 9, 2006 (hereinafter the Lounge
incident). On thisnight, defendant was at the Lounge with
several friends: Jennifer Bains Talamantez (defendant's girl-
friend at the time), Erron Gilmer, and two other women who were
friends of Talamantez.
The State later filed an indictment charging defendant
in the same terms as the information, which was later amended by
interlineation.
In opening argument, the State laid out its theory of
the case. The State would attempt to prove that, on the night of
the Lounge incident, Gilmer got into a dispute at the Lounge.
Bouncers at the Lounge asked defendant's group to leave. Defen-
| {
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240.
241.
242.
243.
244.
245.
246.
247.
248.
249.
250.
251.
252.
253.
254.
255.
256.
257.
258.
259.
260.
261.
262.
263.
264.
265.
266.
267.
268.
269.
270.
271.
272.
273.
274.
275.
276.
277.
278.
279.
280.
281.
282.
Lesson Plans World History II SOL 7abcd: Latin-American Revolutionaries and the Monroe Doctrine
Standard WH II: The student will demonstrate knowledge of the Latin American revolutions of the nineteenth century by
Objectives:a) describing the colonial system as it existed by 1800. b) identifying the impact of the American and French Revolutions on Latin America. c) explaining the contributions of Toussaint L’Ouverture and Simón Bolivar.d) assessing the impact of the Monroe Doctrine.
SOL 7c Contributions of Toussaint L’Ouverture • Former slave who led Haitian rebellion against French • Defeated the armies of three foreign powers: Spain, France, and Britain Contributions of Simón Bolivar • Native resident who led revolutionary efforts • Liberated the northern areas of Latin America
SOL 7d Impact of the Monroe Doctrine • The Monroe Doctrine was issued by President | {
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formal statement from Erin,
at which time she continued to deny any knowledge of her mother’s whereabouts. Erin told Detective Beyer that while she did
not know her mother’s location, she had a bad feeling and admitted that she
told another person that she believed her mother was dead.
Based on his interviews with Erin
and several other subjects, Detective Beyer sought and received a search
warrant for Erin’s trailer. The officers
seized several feet of carpet from the trailer that had a conspicuous red
stain. The day after officers executed
the search warrant, Detective Beyer interviewed Michael Cory Lewis, Erin’s
boyfriend at the time of her mother’s disappearance. Lewis told Detective Beyer that Erin had
strangled her mother and that he had helped her dispose of the body in a
field. Lewis accompanied Detective Beyer
to the field wheresyringe. Erin described
how Jana bit her tongue almost completely off, causing her to bleed on the
carpet. After Jana stopped breathing,
Erin stated they covered her head in a black trash bag, wrapped her in a rug,
and loaded her into the trunk of a car.
They drove to an open grassy area and Lewis dumped Jana’s body.
At trial, the medical examiner, Dr.
Steven Pustilnik, testified that the body had decomposed significantly and that
he could not discern any evidence of trauma from an external examination of the
body. Dr. Pustilnik, however, identified
a fracture to the maxilla, which is the facial bone to the left of the nose,
and a fracture to the hyoid bones, which are two bones in the neck or voice
box. Dr. Pustilnik testified that a
break in the hyoid bones, which form | {
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islands developed into great "
"maritime, commercial and cultural centers. Will you acheive the same?"
msgstr ""
#: maps/random/dodecanese.jsonsettings.Name
msgid "Dodecanese"
msgstr ""
#: maps/random/elephantine.jsonsettings.Description
msgid ""
"Forming the traditional frontier between ancient Kush and Egypt, the "
"fortified Island of Elephantine was situated on the Nile River at the first "
"cataract. As the border between Upper Egypt and Lower Nubia, Elephantine "
"became an important way-station for the trade in ivory and other goods. It "
"was considered to be the home of the god Khnum, guardian of the source of "
"the Nile, and boasted an impressive temple complex."
msgstr ""
#: maps/random/elephantine.jsonsettings.Name
msgid "Elephantine"
msgstr ""
#: maps/random/empire.jsonsettings.Description
msgid ""
"A neighboring province has pledged alegiance to your rule. It's up to you to"
" command them to victory."
msgstr ""
#: maps/random/empire.jsonsettings.Name
msgid "Empire"
msgstr ""
#: maps/random/english_channel.jsonsettings.Description
msgid ""
"Players start in either northern France or southern Britain while theshores of the Mediterranean Sea with a river flowing between them.\n"
"\n"
"The Guadalquivir is the fifth longest river in the Iberian peninsula and the second longest river with its entire length in Spain. The Guadalquivir river is the only great navigable river in Spain. Currently it is navigable to Seville, but in Roman times it was navigable to Cordoba. The ancient city of Tartessos was said to have been located at the mouth of the Guadalquivir, although its site has not yet been found."
msgstr ""
#: maps/random/guadalquivir_river.jsonsettings.Name
msgid "Guadalquivir River"
msgstr ""
#: maps/random/gulf_of_bothnia.jsonsettings.Description
msgid ""
"Players start around a gulf dotted with small islands.\n"
"\n"
"The Gulf of Bothnia is the northernmost arm of the Baltic Sea."
msgstr ""
#: maps/random/gulf_of_bothnia.jsonsettings.Name
msgid "Gulf of Bothnia"
msgstr ""
#: maps/random/harbor.jsonsettings.Description
msgid ""
"Players start with some light fishing opportunities in the calm waters of | {
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member, Cynthia Reiley. At trial, Reiley testified that the assault was the
culmination of an ongoing argument between Appellant and Reiley lasting two weeks.
During these arguments, Appellant threatened to kill her. On January 6, 2006, Appellant
accused Reiley of taking his credit cards. He was upset, angry, and screaming. He
grabbed her in the hallway of their apartment and slammed her against the wall. After
more accusations, he placed her in a chair and tied her wrists behind her with a nylon
jacket so tight he cut the circulation off to her hands. He left her tied in the chair for
approximately thirty minutes while he located his credit cards. When he released her, a
vein in her hand exploded. Appellant had hidden the telephones andbarricaded the front
door so she could not leave. She subsequently crawled out the window and ran to Patricia
Sobal, property manager for the apartment complex, in the parking lot.
Sobal testified she had her assistant call 911 after she became aware of a
disturbance at the apartment complex. She observed Reiley exit the apartment. She
testified Reiley’s hands were black, her wrists and hands injured, she was distressed and
crying. Sobal also observed Appellant telling residents to flee because bombs were going
to explode. She described him as half-dressed and ranting.
Jack Eastland, police officer for the Austin Police Department, arrived at the
apartment complex and observed Appellant throwing household items from his window.
He observed the apartment in a ransacked condition, located the nylon | {
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Decided: October 9, 2007
Before NIEMEYER, KING, and SHEDD, Circuit Judges.
Affirmed by unpublished per curiam opinion.
Carl Benit Cooper, Appellant Pro Se. Robert Holmes Hood, HOOD LAW
FIRM, Charleston, South Carolina; John A. Massalon, WILLS &
MASSALON, Charleston, South Carolina; Joseph Rutledge Young, III,
DUFFY & YOUNG, LLC, Charleston, South Carolina; Eduardo Kelvin
Curry, CURRY, CURRY & COUNTS, Charleston, South Carolina; Timothy
William Bouch, LEATH, BOUCH & CRAWFORD, LLP, Charleston, South
Carolina, for Appellees.
Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.
PER CURIAM:
Carl Benit Cooper appeals a district court order and
judgment adopting the magistrate judge’s report and recommendation
and dismissing his claim of a conspiracy among several parties
ultimately resulting in his criminal convictions. We have reviewed
the record and the district(Reuters) - Michael Cohen, U.S. President Donald Trump's former personal lawyer, on Friday lost his bid for an emergency gag order to stop Michael Avenatti, a lawyer for adult film actress Stormy Daniels, from maligning him in frequent media appearances.
In a brief order, U.S. District Judge James Otero in Los Angeles said Cohen had not shown he would face "immediate, irreparable injury" without an immediate restraining order.
The judge also admonished Cohen in a footnote, saying such requests "throw the system out of whack" by creating more work for the court, forcing adversaries to respond in a hurry and allowing some litigants to "cut in line" ahead of others.
_________________when good people stay silent the right wing are the only ones heard.
Stormy Daniels Arrested In Ohio Strip Club, Michael Avenatti | {
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agreed to let J.S. stay
with her sister C.
Jon Gregory, the Department
caseworker who handled the intake investigation in August 2009, testified that
he tried to contact P. and that she returned his phone call in early
September. P. denied leaving J.S. and L.
alone without resources, and she said that there was another couple living in
the house with them. P. also asked what
she needed to do to regain custody of J.S.
In late September, P. met with Gregory at his office. Gregory testified that she was twitching in
her seat and could not remain still.
Also in September 2009, P. was
placed on probation for possession of a controlled substance related to her
April 2009 arrest. While on probation,
she was arrested for theft of service and two charges of theft by check. Her probation was revoked inJanuary 2010,
and, in lieu of prison time, she entered a court-ordered substance abuse
treatment program, the Substance Abuse Felony Punishment Facility of the Texas
Department of Criminal Justice, which was to be followed by three-and-a-half
years of probation. Caseworkers set up
family meetings and appointments for various court-ordered evaluations and
services, but P. did not attend these meetings or appointments because she was
in jail or the court-ordered substance abuse treatment program.
Approximately two months before P.
completed the court-ordered substance abuse treatment program, she wrote a
letter to the Department, asking what was required for her to regain custody of
J.S. After completing the program, P.
entered a “halfway house for drug rehabilitation and to transition back into
society after being in prison.” P. said
that she would be released from the halfway house in mid-December, but that she
would go | {
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render a judgment of acquittal.
I.
BACKGROUND
In the early morning hours of
December 19, 2006, Washington County Deputy Jonathan Prior was dispatched to a
one-vehicle rollover accident on U.S. Highway 290. Upon arriving at the scene,
he observed a dark-colored pickup truck resting upright in a ditch with its
roof crushed. Deputy Prior saw appellant, who was behind the wheel of the
truck, slide across the center console into the passenger seat and exit the
vehicle.
When Deputy Prior approached, he
noticed appellant using the vehicle to steady himself. Appellant had sustained
some small lacerations to his forehead from the accident. When asked what had
happened, appellant told Deputy Prior that he had fallen asleep. Deputy Prior
testified that he noticed a strong smell of alcohol on appellant=s breath, appellant=s eyes were glassy and bloodshot, he
had trouble standing,and he was slurring his speech.
Approximately three minutes later,
emergency medical services (EMS) arrived at the scene and began treating
appellant. Paramedic David Zeiders testified that appellant was a little
unsteady on his feet, and had lacerations to his hands and face and a red strap
mark across his chest. Zeiders smelled alcohol at the scene but could not
determine its source. Deputy Prior confirmed that appellant was the only
occupant of the vehicle. Appellant told Zeiders that he had not lost
consciousness but could not remember the accident. Appellant agreed to be
transported to the hospital by EMS. Zeiders testified that because appellant
complained of chest pain, he drew appellant=s blood so that hospital personnel
could determine whether appellant had sustained any cardiac injury. Zeiders
left the accident scene with appellant at 12:41 a.m. and arrived at Trinity
Medical | {
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children take on these traits (395c‐d, 400d‐401d). For this reason, craftsmen who imitate good character "lead them [children] unwit‐ discourse
worth
serious
attention
has
ever
been
written
in
verse
or
prose"
(277e5‐8). Socrates goes on to distinguish the
written discourse of the philosopher from those of other
writers such
as
poets. If a
writer composes
his
document
with
knowledge, can
defend
his
writing, and
can
argue
that
his
writing
is
of
little
worth,
he
may
be
called
by
"a
name
derived
not
from these
writings
but
rather
from
those
things
that
you
are
seriously
pursuing"
(278c7‐d1),
phi‐ losophy. On
the
other
hand,
"if
a
man
has
nothing
more
valuable
than
what
he
has
composed or
written, spending long
hours twisting it around,
pasting
parts together and taking them apart"(278d8‐e1), he should be called by another name, such as "poet". So, a philosopher shapes souls, leaving behind philosophers, in contrast to a poet, who only leaves behind written
works. If
a
man
meets
certain
criteria
in
his
writing,
he
may
be
called
a
philosopher only
if
he,
in
addition
to
writing,
practices
the
soul‐shaping
work
of
philosophy. Likewise,
in the
Republic,
philosophy
is
distinguished
from
poetry
by
its
product: the
philosopher
leaves behind
a
soul
shaped
in
imitation
of
the
forms
whereas
a
poet leaves
behind
poetry. I
shall argue
below,
however,
that
the
work
of
some
poets
may
be
used
by
the
philosopher
in
order to
shape
souls,
as
may
the
written
work
of
a
philosopher. All
in
all,
though,
poetry
and
other mimetic literary
works,
even
Plato's
dialogues,
are imitations
and
as
such
are inferior to the activity
of
philosophy. 34 Miriam Byrd tingly,
from
childhood
on,
to
resemblance,
friendship,
and
harmony
with
the beauty of reason" (401d1‐3). Socrates explains at 401d6‐402a4 why poetry should
be
the
foundation
of
elementary
education
in
the
good
city: First, because rhythm
and
harmony
permeate the inner
part
of the soul
more than anything else, affecting it
most stronglyThe Society mourns the loss of famed physician-scientist and global health leader Dr. Adel Mahmoud, who died June 11, 2018, in New York City as a result of a brain hemorrhage. He is survived by his wife, Dr. Sally Hodder.
Born and raised in Egypt, Dr. Mahmoud received his medical degree from the University of Cairo in 1963. Following a change in political climate, he left Egypt in 1968 to pursue studies in the UK and was awarded a PhD in 1971 from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Committed even at this early stage of his career to the improvement of health in the developing world, he immigrated to the US in 1973 to work as a postdoctoral fellow with the storied Kenneth Warren at Case | {
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mother, and it was not the
first time his father had made such threats.
Appellant further testified that
when he went to confront his father, he saw a gun sitting out on the desk. His
father grabbed the gun, but appellant was able to take it away from him because
his father did not have a good grasp on it. Even though appellant retrieved the
gun, he testified that he was still scared that his father was armed. He knew
that his father kept several weapons throughout the house and also carried a gun
in his pocket.
Appellant testified that his father
approached him aggressively and said, "I didn't have the guts, and that I
was a coward, and that he was going to teach me about taking -- taking something
out of his hands again," which appellant knew wasknew two
attorneys who could have helped him and his mother when he thought their lives
were in danger, but he did not pursue their help. He admitted that when the
murder occurred, it had been years since his father had used a weapon or
physically assaulted them. There was still verbal abuse, but they "often
all got mixed up" in it.
The jury also heard testimony that
after the appellant shot his father between the eyes and he had fallen to the
ground, appellant fired a second shot to his father's head at close range. The
expert testified that the father was not in a threatening or aggressive position
after he fell to the ground. Appellant testified that he attempted to give his
father CPR; however, no blood was found on appellant. Furthermore, an expert
testified that the photographs | {
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into their expedition like completing a wildlife survey while on a backpacking trip in a national park or searching for signs of prehistoric life in a remote area.
Explorations are trips that provide youth with a new cultural experience. These may include living on a farm, traveling to a foreign country, visiting a historical site, or exploring a new environment. Explorations involve preliminary research and preparation. Challenges may include language barriers, traveling great distances, or learning new skills.
Values-added partnerships
The Congressional Award is a values-added program, meaning that youth can count many of the activities they are already involved with toward portions of the Congressional Award. This option has been further enriched through the Congressional Award Foundation's partnerships with various youth-related programs.
Activities that can count toward portions of the– Director of Regulatory Relations, Edward Jones
The Honorable Richard Hudson* – U.S. Representative, NC-08
David W. Hunt, Esq.* – Legal Counsel
The Honorable Johnny Isakson* – U.S. Senator, Georgia
Dr. Brian Johnson – President & CEO, Advance Higher Ed
Karlos Lasane* – VP, Government Relations, Caesars Entertainment
Christopher Leahy – VP & Head of Government Relations & Policy, Bayer
The Honorable Sheila Jackson Lee – U.S. Representative, TX-18
Mateo Magdaleno* – Chief Education Officer, IDQ Group
The Honorable Joe Manchin* – U.S. Senator, West Virginia
Lance Mangum – Senior Federal Affairs Representative, FedEx
Dr. Linda Mitchell – MSU Extension
Kim Norman* – Co-Owner/Consultant, G2 Secure Staff
Laura O'Connor* – Junior High Registrar, Alpine School District
Michael Pitts* – Wisconsin
Steven Roberts* – Founder & President, The Roberts | {
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of Abraham was 352 years.48 Moses informs us that Shem lived, after he begat Arphaxad, 500. Gen. 11:11. This added to 100 years, which was his age when Arphaxed was born, makes him 600 years old when he died. Arphaxed lived, after he begat Salah, 403 years. 11:13. This added to 35 years, which was his age when Salah was born, makes him 438 years old when he died. Salah lived, after he begat Eber, 403 years. 11:15.— This added to 30 years, which was his age when Eber was born, makes him 433 years old when he died.— Eber lived, after he begat Peleg, 430 years. 11:17. This added to 34 years, which was his age when Peleg was born, makes him 464 years old. Peleg lived,after he begat Reu, 209 years. 11:19. This added to 30 years, which was his age when Reu was born, makes him 239 years old when he died. Reu lived, after he begat Serug, 207 years. Gen. 11:21. This added to 32 years, which was his age when Serug was born, makes him 239 years old when he died. Serug lived, after he begat Nahor, 200 years. Gen. 11:23. This added to 30 years, which was his age when Nahor was born, makes him 230 years old when he died. Nahor lived, after he begat Terah, 119 years. Gen. 11:25. This added to 29 years, which was his age when Terah was born, makes him 148 years when he died. Terah was 130 years old when Abraham was | {
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periods and the failure to comply with CPS's directives to attend abuse
control and to conduct remedial and educational meetings.
At the appeal hearing before the presiding trial judge, he heard the live testimony
of three witnesses, Diana Bartlett, James H. Reeves, and Susan Cummings. Bartlett was
a CPS Specialist and the Neeley family case had been transferred to her to ensure that
they were able to complete any services requested in the order issued by the associate
judge, primarily the portion related to the drug screens. She offered to do a cheek swab
drug screen, but the Neeleys were not comfortable with that, told her they thought they
were only supposed to participate in a urinalysis, and wanted to contact their attorney. The
maternal grandmother of the children advised them not to submitto tests until they talked
to their attorney. She later learned that a drug screen had been completed on John at the
Juvenile Probation Office in Gray County. The Neeleys never returned to her. She also
averred that the children had been doing well in their relative placement with a maternal
great-aunt and uncle.
James H. Reeves, a juvenile probation and TYC parole officer in Gray County,
testified that as a part of his duties, he gave drug screens for jobs and "things like that" and
identified the type of report form they used. He averred that John came in and requested
a drug test, stating that he had a job interview coming up for which he would need a drug
test certification. Reeves said John supplied a urine sample, which | {
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of Elderly Animals from Farm Sanctuaries” published by the University of Chicago Press in 2019
Luis Marden (1913–2003) - photographer, explorer, writer, filmmaker, diver, navigator, and linguist who worked for National Geographic magazine
Nick Saglimbeni - photographer 3D
Francesco Scavullo (1921–2004) - fashion photographer known for his work on the covers of Cosmopolitan magazine and his celebrity portraits
Mario Sorrenti (born 1971) - fashion photographer
Sculptors
Vincent Cavallaro
Jasper D'Ambrosi
John DeAndrea
Joe De Santis
Arturo Di Modica
Mark Di Suvero
Virginio Ferrari
Corrado Parducci
Piccirilli Brothers
Italo Scanga - neo-Dadaist
Business
Criminals
Entertainers
Actors
Food
Joe Bastianich - chef
Lidia Bastianich - chef
Buddy Valastro - chef
Hector Boyardee - famous for his Chef Boyardee brand of food products
Caesar Cardini - creator of the Caesar salad
Michael Chiarello - American celebrity chef specializing in Italian-influenced California cuisine
Nicholas D’Agostino - Creator of the modern supermarket
Giada De Laurentiis -as Donnie Brasco and infiltrated the Bonanno crime family.
Louis Freeh (born 1950 in Jersey City, New Jersey) - Director of the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) from 1993 to 2001
Rudolph Giuliani - early career was a US attorney in S.D.N.Y., prosecuting high-profile cases, including Cosa Nostra cases
Dan Mitrione- Italian-born American police officer and U. S. government advisor in Latin America.
Frank Rizzo
Frank Serpico
Joe Petrosino - NYCPD lieutenant in charge of the Italian Squad, an elite corps of Italian-American detectives formed to fight the Mafia
Charles Joseph Bonaparte - member of Theodore Roosevelt's Cabinet and founder of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
Joe Fiorentino - Cook County Deputy, 2010 ISBA Law Enforcement Award, Cook County Crime Stoppers Award
Journalism (print and multimedia)
Melissa Anelli - resident of Staten Island, | {
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assessment, and her
doctor terminated her psychiatric medications because mother refused to do
urine screens and pill counts. Mother was extremely volatile with DCF
workers as well as with the children’s foster mother.
¶ 4.
In May 2012, DCF moved to terminate parents’ residual rights, and a
hearing was set for July 2012. On the first day of the termination
hearing, mother informed her attorney that she was dissatisfied with her
representation. Mother asked either for a new attorney or to be allowed
to represent herself. Mother indicated
that she had been dissatisfied with her attorney since she was appointed in
June 2011. When the court asked mother why she was raising this issue at
such a late date, mother replied that it was because she felt pressured into
voluntarily relinquishing her parental rights in another child (the infant born
inFebruary 2012), and she felt that her concerns were not being
addressed.
¶ 5.
Mother’s attorney responded that she had been vigorously representing
mother, and that she had been actively involved in the case from the
beginning. The court concurred. It explained that if mother had
been unsatisfied with her attorney from the outset, mother should have brought
up this issue much earlier. Instead, mother raised it at the very last
stage of the case—the hearing was about to commence, and witnesses were present
and ready to testify. Accommodating such a request, the court continued,
would require rescheduling the termination hearing to the detriment of the
children, who had a very strong interest in having the case resolved. The
court noted that mother’s attorney worked very hard on her cases and was well
prepared in those cases, and that there | {
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her
whether she had been drinking. Jordan responded that she had consumed a couple of beers that
afternoon. The officer did not smell alcohol on her breath. The officer then asked her whether
she had taken any drugs. Jordan responded that she had taken Benedryl and Sudafed as well as
Soma, a muscle relaxant. Shaw observed that Jordan's speech was slurred and she mumbled when
she spoke. She was unable to maintain her balance and she swayed while standing. She walked
with difficulty and stumbled as she walked. As she leaned over to tie her shoe, she almost fell
onto the pavement. Based on these signs and symptoms, Shaw suspected that Jordan was under
the influence of alcohol or drugs, so he conducted field sobriety tests. Officer Shaw tied Jordan's
shoe so that she could perform the tests, which she failed.
After Jordan failed the field tests, Officer Shaw placed her under arrest and
transported her to the police station where she was videotaped. An intoxilyzer test administered
to appellant reflected no alcohol in her system. Appellant also consented to a blood test, but law
enforcement personnel were unable to draw blood from her.
Jordan filed a pre-trial motion to suppress all evidence obtained as a result of the
arrest. She sought suppression of her statements made to Officer Shaw as well as the statements
made by the two witnesses, the results of breath and blood tests, the videotape made at the station,
and the officer's observations. Officer Shaw was the sole witness to testify | {
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her older three children were
removed, but she stated that she was only using maybe twice a month at that
point and was not using with C.S.H. or her family members. Later she testified that she last smoked
methamphetamine in February 2007 and that she did so with C.S.H. She also testified that she last used drugs
at the end of January or beginning of February 2007. She conceded that she was using while she was
in drug treatment during the first six months after the removal. Her last positive drug test occurred in March
2007. Mother=s niece,
who testified that she had last used methamphetamine with Mother five or six
years before trial and had not used drugs for five or six years, testified that
she did not know whether Mother still used drugs but thatshe did know that
Mother still hung out with the same people with whom she had used drugs in the
past.
Mother could not remember when she told the CPS
worker that she was pregnant with twins, fathered by C.S.H., but she delivered
the twins early in June 2007, while she still lived in the Gainesville
home. Mother lied to the hospital about
the location of her older three children, stating that they were staying with
her grandmother. Mother admitted at
trial that the hospital expressed concerns about C.S.H. and her attentiveness
to the twins. Although Mother admitted
drug use during the pregnancy with the twins and that the drug use put them in
danger, she testified that she did not believe that her drug use during the
pregnancy endangered their health. The
twins were not tested for the presence of drugs | {
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Sunday, May 15, 2011
Children's CD Review: Hope Harris in Cousins Jamboree
With the unfortunate blogger down-time and loss of some of my posts, I'm afraid I have to start from scratch and do some reposts which puts my schedule slightly behind. Nevertheless, keep your eyes peeled, some great reviews and giveaways are on their way!
Hope Harris, graduate of University of Virginia and Neighborhood Playhouse School of Theatre, has performed both on and off broadway in NYC, various productions across the country and stints at Nashville's Bluebird Cafe. She's most well known for her role as "Baker Bobbie" in the Chocolate Chip Chamber Music Series in Park Slope, Brooklyn, NY. Her newest children's music album, Cousins Jamboree, has already won the 2011 Parents' Choice Silver Honor Award.
With a happy countryapplications include:
Avionics applications in the US (Boeing 777), Europe (Airbus
320) and Russia (BE-200)
Train control for the Swiss railroad and the French TGV and
Astree as well as urban rail systems in Paris, Cairo, Calcutta
and Hong Kong
The US Global Positioning System
Electronic Funds Transfer for the Swiss PTT
Medical analysis devices in Germany and the US
Steel manufacturing process control in the US
Automobile plant floor control in UK, Sweden and France
Electrical distribution monitoring in Switzerland
VLSI design tools in France and CAD systems in France and Germany
Mobile communication systems for Inmarsat
Radio telescope control in Finland
Astrophysical spectral analysis and modeling in Austria
Laser fusion experiment control at the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory
Real-time video production and editing in the US
Interest in Ada from the educational sector is growing. A 1996
survey in the US show 345 colleges, universities, commercial | {
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read this article.
Find the state that has the state that has the most vowels in its name. To make things simple we are going to assume that y is not a voewl
let states = [ "Alabama" , "Alaska" , "Arizona" , "Arkansas" , "California" , "Colorado" , "Connecticut" , "Delaware" , "Florida" , "Georgia" , "Hawaii" , "Idaho" , "Illinois" , "Indiana" , "Iowa" , "Kansas" , "Kentucky" , "Louisiana" , "MaineME" , "Maryland" , "Massachuset" , "Michigan" , "Minnesota" , "Mississippi" , "Missouri" , "Montana" , "Nebraska" , "NevadaNV" , "New Hampshi" , "New Jersey" , "New Mexico" , "New York" , "North Carolina" , "North Dakota" , "Ohio" , "Oklahoma" , "Oregon" , "Pennsylvania" , "Rhode Island" , "South Carolina" , "South Dakota" , "Tennessee" ,Up Front
Is Jenna Bush -- the blond half of the once hard-partying Bush twins -- a swing voter? One of the horde of young women upon whom pollsters tell us the fate of the Democratic Party could depend this November? On Larry King Live in late April, the president's daughter, accompanying her mother for an interview about their new children's book, surprised Larry by saying that "of course" she would consider voting for a Democrat this election year. "Who isn't open to learning about the candidates?" she continued, as her mom sat by with a forced smile. Laura, for her part, had said that if compelled to choose between Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama for president, she couldn't. "My favorite is the Republican," she insisted.
There's been evidence for | {
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International Airport, Guatemala City, 1972 (now uninstalled)
Santa Lucia Park, Santa Lucia Cotzumelhuapa, Guatemala,1974
Instituto Turismo, Guatemala City, 1976
Nobel Laureate Miguelangel Asturias headstone, Paris, France, 1976
United Nations Guatemalan Cultural Park, Lago Amatitlán, Guatemala, 1976
Hotel Dorado Americana, Guatemala City, 1978
Olympic Stadium, Retalhuleu, Guatemala, 1980
Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, 1980
University of North Carolina, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, 1981
Guatemala City Zoo, Guatemala City, 1981
Miguelangel Asturias Park, Guatemala City, 1982
Jacksonville Museum of Art, Jacksonville, Florida, 1983
Temporary exhibitions
Mint Museum, Charlotte, North Carolina, 1972
Jacksonville Museum of Art, Jacksonville, Florida, 1973 and 1983
Galleri Seven, Ridgefield, Connecticut, 1973
Museum of Science and Planetarium, Miami, Florida, 1974
Glynn Art Center, Saint Simon, Georgia, 1974
American Institute, Guatemala City, 1974 and 1978
Oregon Museum of Art, University2, Number 4, July–August 1978, pp. 17–19.
1979 Adventure. People, 22 January, pp. 22–23.
Callaway, Carl D.
2012 Rubbings of Ancient Maya Sculpture by Joan W. Patten. Mayaweb Art Press.
Smith, Dick
1977 Joan Patten Escultora. Atracciones, La Nacion, 22 April 1977, Guatemala.
References
External links
http://mayawebart.com/list-of-patten-rubbings-htm.htm
Category:1924 births
Category:2005 deaths
Category:Columbia University School of the Arts alumni
Category:Hewitt School alumni
Category:People from New York City | {
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Instead, Dr.
Li obtained legislative consent to sue the University. The Texas Legislature waived
the State's and the University's sovereign immunity from suit in a resolution that
provided:
Doctor Li is granted permission to sue the State of Texas
and The University of Texas Medical School at Houston .
. . for the official certificate of completion of the fellowship
program and for no other monetary or other damages . . . .
Tex. S. Con. Res. 3, 75th Leg., R.S., 1997 ("legislative resolution").
In 1999, Dr. Li filed this lawsuit against Associates, Eye Center, the University,
and Drs. Ruiz and Salmonsen, in their individual and official capacities, asserting the
same facts and a breach of contract claim that she had previously pleaded in Li I. In
the current case, appellees Associates and Eye Center sought summary judgments
baseddispute, they constitute a bar to re-litigation of that dispute, again, in this case.
See Amstadt, 919 S.W.2d at 652.
We overrule that portion of Dr. Li's first point of error, and we overrule her
second and third points of error.
B. The University and Drs. Ruiz and Salmonsen in Their Official
Capacities (2)
In the remaining portion of her first point of error, Dr. Li argues that the trial
judge erred by granting summary judgment for the State Defendants. Doctor Li
includes the University and Drs. Ruiz and Salmonsen, in their official capacities, as
State Defendants. We disagree.
1. Drs. Ruiz and Salmonsen, in Their Official Capacity
As to the Dr. Li's claim against Drs. Ruiz and Salmonsen in their official
capacities, that cause of action is not barred by res judicata. We construe | {
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money to be transferred into Jefferson’s account “[b]y check or
some manner,” and he testified that Jefferson never denied receiving the money
from Holman Street.
While
acknowledging that he met with Holman Street officials in 1992 regarding money
paid by the church on his behalf, Jefferson denied having acknowledged any personal
loan obligation. Meeting minutes were produced from the business records of
Holman Street demonstrating that a meeting occurred on March 15, 1992 between
Jefferson, Johnson, and several deacons, or “Administrators,” in charge of Holman
Street’s financial affairs. When pressed to repay the loan, Jefferson stated
that he would see if he could generate the necessary funds from his other
business assets.
After that
meeting, Holman Street received a signed promissory note and, a few days later,
a signed security agreement. Under the terms of the promissory note, signed by
Jeffersoncontinue in full force
“until first to occur of the following: (i) the expiration of four (4) years
from the date of payment of Debtor’s last Obligation to Secured Party; or (ii)
the payment by Debtor of all obligations secured” by the agreement.
In a letter dated March 16, 1993, Jefferson
acknowledged having signed the note “as a personal favor” to Johnson. He also
expressed concern about Holman Street’s apparent desire to sell its interest in
Unity Bank, including the promissory note, to an investor group. He further
stated: “This letter is to convey my continued interest and commitment to meet
the obligations of the note . . . .”
Johnson testified that beginning after the maturity
date of the note, December 31, 1992, but sometime before December 31, 1996 (the
cut-off date for the statute of limitations), Jefferson made | {
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in
January by letter to his attorney. The letter summarized the
outcry witness's testimony. The trial began in April. Appellant
had sufficient notice of the testimony. Point of error two is
overruled.
In his third and fourth points, appellant complains that the
trial court erred in admitting into evidence an involuntary
statement which was allegedly obtained in violation of his Miranda
rights. Ms. Bachicha, a caseworker for the Texas Department of
Human Services, testified that she took appellant's statement when
he came into the office with his girlfriend, the child victim's
mother. Ms. Bachicha testified that she did not consider him under
arrest nor did she have the authority to make an arrest. After a
complaint is made, it is DHS policy to take a statement from a
potential abuser in order tointerrogation
purposes. United States v. Phelps, 443 F.2d 246 (5th Cir. 1971).
The determination of custody is made upon the totality of the
circumstances. Here, both appellant and Ms. Bachica testified that
he voluntarily returned to DHS the second day. Ms. Bachicha was
not a law enforcement officer and could not force him to return to
the DHS. He came by his own persuasion.
Appellant asserts in his brief that Ms. Bachicha, as DHS
agent, coerced and induced him to make the incriminating statement.
He asserts that his statement was taken under the premise that Ms.
Bachicha would help him regain custody of his future step-daughter.
Ms. Bachicha testified that she informed appellant that he had the
right to terminate the interview at any time and that he was free
to leave. | {
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Professor of Inductive Biblical Studies at Asbury Theological Seminary.
Dr. Peter Chow is the president of China Evangelical Seminary in Taiwan.
Dr. Steven Cowan is Associate Director of the Apologetics Resource Center and Associate Professor of Philosophy and Apologetics at Birmingham Theological Seminary.
Dr. Brandon Crowe is Assistant Professor of New Testament at Westminster Theological Seminary.
Dr. Saul Cruz is a psychologist, and he and his wife, Pilar Cruz-Ramos are co-directors of Armoniá Ministries in Mexico City.
Dr. Dan Doriani is the senior pastor of Central Presbyterian Church in Clayton, Missouri.
Dr. Matt Friedeman is Professor of Evangelism and Discipleship at Wesley Biblical Seminary in Jackson, Mississippi.
Dr. Steve Harper is the founding Vice President of the Florida Dunnam campus of Asbury Theological Seminary.
Dr. Greg Perry is Associate Professor of New Testament and Director ofCity Ministry Initiative at Covenant Theological Seminary, St. Louis, Missouri.
Dr. Robert Plummer is Associate Professor of New Testament Interpretation at The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky.
Dr. David Redelings is a New Testament professor at Bethel Seminary.
Mr. Emad Sami serves at Veritas College as the Regional Director of Middle East & North Africa.
Dr. Thomas Schreiner is the James Buchanan Harrison Professor of New Testament Interpretation and Associate Dean of Scripture and Interpretation at The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky.
Dr. Mark Strauss taught at Biola University, Christian Heritage College, and Talbot School of Theology before joining the Bethel Seminary faculty in 1993.
Dr. William Ury is Professor of Systematic and Historical Theology at Wesley Biblical Seminary in Jackson, Mississippi.
Dr. Peter Walker is Tutor in Biblical Theology at | {
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AFTER FINDING THE
SWEDEN.
>> AFTER FINDING THE RECIPE
SWEDEN.
>> AFTER FINDING THE RECIPE ON
>> AFTER FINDING THE RECIPE ON
>> AFTER FINDING THE RECIPE ON
A
>> AFTER FINDING THE RECIPE ON
A FACEBOOK
>> AFTER FINDING THE RECIPE ON
A FACEBOOK GROUP
>> AFTER FINDING THE RECIPE ON
A FACEBOOK GROUP CALLED
>> AFTER FINDING THE RECIPE ON
A FACEBOOK GROUP CALLED TIPS
A FACEBOOK GROUP CALLED TIPS
A FACEBOOK GROUP CALLED TIPS
FOR
A FACEBOOK GROUP CALLED TIPS
FOR SCHOOL
A FACEBOOK GROUP CALLED TIPS
FOR SCHOOL MEALS
A FACEBOOK GROUP CALLED TIPS
FOR SCHOOL MEALS THAT
A FACEBOOK GROUP CALLED TIPS
FOR SCHOOL MEALS THAT ROCK,
A FACEBOOK GROUP CALLED TIPS
FOR SCHOOL MEALS THAT ROCK, HE
FOR SCHOOL MEALS THAT ROCK, HE
FOR SCHOOL MEALS THAT ROCK, HE
DECIDED
FOR SCHOOL MEALS THAT ROCK, HE
DECIDED HE
FOR SCHOOL MEALS THAT ROCK, HE
DECIDED HE HAD
FOR SCHOOL MEALS THAT ROCK, HE
DECIDED HE HAD TO
FOR SCHOOL MEALSTHAT ROCK, HE
DECIDED HE HAD TO MAKE
FOR SCHOOL MEALS THAT ROCK, HE
DECIDED HE HAD TO MAKE IT
FOR SCHOOL MEALS THAT ROCK, HE
DECIDED HE HAD TO MAKE IT FOR
DECIDED HE HAD TO MAKE IT FOR
DECIDED HE HAD TO MAKE IT FOR
HIS
DECIDED HE HAD TO MAKE IT FOR
HIS STUDENTS.
HIS STUDENTS.
HIS STUDENTS.
THIS
HIS STUDENTS.
THIS TYPE
HIS STUDENTS.
THIS TYPE OF
HIS STUDENTS.
THIS TYPE OF MEXICAN
HIS STUDENTS.
THIS TYPE OF MEXICAN AMERICAN
THIS TYPE OF MEXICAN AMERICAN
THIS TYPE OF MEXICAN AMERICAN
IS
THIS TYPE OF MEXICAN AMERICAN
IS VERY
THIS TYPE OF MEXICAN AMERICAN
IS VERY POPULAR
THIS TYPE OF MEXICAN AMERICAN
IS VERY POPULAR AND
THIS TYPE OF MEXICAN AMERICAN
IS VERY POPULAR AND SWEETNESS
IS VERY POPULAR AND SWEETNESS
IS VERY POPULAR AND SWEETNESS
WAS
IS VERY POPULAR AND SWEETNESS
WAS A
IS VERY POPULAR AND SWEETNESS
WAS A BIG
IS VERY POPULAR AND SWEETNESS
WAS A BIG HIT.
WAS A BIG HIT.
WAS A BIG | {
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HOMAGE TO JOCKEYS LABOR
MUSEUM DOCUMENTS THIS HISTORY
PAYING HOMAGE TO JOCKEYS LABOR
MUSEUM DOCUMENTS THIS HISTORY
PAYING HOMAGE TO JOCKEYS LABOR
FOUNDATION
MUSEUM DOCUMENTS THIS HISTORY
PAYING HOMAGE TO JOCKEYS LABOR
FOUNDATION DERBY.
MUSEUM DOCUMENTS THIS HISTORY
PAYING HOMAGE TO JOCKEYS LABOR
FOUNDATION DERBY. THEY
MUSEUM DOCUMENTS THIS HISTORY
PAYING HOMAGE TO JOCKEYS LABOR
FOUNDATION DERBY. THEY WERE
PAYING HOMAGE TO JOCKEYS LABOR
FOUNDATION DERBY. THEY WERE
PAYING HOMAGE TO JOCKEYS LABOR
FOUNDATION DERBY. THEY WERE
AFRICAN-AMERICAN
PAYING HOMAGE TO JOCKEYS LABOR
FOUNDATION DERBY. THEY WERE
AFRICAN-AMERICAN AND
PAYING HOMAGE TO JOCKEYS LABOR
FOUNDATION DERBY. THEY WERE
AFRICAN-AMERICAN AND THEIR
PAYING HOMAGE TO JOCKEYS LABOR
FOUNDATION DERBY. THEY WERE
AFRICAN-AMERICAN AND THEIR OFTE
FOUNDATION DERBY. THEY WERE
AFRICAN-AMERICAN AND THEIR OFTE
FOUNDATION DERBY. THEY WERE
AFRICAN-AMERICAN AND THEIR OFTE
FORGOTTEN
FOUNDATION DERBY. THEY WERE
AFRICAN-AMERICAN AND THEIR OFTE
FORGOTTEN THAT
FOUNDATION DERBY. THEY WERE
AFRICAN-AMERICAN AND THEIR OFTE
FORGOTTEN THAT IT
FOUNDATION DERBY. THEY WERE
AFRICAN-AMERICAN AND THEIR OFTE
FORGOTTEN THAT IT HELPS
FOUNDATION DERBY. THEY WERE
AFRICAN-AMERICAN AND THEIR OFTE
FORGOTTENNO VERY FEW BLACK HOCKEY
SEGREGATION ISSUES TO NOW THERE
ARE NO VERY FEW BLACK HOCKEY
SPORTS.
SEGREGATION ISSUES TO NOW THERE
ARE NO VERY FEW BLACK HOCKEY
SPORTS. CHURCHILL
SEGREGATION ISSUES TO NOW THERE
ARE NO VERY FEW BLACK HOCKEY
SPORTS. CHURCHILL DOWNS
SEGREGATION ISSUES TO NOW THERE
ARE NO VERY FEW BLACK HOCKEY
SPORTS. CHURCHILL DOWNS IS
SEGREGATION ISSUES TO NOW THERE
ARE NO VERY FEW BLACK HOCKEY
SPORTS. CHURCHILL DOWNS IS BLACK
ARE NO VERY FEW BLACK HOCKEY
SPORTS. CHURCHILL DOWNS IS BLACK
ARE NO VERY FEW BLACK HOCKEY
SPORTS. CHURCHILL DOWNS IS BLACK
STOCKINGS
ARE NO VERY FEW BLACK HOCKEY
SPORTS. CHURCHILL DOWNS IS BLACK
STOCKINGS WERE
ARE NO VERY FEW BLACK HOCKEY
SPORTS. CHURCHILL DOWNS IS BLACK
STOCKINGS WERE LEFT
ARE NO VERY FEW BLACK HOCKEY
SPORTS. CHURCHILL DOWNS IS BLACK
STOCKINGS WERE LEFT OUT.
ARE NO VERY FEW BLACK HOCKEY
SPORTS. CHURCHILL DOWNS IS BLACK
STOCKINGS WERE LEFT OUT. TRACY
SPORTS. CHURCHILL DOWNS IS BLACK
STOCKINGS | {
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During the arrest, Paredes attempted to draw a loaded
.38 caliber semi-automatic pistol from his pockets, but was
forcibly restrained from doing so. The officers searched the car,
and found 119 grams of crack cocaine under the passenger's seat.
The arrest was not random. An undercover state police
officer, Trooper Juan Col¢n, had negotiated for delivery of cocaine
on three previous occasions with the main target of the
investigation, a certain Jos Reyes, also known as Rafi. On
October 12, October 18, and November 2, 1994, Rafi delivered crack
cocaine to Col¢n at the same location on Merwin Street where
Paredes was later arrested. During the first transaction, on
October 12, Rafi brought the crack by himself and then sold it to
Col¢n. On October 18, Rafi arrived alone withoutIt was precisely 7:15 p.m. when Paredes and
Antigua arrived at the designated location in their car, carrying
119 grams (approximately 4.2 ounces) of crack cocaine.
After his arrest, Paredes waived his Miranda rights, seeMiranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966), admitted that he was
delivering cocaine, and then led the arresting officers to the
building where Rafi had given him the crack cocaine. However,
Paredes subsequently retracted his confession and denied having
taken part in or even having had knowledge of the drug transaction.
He explained that he showed the police where Rafi lived merely
because he was trying to be helpful. He also simultaneously
asserted, inconsistently, that he had no knowledge of the cocaine
that was found in his car, and that the cocaine belonged to Rafi.
Paredes further | {
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(and would do anything for them), is now in the ring fighting against Trump."
Messages seeking comment were left with Gillibrand's office.
On Monday, the women -- Jessica Leeds, Samantha Holvey and Rachel Crooks -- urged Congress to investigate Trump's behavior.
White House spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders pledged to provide a list of eyewitnesses whose accounts exonerated the president. She did not provide the list by late Monday.
The allegations surfaced during last year's presidential campaign, but the women raised the issue anew on the Kelly show Monday and at a news conference.
"It was heartbreaking last year," Holvey said. "We're private citizens and for us to put ourselves out there to try and show America who this man is and how he views women, and for them to say, `Eh, we don'tcare,' it hurt."
The former beauty queen claimed that Trump ogled her and other Miss USA pageant contestants in their dressing room in 2006. Crooks is a former receptionist at Trump Tower and Leeds says she met Trump on a flight.
Sixteen women have come forward with a range of accusations against Trump, many after the release of the "Access Hollywood" tape last October in which Trump was caught on an open microphone bragging about groping women. One woman, Summer Zevos, a contestant on Trump's reality show, "The Apprentice," sued, contending that Trump's denials of her accusations amount to false and defamatory statements.
© 2017 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. | {
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that the jury could have
found the following facts.
On June 20, 1996, a Puerto Rico judge found probable
cause to believe that Ortiz had engaged in a conspiracy to commit
murder and issued a warrant for his arrest. On that same date,
agents of the Puerto Rico Department of Justice executed the arrest
warrant at Ortiz' parents' residence in Guayama, Puerto Rico, which
was located approximately 150 feet from the Genaro Cautio Public
Middle School. Ortiz lived in a small house, approximately 10 feet
wide by 10 feet long, behind the main residence. The agents
knocked on his door and identified themselves as police. When the
defendant opened the door, the arrest team physically restrained
the suspect on his bed and handcuffed him.
Next to the bed, agents found a small plastic bag
containing vials of whatwas later discovered to be cocaine base,
commonly known as crack cocaine. One of the agents searched a
dresser, which was to the left hand-side of the bed, and found a
pistol and a bag of cocaine in the first drawer. The gun was a
nickel-plated Smith and Wesson pistol with 15 rounds of ammunition
in the magazine and a bullet in the chamber. Its serial numbers
had been removed. The agent also searched a plastic shopping bag
on top of the dresser, and discovered additional vials of crack
cocaine.
The weapon and narcotics evidence was the basis of a
four-count federal indictment against Ortiz. Counts One and Two
charged Ortiz with possession with intent to distribute varying
amounts of narcotics within 1,000 feet of a public school in
violation of 21 U.S.C. 841(a) and | {
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THINK
OTHER SIDE BUT I DON'T THINK
YOU
OTHER SIDE BUT I DON'T THINK
YOU COULD
OTHER SIDE BUT I DON'T THINK
YOU COULD HANG
OTHER SIDE BUT I DON'T THINK
YOU COULD HANG ON
OTHER SIDE BUT I DON'T THINK
YOU COULD HANG ON FOR
OTHER SIDE BUT I DON'T THINK
YOU COULD HANG ON FOR THAT
YOU COULD HANG ON FOR THAT
YOU COULD HANG ON FOR THAT
LONG.
LONG.
LONG.
HE
LONG.
HE MOVED
LONG.
HE MOVED IT
LONG.
HE MOVED IT FROM
LONG.
HE MOVED IT FROM NEW
LONG.
HE MOVED IT FROM NEW YORK
LONG.
HE MOVED IT FROM NEW YORK CITY
HE MOVED IT FROM NEW YORK CITY
HE MOVED IT FROM NEW YORK CITY
TO
HE MOVED IT FROM NEW YORK CITY
TO ARIZONA
HE MOVED IT FROM NEW YORK CITY
TO ARIZONA THE
HE MOVED IT FROM NEW YORK CITY
TO ARIZONA THE LAST
HE MOVED IT FROM NEW YORKTHE
DROP.
>> WITH THE TOWN
DROP.
>> WITH THE TOWN OF
DROP.
>> WITH THE TOWN OF 7000
DROP.
>> WITH THE TOWN OF 7000 WE
>> WITH THE TOWN OF 7000 WE
>> WITH THE TOWN OF 7000 WE
NORMALLY
>> WITH THE TOWN OF 7000 WE
NORMALLY SAY
>> WITH THE TOWN OF 7000 WE
NORMALLY SAY AND
>> WITH THE TOWN OF 7000 WE
NORMALLY SAY AND IT
>> WITH THE TOWN OF 7000 WE
NORMALLY SAY AND IT IS
>> WITH THE TOWN OF 7000 WE
NORMALLY SAY AND IT IS GOOD
>> WITH THE TOWN OF 7000 WE
NORMALLY SAY AND IT IS GOOD TO
NORMALLY SAY AND IT IS GOOD TO
NORMALLY SAY AND IT IS GOOD TO
BE
NORMALLY SAY AND IT IS GOOD TO
BE IN
NORMALLY SAY AND IT IS GOOD TO
BE IN THE
NORMALLY SAY AND IT IS GOOD TO
BE IN THE SPOTLIGHT
NORMALLY SAY AND IT IS | {
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gThe New Left in New Zealand
h in On the Left: Essays on Socialism in New
Zealand, eds. Pat Moloney and Kerry Taylor.
Dunedin: Otago University Press, 2002, pp.
117–32.
Boraman, T. gThe New Left and Anarchism in
New Zealand From the Mid-1950s to the Early
1980s: An Anarchist Communist Interpretation.
h PhD thesis, University of Otago, Dunedin,
2006.
Buchanan, Sam. Anarchy: The Transmogrification
of Everyday Life. Wellington: Committee for
the Establishment of Civilisation, * 1999.
Buis, Simon. The Brutus Festival. Auckland:
Auckland Copy Centre, 1969.Churton, Wade.
gHave You Checked the Children? h Punk and
Postpunk Music in New Zealand, 1977.1981.
Christchurch: Put Your Foot Down Publishing,
1999.
Cumming, Allan. Understanding Nonviolence.
Dunedin: Dunedin Nonviolent Action Resource
Group, 1983.
Cumming, A. How Nonviolence Works. Dunedin:
Nonviolent Action Network in Aotearoa, 1985.
Davidson, Jared. Remains to be Seen: Tracing
Joe Hill's ashes in New Zealand, Wellington:
Rebel Press, 2011.
Droescher, Werner. gThe Little Black and Red
Bookof Anarchism. h Unpublished manuscript,
1977.
Droescher, W. gToward an Alternative Society.
h Unpublished manuscript, 1978. University
of Auckland Library.
Dwyer, Bill. [writing under the pseudonym
B. Langford]. gAnarchism in New Zealand. h
Red and Black. 1 (1965), pp. 33–35.
Gramaphone, Malcolm. Get Lushed on Your Own
Grog cAn Underground Brewer fs Bible. Dunedin:
Kropotkin Press, 1972.
Innes, Wayne. Don ft Pay Taxes. Auckland:
Social Analysis, 1978.
Innes, W. How to Survive in Suburbia. Auckland:
Pupuke Press, 1981.
Prebble, Frank. Troublemakers: Anarchism and
Syndicalism, The Early Years of the Libertarian
Movement in Aotearoa/New Zealand. Christchurch:
Libertarian Press, 1995.
Prebble, F. gJock Barnes and the Syndicalist
Tradition in New Zealand. h Thrall. 14 (July/August
2000), pp. 4–5.
Sargent, Lyman T. gBeeville: An Anarchist
Commune in New Zealand, 1933-1973. h Paper
delivered at the Sixth International Communal
Studies Association meeting, Amsterdam, 1998.
Sargent, L. and Lucy Sargisson. Living in
Utopia: New Zealand fs Intentional Communities.
Aldershot and Burlington: | {
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9 gun with him. When they saw
Shelton in his van, they decided to carry out their plan. Martin
gave Mapp the Tech 9. Mapp saw that the gun was loaded. They
put on their masks. Mapp borrowed Richardson's jacket to hide
his hair. Mapp and Martin left the truck.
Mapp and Martin approached Shelton, who was walking with his
family, from different sides. Martin shot Shelton. Shelton
dropped everything he was carrying. Mapp approached Shelton with
the Tech 9 and picked up two key chains Shelton had dropped. He
shoved Shelton in the back. Martin shot Shelton again. Mapp
stepped back to avoid being shot himself. Martin fired several
more shots. Then Mapp and Martin ran off. Aswas
carrying her and Shelton's two-month-old son. They lived at 3500
S. Lake Park in Chicago, Illinois. They parked on the street in
front of the building. Everyone but Turnbull walked to the
building. Turnbull stayed at the van to lock it, then followed
the others.
Two men approached Shelton. The men carried guns. They
wore masks. Although Ladonna knew Martin and Mapp, she could not
identify them because of the masks. One man had a silver gun,
the other a black gun. Later testimony showed Martin had the
silver gun and Mapp had the black gun.
The eyewitnesses' description of the incident was similar to
Mapp's. In addition, Robin said the first shot hit her in the
ankle. | {
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which recorded the movement of the marijuana identified someone who picked up marijuana only as "George," and Sharos challenged the credibility of the witnesses identifying him as "George." Sharos contends that the trial court erred by not directing a verdict for acquittal, by allowing Richard Schair to testify about marijuana transactions with Sharos occurring prior to the alleged conspiracy, by allowing Schair to testify to hearsay statements by Jeffrey Bayles, and by allowing FBI Agent Robert Dueker to testify that an identification lineup for Sharos was unnecessary because Dueker had other evidence (not presented at trial) that identified Sharos as "George." Sharos also maintains that the government attempted to impeach Bayles through improper methods, and then improperly alluded to the impeachment innumber of other purposes. One of these admissible purposes is "identity." In this instance, the testimony of Schair was admissible to show the identity of the "George" listed in the "stash house" records, and to show that the "George" appearing in the "stash house" records was consistent with the "Brian" in Bayles' records, because Biagini paid Bayles, and Sharos appeared at the "stash house" to pick up Biagini's marijuana.11 Although the "identity" exception in Rule 404(b) usually applies to an unusual modus operandi, this exception is broad enough to include Schair's testimony about the relationship between Sharos and Biagini. Schair's testimony was also probative of Sharos' intent to distribute, see supra Sec. IA, and knowledge of the marijuana distribution business.
50
Sharos also | {
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for the gun" "Oh yes, oh yes, oh yes, they both" "Oh yes, they both, oh yes, they both reached for" "The gun, the gun, the gun, the gun, oh yes" "They both reached for the gun, for the gun" "Understandable, understandable" "Yes, it's perfectly understandable" "Comprehensible, comprehensible" "Not a bit reprehensible" "It's so defensible" " How're you feeling?" " Very frightened" " Are you sorry?" " Are you kidding?" " That's your statement?" " All I'd say is" "Tho 'my choo-choo jumped the track I'd give my life to bring him back" " And?" " Stay away from" " What?" " Jazz and liquor" " And?" " And the men who" " What?" " Play for fun" " And what?" " That's the thought that" " Yeah?"" Came upon me" " When?" " When we both reached for the gun" "Understandable, understandable" "Yes, it's perfectly understandable" "Comprehensible, comprehensible" "Not a bit reprehensible" "It's so defensible" "Oh yes, oh yes, oh yes, they both" "Oh yes, they both" "Oh yes, they both reached for" " Let me hear it!" " The gun, the gun, the gun" "Oh yes, they both reached for the gun, for the gun" " A little louder!" " Oh yes, oh yes, oh yes, they both" "Oh yes, they both, oh yes, they both reached for" "The gun, the gun, the gun, the gun, oh yes" " They both reached for the gun" " Now you got it!" "Oh yes, oh yes, oh yes, they both, they both, yes, they both | {
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``1 year after the date of
enactment of the Water Resources
Development Act of 2016''; and
(II) by striking ``State or tribal''
and inserting ``State, regional, or
tribal''; and
(ii) in subparagraph (B)--
(I) by striking ``State and Indian
tribe'' and inserting ``State, regional
district, and Indian tribe''; and
(II) by striking ``State or Indian
tribe'' and inserting ``State, regional
district, or Indian tribe''; and
(C) in paragraph (2)--
(i) in the paragraph heading by striking
``states'' and inserting ``states, regional
districts, and indian tribes'';
(ii) in subparagraph (A) by striking ``States
and Indian tribes'' and inserting ``States,
regional districts, and Indian tribes'';
(iii) in subparagraph (B)--
(I) in the matter preceding clause
(i) by striking ``State or Indian
tribe'' and inserting ``State, regional
district, or Indian tribe'';
[[Page 130 STAT. 1652]]
(II) in clause (ii) by striking
``levees within the State'' and
inserting ``levees within the State or
regional district''; and
(III) in clause (iii) by striking
``Stateor Indian tribe'' and inserting
``State, regional district, or Indian
tribe'';
(iv) in subparagraph (C)(ii) in the matter
preceding subclause (I) by striking ``State or
tribal'' and inserting ``State, regional, or
tribal''; and
(v) in subparagraph (E)--
(I) by striking ``States and Indian
tribes'' each place it appears and
inserting ``States, regional districts,
and Indian tribes'';
(II) in clause (ii)(II)--
(aa) in the matter preceding
item (aa) by striking ``State or
Indian tribe'' and inserting
``State, regional district, or
Indian tribe'';
(bb) in item (aa) by
striking ``miles of levees in
the State'' and inserting
``miles of levees in the State
or regional district''; and
(cc) in item (bb) by
striking ``miles of levees in
all States'' and inserting
``miles of levees in all States
and regional districts''; and
(III) in clause (iii)--
(aa) by striking ``State or
Indian tribe'' and inserting
``State, regional district, or
Indian tribe''; and
(bb) by striking ``State or
tribal'' and inserting ``State,
regional, or tribal''; and
(4) in | {
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by Alicia Thorgrimsson
The Gorge by Ryan Gavan
The Grace Of Citrus by Edem Dotse
The Hanging Man by Esther Geller
The Heeler by Darcy Lueking Bahensky
The Heir by Victor Huskey
The Hippocratic Coercion by Rugare Nyakunu
The Horrors Of Aging by Shaun Murphy
The Hunted by Mark Flood
The Hurricane Killers by Jim Greer
The Illumination Of Isaac Newton by Gc Johnson
The Impresario by Daniel Leventhal
The Incommunicable by Spencer Janes
The Indian Wife by Ronika Merl
The Italian Lover by Suzanne Griffin
The Jesuit Case by Aaron Corpus
The Keeper by Daniel Judson
The Lane by Johnny Vong
The Language of Wolves by Nan Schmid
The Last Adventure Of Shay Blaze by Howard Fridkin
The Last Bohemian by Bruno Borello
The Last Charming Man by Steven Jancovic
The Last Concerto by David Margolis
The Last Doctor by Matteo Gomez & Kareem Ayas
The Left Handed Hurl by FrancisScullion & Geraldine Scullion
The Legend Of Pearl Hart by Lana Slezic
The Lesson Paln by Jodi Levtian
The Lie Factory by Joel Sinensky
The Lightkeeper’s Daughter by Alan Savage
The Locksmith by Samuel Hawley
The Lonely Hero Of Someplace Else by Michael Bruno
The Luminare by Robert Walcott & Amir Barda
The Mad Season by Tim Vasile
The Making Of Port Chatham by Ian Miller
The Man Who Killed Hitler by Fausto Politi
The Mana Of Aloha by Sean Kennelly
The Mark by Jonathan Maher
The Master Code by Monica Hafer
The Mattachine Family by Daniel Kish
The Method by Duncan Ralston
The Midwife Theory by Lisa Maree Dewberry
The Misdirect by Brennan Howard
The Missing Journey by Geoffrey Uhl
The Mission by Filip Terlecki
The Monsters Are Here by Zach Roe
The Mothman by Jackson Murray
The Music And The Mirror by Jeremy Fassler
The Nature Of Power by | {
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The Second Eviction
A month after the eviction and reentry, Nimrod was re‐
placed by First Merit Realty Company as the new property
manager for Castilian. Michael Bloom, a First Merit employee,
noticed that Zoretic never signed a lease with Castilian. He
sought legal advice from the Kovitz lawyers about the matter.
They emailed him on February 4 and told him that “if the ten‐
ant refuses to sign the lease we would replace the eviction or‐
der with the sheriff.”
Bloom then sent Zoretic a letter with the order of posses‐
sion, advising Zoretic that if she wanted to remain in the unit,
she needed to sign the new lease by February 10. He sent an‐
other letter on February 11, warning that Zoretic would face
eviction if she refused to sign the lease and did not leave the
apartment. After receiving no response, Bloom asked Kovitz
lawyers to take over the eviction process. On April 29, Kovitz
lawyers obtained a new date stamp from the Clerk of Cook
County on the original September 2008 order, and placed the
newly stamped order with the Cook County Sheriff.
On June 5, Deputy Sheriffs John Darge, Darrell Dyson, and
Kyle Tryba were assigned to execute the eviction order. They
arrived at Castilian around 2:00 p.m. and spoke with Edward
Carey, a Castilian agent who confirmed the unit to be evicted.
The deputy sheriff team then knocked on the door of the unit
and announced their presence. When no one answered, they
opened the door and entered the unit with their guns drawn,
where they found Zoretic and her husband. Seeing that they
were unarmed, the officers put down their weapons and
asked if anyone else was in the unit. Zoretic and her husband
were taken to the living room while the officers conducted a
protective sweep, searching for any individuals who may
have been hiding. While the deputy sheriffs were completing
paperwork to finalize the eviction, Zoretic informed Dyson
4 No. 14‐2008
that she had spoken with Chief Dicaro and Lieutenant Pon at
the sheriff’s office about the eviction. Dyson called Lieutenant
Pon, who told him to continue the eviction. After photo‐
graphing items that Zoretic asked to take with her, the officers
escorted Zoretic out of the unit, and gave possession to Carey.
Less than a week later, Zoretic sued in circuit court, and
was awarded possession of the unit until Castilian obtained a
lawful two cohorts reflect this process.
The first cohort was organised around a Christian church although participation was open to non-members through the networks of the members and through a Facebook call. These included both men and women with the belief that including women would help link their partners to the intervention. The minimal criteria to enrol in the first cohort through the church and Facebook call were to be an adult Māori male with a Body Mass Index (BMI) of 25 or higher or an adult member of the whānau (extended family) of a participant.
The second cohort was organised through a trainer at a local gym. He recruited community members who met the eligibility criteria from his network and the networks of participants; most of the men were not | {
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} | 49,253,377 |
aliphatic groups including straight-chain, branched-chain and cyclic groups.
The term xe2x80x9calkylamidexe2x80x9d refers to an alkyl group substituted with an amido (xe2x80x94C(xe2x95x90O)xe2x80x94NH2) moiety.
The term xe2x80x9calkenylamidexe2x80x9d refers to an alkenyl group substituted with an amido moiety.
The term xe2x80x9calkynylamidexe2x80x9d refers to an alkynyl group substituted with an amido moiety.
The term xe2x80x9calkylaminexe2x80x9d refers to an alkyl group substituted with an amino (xe2x80x94NH2) moiety.
The term xe2x80x9calkenylaminexe2x80x9d refers to an alkenyl group substituted with an amino moiety.
The term xe2x80x9calkynylaminexe2x80x9d refers to an alkynyl group substituted with an amino moiety.
The term xe2x80x9calkylazidexe2x80x9d refers to an alkyl group substituted with an azide (xe2x80x94Nxe2x95x90Nxe2x95x90N) moiety.
The term xe2x80x9calkenylazidexe2x80x9d refers to an alkenyl group substituted with an azide moiety.
The term xe2x80x9calkynylazidexe2x80x9d refers to an alkynyl group substituted with an azide moiety.
The term xe2x80x9calkylcarbamoylxe2x80x9d refers to an alkyl group substituted witha carbamoyl (xe2x80x94Oxe2x80x94C(xe2x95x90O)xe2x80x94NH2) moiety.
The term xe2x80x9calkenylcarbamoylxe2x80x9d refers to an alkenyl group substituted with a carbamoyl moiety.
The term xe2x80x9calkynylcarbamoylxe2x80x9d refers to an alkynyl group substituted with a carbamoyl moiety.
The term xe2x80x9c-alkyl-carbonyl-alkylxe2x80x9d refers to an alkyl group substituted with a carbonyl moiety (xe2x80x94C(xe2x95x90O)xe2x80x94) between two adjacent carbon atoms.
The term xe2x80x9c-alkenylcarbonyl-alkenylxe2x80x9d refers to an alkenyl group substituted with a carbonyl moiety between two adjacent carbons. Preferably, the carbonyl is not adjacent to a double bonded carbon.
The term xe2x80x9c-alkynylcarbonylalkynylxe2x80x9d refers to an alkynyl group substituted with a carbonyl moiety between two adjacent carbons. Preferably, the carbonyl is not adjacent to a triple bonded carbon.
The term xe2x80x9calkylhydrazinexe2x80x9d refers to an alkyl group substituted with a hydrazinyl (xe2x80x94NHxe2x80x94NH2) moiety.
The term xe2x80x9calkenylhydrazinexe2x80x9d refers to an alkenyl group substituted with a hydrazinyl moiety.
The term xe2x80x9calkynylhydrazinexe2x80x9d refers | {
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Cooper]]'' while another episode mentioned ''[[Series/GilligansIsland Skipper's Island]]''. In terms of films, one episode referred to ''Franchise/BackToTheFuture Part IV'' while another showed Quinn, Rembrandt and Maggie outside of a cinema advertising ''Film/TheManWhoWouldBeKing'' starring Clark Gable and Humphrey Bogart. This was based on the fact that John Huston had tried, unsuccessfully, to make a version of the film with those iconic Golden Age stars in the 1950s. A DeletedScene from the pilot mentioned that Ronald Reagan was the Mayor of San Francisco in 1995 and that he was best known as an actor for playing the first Howard "Mr. C" Cunningham in ''Series/HappyDays''.* In the universe of ''Series/TheWalkingDead'', zombie fiction doesn't exist. Hence, the characters are [[GenreBlindness Genre Blind]] and use any word to describe the zombies *except* "zombie".*In the [[DistaffCounterpart female-orientated]] parallel universe visited by the crew of ''Series/RedDwarf'', Jeremy Greer wrote the seminal masculinist work ''The Male Eunuch'' while Wilma Shakespeare was responsible for the English language's greatest plays, including ''The Taming of the Shrimp''. [[/folder]]
[[folder: Music]]* ''Everyday Chemistry'' is an album of mashups derived from songs created by the members of Music/TheBeatles during their solo career, with the central conceit being that it's actually an album from a parallel universe where they never broke up.[[/folder]]
[[folder: Tabletop Games]]* ''TabletopGame/{{GURPS}} Infinite Worlds'', set in a world with regular cross-dimensional travel, includes a list of "alternate bestsellers" that were brought home from other Earths. These include a complete ''Mystery of Edwin Drood'' by [[AuthorExistenceFailure Charles Dickens]], an account of the WWII invasion of Japan by [[RichardNixonTheUsedCarSalesman | {
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Citation Nr: 1829753
Decision Date: 07/24/18 Archive Date: 08/02/18
DOCKET NO. 16-44 177 ) DATE
)
)
On appeal from the
Department of Veterans Affairs Regional Office in Cleveland, Ohio
THE ISSUE
Whether a January 17, 1983, decision of the Board of Veterans' Appeals (Board), which denied a rating in excess of 30 percent for psychophysiologic gastrointestinal reaction with residuals of colostomy, should be revised or reviewed on the grounds of clear and unmistakable error (CUE).
REPRESENTATION
Moving Party represented by: Peter J. Sebekos, Attorney
ATTORNEY FOR THE BOARD
Joshua Castillo, Counsel
INTRODUCTION
The Veteran had active duty from September 1969 to September 1971, including combat service in the Republic of Vietnam for which he received two Bronze Stars and two Purple Heart Medals.
This matter comes before the Board as an action on the motion of the Veteran alleging CUE ina Board decision rendered on January 17, 1983, which denied a rating in excess of 30 percent for a service-connected disability then characterized as psychophysiologic gastrointestinal reaction with residuals of a colostomy.
Historically, in February 2012, the Board denied the Veteran's motion to revise the January 1983 Board decision on the basis of CUE; however, in November 2013, the Board vacated it's denial and dismissed the motion without prejudice. In July 2016, the Veteran submitted the motion that is currently before the Board.
The Board acknowledges that the issues of (i) entitlement to an increased rating for residuals of a colostomy, to include as due to CUE in the March 1978 rating decision; (ii) entitlement to an effective date earlier than June 25, 2001, for the award of a | {
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one investigation in 1999, one investigation in 2000, two
investigations in 2001, one investigation in 2004, two investigations in 2006,
one investigation in 2007, two investigations in 2008, and three investigations
in 2009. The September 2000, March 2000,
May 2004, and May 2006 investigations involved allegations that Mother used
illegal drugs, and several exhibits entered into evidence showed that Mother
tested positive for cocaine when both A.M.E. and D.A.S. were born and that
cocaine was “detected” in both A.M.E. and D.A.S when they were born. Mother admitted using illegal drugs in May
2009 and late September 2009, and she tested positive for cocaine in January
2010, exhibiting high levels of cocaine just two months before the final
termination trial. One of Mother’s
medical records, dated October 2009, notes that she reported “that she used to
smoke crack about every otherday, but she stopped on her own about 1 month
ago,” which would have been in September 2009, well after the children had been
removed from her care. In 2009, although
Mother claimed that the items belonged to someone else, she told Lawless that
she had found cocaine residue, cocaine baggies, and glass pipes in the backyard
shed at the Jones Street residence. The
children were living there at the time. Notwithstanding
the concerning condition of the house located on Jones Street, Mother’s illegal
drug use in May 2009—after the children had already been removed once for her
illegal drug use in May 2006—was a major factor that led CPS to remove the
children from her care for a second time; CPS had warned Mother after she was reunited
with the children in 2007 that this was her last | {
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versions of Families (some with pre-school age children, teenagers, etc.) as well as Senior Citizens, "Student Accom" and "Studio Apartment". Some specialty residences exist in the game as well, including "Piano Tuner's Home" and "Author's Home". These special designations do not seem to have any additional benefit in-game.
Amusement Facilities: Including "Karaoke", "Amusement Park", and "Slot Machines". Some amusements are specifically for Senior Citizens, Adults, or Families.
Grocers: Including "Seafood Shop", "Bakery", "Butcher Shop", and "Fruit & Veg. Shop".
Super Stores: Including "Tailor", "Electrician", "Stationery Store", "Laundrette", "Hardware Shop", and "Department Store".
Restaurants: In this game, restaurants have specific target consumers; some are specifically for Family, some are for Adult. Examples include "Savory Pancakes", "Coffee Shop", "Mexican Bistro", "Hamburger Shop", "Drink Bar", "Thai Restaurant", and "French Bistro".
Police Stations: "Police Stations"
Employment Agency: "EmploymentPresident Donald Trump signs an "Education Federalism Executive Order" as teachers and legislators look on in the Roosevelt Room at the White House on Wednesday. Photo by Mike Theiler/UPI | License Photo
President Donald Trump signs an "Education Federalism Executive Order" as teachers and legislators look on in the Roosevelt Room at the White House on Wednesday. Photo by Mike Theiler/UPI | License Photo
President Donald Trump signs an "Education Federalism Executive Order" as teachers and legislators look on in the Roosevelt Room at the White House on Wednesday. Photo by Mike Theiler/UPI | License Photo
Education Secretary Betsy DeVos speaks prior to President Donald Trump signing an "Education Federalism Executive Order" in the Roosevelt Room at the White House on Wednesday. Photo by Mike Theiler/UPI | License Photo
President Donald Trump | {
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of marihuana to Barlow. In the course of this transaction,
Barlow and Dezavies Taylor, also known as "Tucker," met Flores and Ronnie at a fast
food restaurant along Interstate 10 in Houston.
Flores and Ronnie were traveling in
Flores' wife's car, and Barlow and Taylor were traveling in a white Chevrolet Caprice
driven by Taylor. From the restaurant, Taylor and Barlow, and unidentified persons in
a gray Buick, followed Flores and Ronnie to Ronnie's residence, where Ronnie got the
marihuana and put it in the Caprice. Flores and Ronnie then got in the car with Barlow
and Taylor, expecting to be paid for the marihuana. Instead, Taylor drove away,
ultimately stopping—at Ronnie's instruction—at the home of Flores' mother. Flores
testified he got out of the car at his mother's house "tohead her off," and when he
returned to the car, Barlow pulled a gun, ordered Ronnie out of the car, and pointed the
gun at Flores. The Caprice then sped away, with no money having been exchanged
for the marihuana. Flores' brother took Flores and Ronnie back to Ronnie's house
where they had left Flores' wife's vehicle. Flores and Ronnie, joined by Flores' wife,
then attempted to locate the Caprice and, in the process, encountered the gray Buick.
Flores was driving his wife's car, and he pursued the Buick, but the passenger in that
car started shooting toward them. Flores testified they were shot at nine or ten times
before the driver of the Buick was able to elude them. None of the shots fired hit
Flores, his wife, or Ronnie; | {
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store, located at 7105 Third Avenue in Brooklyn, displayed a gun, and ordered Veronica Goldston to place a large quantity of jewelry into a plastic bag. Jaworsky then fled with the bag of jewelry and got into the passenger side of a beige-colored Chevrolet, which was double-parked about one hundred yards away from the store. Donald Goldston, Veronica's husband and co-owner of the jewelry store with her and their daughter, looked on as the car pulled away from the curb. Mr. Goldston had been next door at the time of the robbery, but when his wife and daughter told him of the theft and pointed to Jaworsky getting into the car, he followed the car in an ambulance whose driver and passenger agreed to help pursue the robber.hereditary hypofibrinogenemia (due to fibrinogen), ACT deficiency (due to α1-antichymotrypsin), diabetes insipidus (DI), neurophyseal DI (due to vasopvessin hormone/V2-receptor), neprogenic DI (due to aquaporin II), Charcot-Marie Tooth syndrome (due to peripheral myelin protein 22), Perlizaeus-Merzbacher disease, neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's disease (due to βAPP and presenilins), Parkinson's disease, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, progressive supranuclear plasy, Pick's disease, several polyglutamine neurological disorders such as Huntington, spinocerebullar ataxia type I, spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy, dentatorubal pallidoluysian, and myotonic dystrophy, as well as spongiform encephalopathies, such as hereditary Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (due to prion protein processing defect), Fabry disease (due to lysosomal α-galactosidase A), Straussler-Scheinker syndrome, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), dry eye disease, and Sjögren's Syndrome.
In addition to up-regulation of CFTR activity, reducing anion secretion by CFTR modulators may be | {
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partner in the Manhattan law firm Haas, Greenstein, Samson, Cohen & Gerstein and the co-op board's lawyer.
Like office buildings, residential co-ops and condominiums, once among the pickiest of landlords, are welcoming tenants that were once anathema. "Co-ops used to want stores that would attract buyers of apartments," said Neil Kreisel, president of the Kreisel Company, which manages co-ops and condominiums. "Now they want stores that generate revenues."
Correction: February 2, 1992, Sunday An article last Sunday about retail vacancies in Manhattan misstated the terms of Fila's lease for its new Madison Avenue store and misidentified the negotiating broker. The lease is for $3 million over 10 years. The brokers were Stuart S. Ellman and Helene Wall of Judson Realty.Real-time view data is not available at this time. Learn more.
Everyone playing basketball nowadays knows that if you want to be the best you have to be like Dirk Nowitzki. No one wants to Be Like Mike, everyone wants to Be Like Dirk.
Director/Show Lead Scott Gairdner Cinematographer Brian Lane Music Brian Lane Writer David Ferguson Actor Jordan Jones Actor Maxwell Chase Producer Christin Trogan
Featuring Jordan Jones, Alvin Paige, Maxwell Chase, & Trillion Galloway
Directed by Scott Gairdner
Written by David Ferguson
Produced by Christin Trogan & Phillip Van Wagoner
Edited by Scott Gairdner
Director of Photography & Music: Brian Lane
Hair & Makeup: Emily Blackmun & Noelle Vanatta
Vocals by Jordan Jones and The Gold Club
Photoeditor & Production Assistant: Chris Vanartsdalen
Special thanks: Dan Marcus, Myke Chillian, & Oz Rodriguez | {
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wondrous target for us to reach,” Chan told THR.
China Film Group will have a delegation to promote their movie Wolf Totem, directed by French director Jean-Jacques Annaud, although there appears to be no senior CFG management attending.
Zhang Qiang, China Film Company’s vice president in charge of film investment and production, who had all of his luggage stolen from his rented Cote d'Azur apartment last year, will not be coming.
Zhang Zhao, head of LeVision Pictures, who invested in Expendables 2 and has signed Zhang Yimou to its stable of directors, is attending.
Sure to attract a lot of attention will be execs from Huayi Brothers, which is planning to invest between $120 million and $150 million in the Studio 8 venture with former Warner Bros. film chief Jeff Robinov. HuayiSince President Putin's election, Russian authorities have intensified their assault on basic freedoms and undermined rule of law. This crackdown should be a matter of grave concern to the United States.
As President Barack Obama and President Xi Jinping of China begin discussions designed to forge closer personal bonds between the two nations, they should not shy away from uncomfortable topics. The centerpiece for this summit ought to be crafting a shared vision on human rights.
Youcef Nadarkhani, a pastor who was sentenced to death in Iran for the crime of apostasy and spent more than three years in prison, has been allegedly detained on Christmas Day in his home city of Rasht.
While Bahraini prisoners of conscience languish in jail cells, will U.S. and Bahraini officials continue with business as | {
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of Protestants";
"the hotter sort of
Protestants."
To them the accession of
Elizabeth in 1558 had been a
providential deliverance,
a divine intervention in
English affairs.
November the 17th,
the Queen's accession day,
was celebrated with the ringing
of bells;
it became almost like a
Protestant holy day.
But though they regarded the
Church of England which she
established a year later in 1559
as undoubtedly a true church,
it seemed to these Protestant
radicals that it was a church
which was only half reformed,
and they too were worried about
what might happen next.
They could have no certainty
that it would last.
They were anxious to push
ahead, to consolidate the
position,
to move urgently to what they
described as "further
reformation."
Especially they wanted
reformation of some of the
traditionalist structures of the
Church of England and the
removal of some of the more
traditional aspects of its forms
of worship.
They wanted to get rid of the
"rags ofRome"
or the "dregs the
popery."
This is the sort of language
they used.
So there was from the beginning
an element of dissidence even
amongst those who could be
regarded as Elizabeth's most
enthusiastic supporters.
And that was especially true
amongst the younger clergy who
were emerging from the
universities,
now thoroughly trained in
Protestant doctrine,
and who were becoming,
if anything,
more emphatically Protestant
even than those who had led the
church in the later years of
Edward VI.
This younger generation were
moving beyond the doctrinal
position which had been
established by Archbishop
Cranmer in the early 1550s and
was enshrined in the prayer
book.
Increasingly,
they felt the influence of John
Calvin, the great Protestant
leader of Geneva,
and his successor there,
Theodore Beza.
In terms of the doctrine of
salvation, they increasingly
adopted the doctrine of
'predestination' championed by
Calvin;
the notion that only an elect
minority would find salvation.
Many also adopted the doctrine
of double predestination
championed by Beza;
the view that God | {
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all the madrassas. His
policies of ethnic cleansing
forever associated
secularism with the violence
of the Young Turks, a
secularist group who had
seized power in Ottoman
Turkey and committed the
Armenian massacres during
World War I. These rulers
wanted their countries to
look modern (that is,
European), even though the
majority of the population
had no familiarity with
Western ideas.
What about Egypt, the
motherland of Islamism?
Armstrong: After an attempt
on his life in 1954, Gamal
Abdel Nasser incarcerated
thousands of members of the
Muslim Brotherhood, the
innocent along with the
guilty minority. Most were
imprisoned without trial for
doing nothing more
incriminating than handing
out leaflets or attending a
meeting.
One of them was Sayyid Qutb.
As he saw the Brothers being
beaten, tortured and
executed in this vile prison
and heard Nasser vowing to
secularise Egypt on the
Western model and confine
Islam to the private sphere,
secularism seemed a great
evil. In prison he wrote
"Milestones", the "bible" of
Sunni fundamentalism, the
work of aman who has been
pushed too far and was
executed, at Nasser's
special request, in 1966.
The other Brothers were
radicalised in these
terrible prisons; when they
were released in the 1970s,
they took their extremism
into the mainstream.
END OF SERIES
Interview conducted by
Claudia MendeKaren Armstrong is a
British scholar of
comparative religion. She is
the author of several
bestsellers on the history
of religion. Her newest
publication deals with
violence in Judaism,
Christianity and Islam.
"Fields of Blood: Religion
and the History of Violence"
(2014).
The UK Muslim News Awards
for Excellence event was
held 27 March 2017 in London
to acknowledge British
Muslim and non-Muslim
contributions to the
society.
Ibn Battuta Award
for Excellence in
MEDIA:
For fair, accurate
and balanced
reporting on an
issue involving
Muslims nationally
or internationally.
Winner: Nabila Ramdani
Nabila Ramdani is an
award-winning
French-Algerian
journalist,
columnist, and
broadcaster who
specialises in
French politics,
Islamic affairs, and
the Arab World. She
has established a
long-standing
reputation for
producing fearless,
balanced and honest
reporting across a
wide variety of
media outlets.
Nabila’s bylines
have appeared in the
Daily Mail, Daily
Telegraph, The
Independent, The
Guardian | {
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of the armed services, including Chief Gallagher, who were accused or had been convicted of war crimes, overruling military leaders who sought to punish them. All three were lionized by conservative commentators who portrayed them as war heroes unfairly prosecuted for actions taken in the heat of battle.
Mr. Trump, who was lobbied heavily by the families of the three service members, announced on Nov. 15 that he was reversing the demotion of Chief Gallagher. He also ordered the full pardon of Clint Lorance, a former Army lieutenant, from the military prison at Fort Leavenworth, where he was serving a 19-year sentence for the murder of two civilians; and of Maj. Mathew L. Golsteyn, an Army Special Forces officer who was facing murder charges for killing an unarmed AfghanEver Read" (introduction for PS Publishing reprint of Ray Bradbury's The Day It Rained Forever; September, 2008)
"Lovecraft and I" (Lovecraft Annual #5; August 2011)
"Afterword" (Masters of the Weird Tales: Arthur Machen; Centipede Press, 2013)
"For Melanie (A Short Appreciation, With Footnotes)" (afterword for Singularity and Other Stories by Melanie Tem; Centipede Press, 2017)
Scientific publications (partial list)
Kiernan, C. R., and Schwimmer, D. R. 2004. First record of a velociraptorine theropod (Tetanurae, Dromaeosauridae) from the Eastern Gulf Coastal United States. The Mosasaur 7:89-93.
Kiernan, C. R. 2002. Stratigraphic distribution and habitat segregation of mosasaurs in the Upper Cretaceous of western and central Alabama, with an historical review of Alabama mosasaur discoveries. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 22(1):91-103. abstract online
Schwimmer, D. R. and Kiernan, C.R. 2001. Eastern Late Cretaceous theropods in North | {
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... ... services from offices headquartered in Little Rock, has initiated a charity drive to ... the National Foundation to End Senior Hunger, Arkansas ranks first in senior hunger ...
(Date:12/8/2016)... ... December 08, 2016 , ... Coppin Insurance Agency, an insurance and ... and around the Cape Coral area, is embarking on a charity drive with the ... Florida. , The Harry Chapin Food Bank of Southwest Florida works to provide fresh ...
(Date:12/7/2016)... ... December 07, 2016 , ... DrugDev again ... that it is one of the early adopters completing EU-U.S. Privacy Shield Certification from ... to provide companies on both sides of the Atlantic with a mechanism to comply ...
(Date:12/7/2016)... ... December 07, 2016 , ... Children ... bodies, a researcher at the Icahn School ofGilbert, on February 9, 1962, which patent was assigned by him to the corporation. On January 20, 1969 Lifetime Door Co. of Mich. assigned the patent back to Gilbert, and he became the sole owner of the patent.
3
Shortly after the issue of the patent Gilbert filed a Reissue Patent Application in the Patent Office, seeking to obtain additional claims. The Examiner in the Patent Office rejected all of the claims in the Reissue Application, including the original claims allowed in the patent, on the ground that the claimed invention was not patentable in view of the prior art.
4
Gilbert then appealed to the Board of Patent Appeals, which sustained the final rejection by the Examiner on the ground that the additional claims as well as the original | {
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group's Wayne Berman , a political appointee of Bush I and husband of Lea Berman, White House social secretary for Bush II, says clients wanted some Democrats. "It's the right business move for us to be a full service . . . firm," he said.
Starting Point Blank
Former Democratic operatives Amy Weiss and Debra DeShong have left the United Nations Foundation and formed Point Blank Public Affairs to provide issue advocacy, strategic counseling and crisis communications services.
Weiss most recently served as vice president of public affairs for the United Nations Foundation and executive director of the Better World Campaign. Earlier, she held communications posts for the Recording Industry Association of America, President Bill Clinton and the Democratic National Committee.Man
Ob-la-di, Ob-la-da
Octopus's Garden
Oh! Darling
Old Brown Shoe
One After 909
Only A Northern Song
Paperback Writer
Penny Lane
Piggies
Please Please Me
Polythene Pam
Ps I Love You
Rain
Revolution
Revolution (Single Version)
Rocky Raccoon
Run For Your Life
Savoy Truffle
Sexy Sady
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (Reprise)
She Came In Through The Bathroom Window
She Loves You
She Said She Said
She's A Woman
She's Leaving Home
Something
Strawberry Fields Forever
Sun King
Taxman
Tell Me What You See
Tell Me Why
Thank You Girl
That Means A Lot
The Ballad Of John And Yoko
The Cont.Story Of Bungalow Bill
The End
The Fool On The Hill
The Inner Light
The Long Andwinding Road
The Night Before
The Word
There's A Place
Things We Said Today
Think For Yourself
This Boy (Ringo's Theme)
Ticket To Ride
Tomorrow Never Knows
Two Of Us
Wait
We Can Work It Out
What Goes On
What You're Doing
What's The New Mary Jane
When I Get Home
When I'm Sixty Four
While My Guitar Gently Weeps
Why Don't | {
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of
Cullman, Ala.; brother Herschel Chandler, of
Sipsy, Ala.; sister Becky Chandler, of Rye;
and a grandson Tyler A. Moor, of
Channelview.
Preceded in death by her husband Billy
Watson; parents Arrie Chandler and Lois
Chandler Gentry; and sister Betty Brown.
Graveside funeral services for Mrs. Wanda
Darlene Chandler Watson were held Friday,
December 23, 2:00 p.m. at Tubb Cemetery, in
Northeast Leon County.
Walters Funeral Home
Betty Walling
Mrs. Betty Ruth Franklin Walling, age 67
of Ratcliff, passed away Thursday, April 27,
2006 at her residence in Ratcliff. Mrs.
Walling was born October 25, 1938 in
Cleveland and had lived most of her lifetime
in Ratcliff. Mrs. Walling was a housewife
and a member of the Truth Tabernacle Church
in Kennard. Mrs. Walling loved family,
children, grandchildren and
great-grandchildren.
Survivors include her children Ernest
Walling and wife Lisa, of Kennard, Pamela
Walling Moran, of Houston, Randy Walling and
wife Jennifer, of Ratcliff and Patricia
WallingPolk and husband Virgil, of Houston;
grand-children Christopher Walling and wife
Misty, Jason Dowdy, Jessica McComas, Corey
Smith, Seth Walling, Heather Mooneyham and
husband David, Joshua Walling, Brice
Walling, Jonathan Walling and Anna Polk;
step-children Ty Parks, Shane Parks and
Daelon Flores; graet-grandchildren Preston
Mooneyham, Alyssa Walling, Payden Dowdy,
Carrigan Dowdy, Kaylynn McComas and Elijah
McComas; brothers Charles Franklin, of
Ratcliff and Homer Franklin and wife Helen,
of Shepherd; sisters Mary Ann Cheney, of
Huntington and Patsy Cadden-head and husband
John, of Lovelady; numerous nieces, nephews
and other relatives.
Preceded in death by her son Joe Falvey
Walling; husband Leroy Walling; and grandson
Jacob Leger.
Funeral Services for Mrs. Betty Ruth
Franklin Walling were held Saturday, April
29, at 2:00 p.m. in the Truth Tabernacle
Church in Kennard with the Rev. Grady
Gladden officiating. Interment followed in
the Conner Ceme-tery.
In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions
may be made to the Truth Tabernacle Church
Building | {
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ceremonies. The program included a performance
of an original composition by Phil Larson from the brass quartet and
a solo by Kent Lundholm. Dr. Robert Mounce delivered the address (see
page 5). Over 800 people were present.
Olford Challenges Church
To Liberty in Holy Spirit
School, Constituency
Need Mutual Trust
Page 4 the CLARION
Seminary Guest
Explains Work
by Don Delich
Last Wednesday, Feb. 19, the
seminary was privileged to hear
Bruce Olson, an independent mis-sionary
to Venezuela and Colum-bia.
Olson, now a veteran mission-ary
with three years of experience,
is only 22 years old.
He graduated from Central high
school in St. Paul at 16 and re-ceived
his B.A. from the Univer-sity
of Minnesota at 19. He is con-versant
in Greek, Latin, Spanish
and Sanskirt, as well as being
familiar with other dialects.
Olson has chosen to work in
one of South America's most
dangerous fields. He works inde-pendently
and without support
among the Indian tribes inthe
mountains between the western
border of Venezuela and Colum-bia.
He has utilized some ingen-ious
methods to make friends
with the hostile Indians in this
territory.
Motile Indians, one of the four
main tribes in the territory, have
killed 585 American oil company
men who have tried to negotiate
with them for permission to tap
some of the rich sources of oil in
their tribal territory.
No one has even been able to
enter this territory and return
alive except Olson. He related story
after story of God's providence in
protecting his life as he entered
the hostile territory without any
weapons for defense.
Olson has now become a repre-sentative
to the Food and Agri-culture
Organization in the Uni-ted
Nations from the Gajira, Ara-wak
and Yuko tribes in Vene-zuela
and Columbia. This job
came by appointment from the
presidents of the two countries,
Romulo Betancourt of Venezuela
and Leon Valencid of Columbia.
Upon his return to his field Ol-son
will | {
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friend. Jones
saw Ryan on the Friday and Saturday before the murder when she went to his home
to purchase marihuana. Trotman
accompanied her on both occasions, but did not go inside Ryans house. As far as Jones knew, Trotman and Ryan did
not know one another.
On the
evening of the murder, Jones planned to go to her aunts house to get something
for her headache; Trotman accompanied her.
When they arrived at the home of Jones aunt, Trotman stayed in the
car. When Jones returned to the car,
Trotman was gone. After visiting with
her aunt a bit longer, Jones and her aunt walked outside, where they spotted
Trotman running from around the corner.
Trotman got in the passenger side of the car while telling Jones to
Drive, Tish. Drive. He was winded and told Jones not toreturn
home via the same route (which would take them past Ryans house). When Jones asked Trotman what was going on,
he told her, I tried to get that nigger.
It was time to eat. Jones
stopped the car and asked Trotman what he tried to do and he said it was time
to eatshe thought he meant he tried to rob somebody. Trotman told Jones that he poked Ryan with a
knife he had taken from her kitchen and that, since he told her what happened,
he was going to have to kill her and her children. Jones fully believed he was capable of doing
that. The police came to Jones house
twice that night to investigate Trotmans role in the murder and arrested
Trotman that same night.
Trotman
claims that the foregoing evidence is both legally | {
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ace.define("ace/mode/mips_assembler_highlight_rules",["require","exports","module","ace/lib/oop","ace/mode/text_highlight_rules"], function(require, exports, module) {
"use strict";
var oop = require("../lib/oop");
var TextHighlightRules = require("./text_highlight_rules").TextHighlightRules;
var MIPSAssemblerHighlightRules = function() {
this.$rules = { start:
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comment: 'ok actually this are instructions, but one also could call them funtions…' },
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{ token:A 50-year-old woman has been arrested for abusing Air India staff on a flight from Mumbai to London after she was denied alcohol on the plane.
The business class passenger, who is believed to be Irish, demanded to speak to the pilot after cabin crew denied her another bottle of wine due to her level of intoxication.
Video shows the blonde-haired barefoot woman, who claims to be a human rights lawyer, swearing at crew, threatening to 'p*** on them' in court, and calling a female staff member an 'Indian f***ing money-grabbing b*****d'.
Abuse: Video footage shows the woman, who claims to be an international human rights lawyer, swearing at an Air India staff member on a flight from Mumbai to London Heathrow
The shocking incident took place on an Air India flight | {
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out publicly at town hall meetings and forums, discouraging youngsters from following a path of violence.
When Port Huron exploded with gang activity in the mid-1990s - climaxing with a 1995 gang-fight murder - Mr. Ackerman was at the forefront. Working with the Port Huron Police Department, he helped turn back the climb in gang-related crimes today they are virtually nonexistent.
"He helped me realize how stupid it was," said Ms. Kilbourne, whose family's house was torched by gangs in 1997. "He helped me to see that it wasn't worth it."
Ms. Kilbourne said she does not believe the charges against him. "He gave advice and kids listened."
In 1994, police gave Mr. Ackerman a medal for his work with youth. "He played a fairly significant role," in curbing gang violence, saidpolice Chief William Corbett, who met Mr. Ackerman in 1990. "Because of who he was and his appearance, some of the gang members related to him and trusted him."
In 1995, Mr. Ackerman opened Clear Choices with his third wife, Nancee Armstrong, a teacher at Yale's Phoenix Alternative School. The nonprofit youth center, which included a pool table, video games, band nights and dances, offered children an alternative to hanging out on the streets.
Running for council
Running on his popularity as a youth advocate and gang fighter, Mr. Ackerman ran in November 1995 for City Council and won the seventh and final seat. But a recount showed a tie, and he lost a lottery to A. Herb Robbins. Thanks to a council tradition of appointing the next-highest vote-getter to City | {
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projected to be “substantially af‐
fected” by the acquisition were eligible for mitigation
measures imposed by the Board as a condition to its approval,
up to and including grade separation between the roadway
and rail line. The Board approved CN’s acquisition in 2008,
but determined that U.S. 14 would neither be substantially af‐
fected nor warrant a grade separation. The Village unsuccess‐
fully petitioned the Board to reopen its decision in 2011 and
2014. It failed for a third time in 2017, and now appeals the
Board’s most recent denial. Because the Village does not pre‐
sent new evidence or substantially changed circumstances
that mandate a different result, we deny the petition for re‐
view.
I. Background
A. Factual Background
CN is one of Canada’s two major railroads, extending
from Halifax, Nova Scotia on the Atlantic coast to Vancouver
and Prince Rupert, British Columbia on the Pacific. Through
its Grand Trunk Corporation subsidiary, the company also
controls numerous rail carriers in the United States. Its Amer‐
ican railway system extends north/south from Chicago to the
Gulf Coast, and east/west from Pennsylvania to Minnesota.
No. 17‐3586 3
Accel World Set 2
The year is 2046. Haruyuki Arita is a young boy who finds himself on the lowest social rungs of his school. Ashamed of his miserable life, Haruyuki can only cope by indulging in virtual games. But that all changes when Kuroyukihime, the most popular girl in school, introduces him to a mysterious program called Brain Burst and a virtual reality called the ACCEL WORLD.
You May Also Like
The year is 2046. Haruyuki Arita is a young boy who finds himself on the lowest social rungs of his school. Ashamed of his miserable life, Haruyuki can only cope by indulging in virtual games. But that all changes when Kuroyukihime, the most popular girl in school, introduces him to a mysterious program called Brain Burst and a virtual | {
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of Susan Toledano, an accomplice in the Wamsleys=
murders. Toledano testified that she,
Chelsea, and Appellant murdered Rick and Suzanna during the early morning hours
of December 11, 2003. In her testimony,
she related how the plans to harm the Wamsleys developed. Sometime during October 2003, Toledano,
Chelsea, and Appellant began their initial discussions of how they could injure
the Rick and Suzanna. Their ideas
included tampering with the brakes in Rick=s car
and putting balloons filled with Drano into the gas tanks of their cars. At some point during the development of their
plans, Hilario Cardenas, a friend of Chelsea and Appellant, provided them with
a revolver. In the latter part of the
fall, Appellant contacted Ruth Brustrom, a friend of Chelsea=s
family, and asked her if he, Chelsea, and Toledano could practice shooting on
her property in Burleson.[10] Eachof the three took turns shooting the gun
into a pond on Brustrom=s property. Soon after, they came up with another plan to
harm the Wamsleys. In November 2003,
Toledano and Appellant attempted to kill the Wamsleys by shooting the gas tank
of the Jeep they were riding in, in hopes that the car would blow up. Eventually, their plan to harm the Wamsleys
was effectuated when they shot and stabbed the Wamsleys during the early
morning hours on December 11. Toledano
testified that immediately after the murders Chelsea used Toledano=s cell
phone to call her friend Jeremy.
Toledano=s entire
testimony was corroborated by several other witnesses who testified at
trial. Brustrom, a longtime friend of
Chelsea=s
family, testified that during the fall of 2003 Appellant had called her asking
if he and Toledano could visit her property in Burleson because | {
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underlying capacities.
This taxonomy also informs government reactions to protest movements. Smart responses target attention as a resource. The Chinese government responded to 2015 protesters in Hong Kong by not engaging with them at all, denying them camera-phone videos that would go viral and attract the world's attention. Instead, they pulled their police back and waited for the movement to die from lack of attention.
If this all sounds dry and academic, it's not. Twitter and Tear Gas is infused with a richness of detail stemming from her personal participation in the 2013 Gezi Park protests in Turkey, as well as personal on-the-ground interviews with protesters throughout the Middle East—particularly Egypt and her native Turkey—Zapatistas in Mexico, WTO protesters in Seattle, Occupy participants worldwide, and others. Tufekci writes with aGOP governor contender faces challenging road ahead
Share this story
State Rep. Dennis Richardson, R-Central Point, speaks to a crowd of supporters at a Murphy Plywood plant in Eugene, Ore., on Wednesday, July 24, 2013. Richardson announced Wednesday that he's running for governor of Oregon. (AP Photo/Jonathan J. Cooper)
SALEM, Ore. (AP) — A Republican state representative is getting an early start in his bid to be Oregon's next governor. But if history is a guide, then Dennis Richardson has a challenging road ahead.
No one younger than 27 has lived in Oregon under a Republican governor, and it's been more than a decade since a GOP candidate was elected to statewide office. Even in 2010, the best year in memory for Republicans, the tea-party fueled conservative wave crashed short of Oregon.
"People | {
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Citation Nr: 1617299
Decision Date: 04/29/16 Archive Date: 05/04/16
DOCKET NO. 13-20 244 ) DATE
)
)
On appeal from the
Department of Veterans Affairs Regional Office in North Little Rock, Arkansas
THE ISSUE
Entitlement to service connection for a back disorder.
REPRESENTATION
Appellant represented by: Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States
WITNESSES AT HEARING ON APPEAL
Appellant and spouse
ATTORNEY FOR THE BOARD
Brian J. Milmoe, Counsel
INTRODUCTION
The appellant is a Veteran who served on active duty from May 1953 to May 1955.
This matter comes before the Board of Veterans' Appeals (Board) on appeal from a rating decision entered in August 2010 by the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Regional Office (RO) in North Little Rock, Arkansas.
By its decision of February 2015, the Board denied entitlement to service connection forsuch as the United States, they are regulated at the level by a single agency. In other jurisdictions they are regulated at the level, or at both state and national levels by various bodies, as is the case in Australia. The role of therapeutic goods regulation is designed mainly to protect the health, regulation is aimed at ensuring the safety, quality, and efficacy of the therapeutic goods which are covered under the scope of the regulation. In most jurisdictions, therapeutic goods must be registered before they are allowed to be marketed, there is usually some degree of restriction of the availability of certain therapeutic goods depending on their risk to consumers. Therapeutic goods in Australia are regulated by the Therapeutic Goods Administration, there are 5 main categories, Normal | {
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THE FACT THEY
WEREN'T WEARING MASKS, WHAT
NECESSARILY THE FACT THEY
WEREN'T WEARING MASKS, WHAT
ENSUED
NECESSARILY THE FACT THEY
WEREN'T WEARING MASKS, WHAT
ENSUED RIGHT
NECESSARILY THE FACT THEY
WEREN'T WEARING MASKS, WHAT
ENSUED RIGHT AFTER.
WEREN'T WEARING MASKS, WHAT
ENSUED RIGHT AFTER.
WEREN'T WEARING MASKS, WHAT
ENSUED RIGHT AFTER.
>>>
WEREN'T WEARING MASKS, WHAT
ENSUED RIGHT AFTER.
>>> BUSINESS
WEREN'T WEARING MASKS, WHAT
ENSUED RIGHT AFTER.
>>> BUSINESS REFUSED
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>>> BUSINESS REFUSED ALSO
WEREN'T WEARING MASKS, WHAT
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>>> BUSINESS REFUSED ALSO TO
ENSUED RIGHT AFTER.
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>>> BUSINESS REFUSED ALSO TO
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>>> BUSINESS REFUSED ALSO TO
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>>> BUSINESS REFUSED ALSO TO
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SERVE THEM AND ASKED
ENSUED RIGHT AFTER.
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SERVE THEM AND ASKED THEM
ENSUED RIGHT AFTER.
>>> BUSINESS REFUSED ALSO TO
SERVE THEM AND ASKED THEM TO
>>> BUSINESS REFUSED ALSO TO
SERVEREFUSED TO LEAVE AND
>> Reporter: ALLEGEDLY THE
FAMILY REFUSED TO LEAVE AND
>> Reporter: ALLEGEDLY THE
FAMILY REFUSED TO LEAVE AND
THAT
>> Reporter: ALLEGEDLY THE
FAMILY REFUSED TO LEAVE AND
THAT IS
>> Reporter: ALLEGEDLY THE
FAMILY REFUSED TO LEAVE AND
THAT IS WHEN
>> Reporter: ALLEGEDLY THE
FAMILY REFUSED TO LEAVE AND
THAT IS WHEN THINGS
>> Reporter: ALLEGEDLY THE
FAMILY REFUSED TO LEAVE AND
THAT IS WHEN THINGS TURNED
>> Reporter: ALLEGEDLY THE
FAMILY REFUSED TO LEAVE AND
THAT IS WHEN THINGS TURNED UGLY.
FAMILY REFUSED TO LEAVE AND
THAT IS WHEN THINGS TURNED UGLY.
FAMILY REFUSED TO LEAVE AND
THAT IS WHEN THINGS TURNED UGLY.
MANAGER
FAMILY REFUSED TO LEAVE AND
THAT IS WHEN THINGS TURNED UGLY.
MANAGER WALMART
FAMILY REFUSED TO LEAVE AND
THAT IS WHEN THINGS TURNED UGLY.
MANAGER WALMART CALLED
FAMILY REFUSED TO LEAVE AND
THAT IS WHEN THINGS TURNED UGLY.
MANAGER WALMART CALLED THE
THAT IS WHEN THINGS TURNED UGLY.
MANAGER WALMART CALLED THE
THAT IS | {
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over all the kingdoms except Sine and Saloum under Governor Louis Faidherbe. Senegalese resistance to the French expansion and curtailing of their lucrative slave trade was led in part by Lat-Dior, damel of Cayor, and Maad a Sinig Kumba Ndoffene Famak Joof, the king of Sine, resulting in the Battle of Logandème.
On 4 April 1959 Senegal and the French Sudan merged to form the Mali Federation, which became fully independent on 20 June 1960, as a result of the independence and the transfer of power agreement signed with France on 4 April 1960. Due to internal political difficulties, the Federation broke up on 20 August, when Senegal and French Sudan (renamed the Republic of Mali) each proclaimed independence.
Léopold Sédar Senghor was proclaimed Senegal’s first president in September 1960.serving dish.
Today is the birthday (1931) of Roger Penrose, mathematician, philosopher, and artist. I am a big fan. Some of you who read this blog regularly may wonder why I admire so many mathematicians; maybe this post will solve that puzzle.
Penrose was born in Colchester on the east coast of England, and is the brother of mathematician Oliver Penrose and of chess Grandmaster Jonathan Penrose. Penrose attended University College School and University College, London, where he graduated with a first class degree in mathematics. While an undergraduate he was already doing original research which he continued at Cambridge, taking his Ph.D. in 1958.
As a student in 1954, Penrose was attending a conference in Amsterdam when by chance he came across an exhibition of M.C. Escher’s work. Soon he | {
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on one occasion. He
also called her a “dingbat” and a “dumb blonde” after she had an
accident while driving a company car. J.A. 242 (internal quotation
marks omitted). Moser complained to O’Shea about Wilkes’ behavior,
specifically mentioning his popping her on the bottom with the
bottle and a number of non-sexual comments he made to her. She
lodged similar complaints about Wilkes to Jones.
Moser also had a few unpleasant interactions with sales
representative Kelly Phipps, although she admits that she had no
“real problem[]” with him. J.A. 322. On one occasion, Phipps
asked her if she was gay. On another, Phipps told her that he felt
like she dressed like a man, and of acting
unprofessionally toward her. For example, Poe once asked Moser if
she was wearing a thong and if she had had sex with her then-
current boyfriend. He suggested that she find someone with whom
she could have casual sex. He said he himself would consider
having sex with her if he were not married. Poe talked about
another woman suffering from premenstrual syndrome and | {
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"FreeLaw"
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433 F.3d 672
Vicki B. LEE; Darrell E. Lee, Plaintiffs-Appellants,v.Stephen S. WALTERS, Brad Higbee, George Rankin, Richard Reid, and Laura A. Fine (in their individual and official capacities as members of the Oregon Racing Commission), and Joanne McAdam (in her individual capacity only), Defendants-Appellees.
No. 03-35102.
United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit.
Submitted March 9, 2005.*
Filed December 29, 2005.
Kathryn H. Clarke, Portland, OR, for the plaintiffs-appellants.
Hardy Myers, Attorney General for the State of Oregon, Mary H. Williams, Solicitor General for the State of Oregon, and Daniel J. Casey, Assistant Attorney General, Salem, OR, for the defendants-appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Oregon, Janice M. Stewart, Magistrate Judge, Presiding. D.C. No. CV-95-00274-JMS.
Before: HUG, REINHARDT, and BYBEE, Circuit Judges.
REINHARDT, Circuit Judge:
1
After a series of disputes involving the licensingand financing of The New Portland Meadows, Inc. (TNPM), a horse racing operation partially owned by Vicki and Darrell Lee, the Lees filed a section 1983 action in the district court against Stephen S. Walters, Brad Higbee, George Rankin, Richard Reid, Laura Fine and Joanne McAdam, all members of the Oregon Racing Commission (ORC). The Lees' complaint alleged, inter alia, that a provision in the Oregon statute pursuant to which they had been ordered excluded from the Portland Meadows track by the ORC violated due process because it was unconstitutionally vague. On summary judgment, the magistrate judge1 agreed that the provision was invalid and, on that basis, ruled that the entire statute, Oregon Revised Statutes section 462.080(1), was void for vagueness. However, at trial the Lees did not | {
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message.
Rhinehart swore out the misdemeanor charge before Magistrate A.O. Reagan, who issued a criminal summons for Smith on Nov. 5.
The warrant alleges that Smith on April 23 assaulted Rhinehart by “grabbing (him) with his hands, pulling him out of a chair and pushing him into a wall.”
The court papers don’t say why the two men were together that day. Reagan declined to discuss the reason he issued the warrant.
Rhinehart is charged with first-degree sex offense on a girl younger than 13 between January 2006 and March 2008 who was living in his home at the time.
He was arrested in August and released on $200,000 bond.
Part of Smith’s duties, according to court papers, is to perform lie-detector exams on suspects for law enforcement agencies across the state.
Shaffer said heflower garland around a devotional image or portrait. Garland paintings were usually collaborations between a still life and a figure painter.<ref>[http://www.hnanews.org/archive/2012/11/vl_merriam0912.html Ursula Härting, Review of Susan Merriam, Seventeenth-Century Flemish Garland Paintings. Still Life, Vision and the Devotional Image]</ref> Van Hoy made garland paintings with other painters, such as the Flemish émigré painter Jan Anton van der Baren, who painted the flowers while Van Hoy painted the devotional image. An example is the Garland of Flowers Surrounding the Holy Family'' in the Museum of Fine Arts (Budapest).
Some of his works can be seen at :
Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna : two scenes of battles
Augustinerkirche, Vienna : the chapel
Dominikanerkirche (Vienna) : the oil paintings in the pendants of the dome
Bezirksmuseum Stockerau (Austria) : the oil painting "Heiliger Stephan"
References
Further | {
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church in
Minneapolis from 1930-38 and field
representative for the college from
1938-51.
Edwin Omark, dean of the sem-inary,
received an engraved watch.
Prior to coming to Bethel he pas-tored
Champion St. Baptist church
in Bellingham, Wash. and Eleventh
Street Baptist church in Los An-geles.
He has been a professor of
practical theology since 1944 and
dean since 1948.
Jeweled cuff links were present-ed
to David Guston, librarian since
1957. He has pastored church-es
in Henning, Minn.; Bristol,
Conn.; Schenectady, N.Y.; and New
York City.
Eugene Johnson and C. Howard
Smith received birthstone rings.
Johnson, professor and chairman
of the art department and director
Purdue Draws
Political Crowd
An estimated 400 midwestern
college students gather on the Pur-due
university campus Thursday
through Saturday, Feb. 27-29, to
hear authorities discuss and debate
"Armament vs. Disarmament" at
the third annual Purdue Confer-ence
on International Affairs.
Students from about 38 Midwest
college and university campuses
will gather for the series of meet-ings.
While directed primarily to-ward
undergraduate students,a
large number of graduate students
also will attend. Foreign students
at midwestern colleges and univer-sities
have also been invited.
The conference is under sponsor-ship
of the Purdue student govern-ment
in co-operation with the
school of humanities, social sci-ences
and education and the divi-sion
of conferences and continua-tion
services of the university ex-tension
administration.
of campus planning, has been a fac,
ulty member since 1951. He was
pastor of Bethel Baptist church
in Pasadena before coming to
Bethel.
Smith, associate professor of
music, has been at Bethel since
1951. He has directed the college
choir and is presently director of
the male chorus.
Miss Lillian Ryberg, associate
professor of Spanish and acting
language department chairman,
and President Carl Lundquist re-ceived
pen desk sets. Miss Ryberg
began full-time at Bethel in 1948.
Dr. Lundquist has been president
since 1954. Prior to assuming this
position, he pastored Elim Baptist
church in Chicago from 1943-53
and was acting dean of Bethel col-lege
from 1953-54.
A candlelight | {
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To Horses" by Robert J. Randisi (Homicide Hosts Presents; by Robert J. Randisi (Homicide Hosts Presents; Henry Po
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This Far, No Further by John Wessel ( by John Wessel ( Harding
ST. MARTINS' PRESS/PWA BEST FIRST PRIVATE EYE NOVEL CONTEST
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The Private Eye Writers of America announced the 1998 Shamus Awards winners at the Shamus Awards ceremony during the Bouchercon in Philadelphia, October 1-4, 1998.
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Charm City byby Jan Grape (Vengeance Is Hers; Jenny Gordon and C.J. Gunn
"Nightcrawlers" by John Lutz (April 1997, EQMM; by John Lutz (April 1997, EQMM; Fred Carver
ST. MARTINS' PRESS/PWA BEST FIRST PRIVATE EYE NOVEL CONTEST
The Losers' Club by Lise S. Baker ( by Lise S. Baker ( Cal Brantley
1999 SHAMUS AWARD S
As presented at Eyecon'99 in July in St. Louis.
THE EYE (Lifetime Achievment Award)
Maxine O'Callaghan , the author of the , the author of the Delilah West series.
BEST P.I. NOVEL
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A Cold Day In Paradise by Steve Hamilton ( by Steve Hamilton ( Alex McKnight
Like A Hole In The Head by Jen Banbury
Dead Low Tide by Jamie Katz (Dan Kardon)
Zen And The Art Of Murder by Elizabeth Cosin ( by Elizabeth Cosin ( Zen Moses
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SIMON. By Clifton W. Collins, M.A.
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The children then ran to the building. They heard four
to five more shots.
LaDonna had seen Martin, Mapp, and Richardson in the parking
lot just before the incident. She saw Martin and Mapp head
toward her building. She saw a blue Isuzu Rodeo truck the three
often used.
Turnbull said as the man with the silver gun started
shooting, the man with the black gun shoved Shelton, searched his
pockets, and grabbed a chain from around his neck. The man with
the black gun pointed it at Turnbull and the baby. The two then
ran past her, taking off their masks.
When the black gun was later found, no bullets had been
fired. Only one mask was found.
Shelton died from multiple gunshot wounds. All the shots
came from Martin's gun.
At trial, Mapp testified in his own defense. He said he did
not plan to rob anyone. He cooperated with the police because he
believed if he implicated Martin, they would return his mother's
truck and let him go. He claimed the assistant State's Attorney
had not read him the entire summary and he did not read it
himself. He had the opportunity to read it. Mapp specifically
denied hearing any sentence that implicated him as an accomplice.
He admitted to hearing the attorney read every sentence that did
not implicate him.
Mapp testified that on the night of the shooting, | {
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ordered the
sentences to run concurrently. We affirm.
There
is no challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence. The record reflects that
the trailer house that appellant lived in with his wife, their children
(daughter age seven and son age six), and appellant=s wife=s
eleven-year-old daughter was destroyed by fire in the early morning hours of
March 3, 2004. Appellant=s
father-in-law, his mother-in-law, and three of his mother-in-law=s grandchildren (ages
eleven, six, and three) were also in the home. Everyone but appellant=s six-year-old son was able
to get out of the burning home. The son was later found burned beyond
recognition in his bedroom. The seven-year-old daughter was severely burned
and suffered critical injuries.
Authorities
noticed a strong smell of ether, starter fluid, or petroleum around the home.
An investigation revealed that the fire started on the back left burner of the
stove inthe kitchen. The heating element of the back left burner was missing,
and an aluminum sauce pan had melted down into the burner. The investigation
also concluded that the fire was accidental and was the result of cooking
methamphetamine.
Aerosol
cans with holes punched in the bottom were recovered in the living room area,
in the kitchen area, in the barrels used to burn trash behind the home, and
outside the home. Empty blister packs of Sudafed were also recovered. Lithium
batteries were found throughout the home including in the master bedroom as
well as in the trash barrels. Many of the batteries had been cut down the
center or Apeeled@ to remove the lithium
strip. Officers also recovered a propane tank altered with brass fittings that
had turned blue, pliers used to peel batteries, strips of aluminum foil, a | {
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all 'wasp' (influenced by OLF *wapsa; ≠ Occitan vèspa, Italian vespa, Spanish avispa)
L viscus > F gui 'mistletoe' (influenced by OLF *wīhsila 'morello' with analogous fruits, when they are not ripe; ≠ Occitan vesc, Italian vischio)
LL vulpiculu 'fox kit' (from L vulpes 'fox') > OF golpilz, Picard woupil 'fox' (influenced by OLF *wulf 'wolf'; ≠ Occitan volpìlh, Old Italian volpiglio, Spanish vulpeja 'vixen')
In contrast, the Italian, Portuguese and Spanish words of Germanic origin borrowed from French or directly from Germanic retain ~ , e.g. It, Sp. guerra 'war', alongside in French guerre). These examples show a clear consequence of bilingualism, that sometimes even changed the first syllable of the Latin words. One example of a Latin word influencing an Old Low Franconian loan isfeminine. There are descendants of Latin second- and third-declension adjectives ending in -er in the nominative singular:aspre "harsh" (< Latin asper, > modern French âpre)
{| class="wikitable"
!
! colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | Masculine
! colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | Feminine
! Neuter
|-
! || Singular || Plural || Singular || Plural || Singular
|-
! Nominative
| rowspan="2" | aspre| aspre
| rowspan="2" | aspre || rowspan="2" | aspres
| aspre|-
! Oblique
| aspres || —
|}
For Class II adjectives, the feminine singular is not marked by the ending -e:granz "big, great" (< Latin grandis, > modern French grand)
{| class="wikitable"
!
! colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | Masculine
! colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | Feminine
! Neuter
|-
! || Singular || Plural || Singular || Plural || Singular
|-
! Nominative
| granz || grant
| granz/grant || rowspan="2" | granz
| grant|-
! Oblique
| grant || granz || grant | {
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by Michael Andrew Stein
Fort Hood Three by Matt Baetz & Antonio Mora
Fragile by Peter Andrews
Free by Syd Blue
Freedom 90 by Kat Corbett
Freedom Soldier by Armelle Lajus
Freefall by Jacob Migicovsky
Fugitive Zero by Joe Lam
Fukushima, Arkansas by Nathan Patton
Fungal by Nick King
Gare Du Nord by Takeo Hori
Get Back by William (Max) Reynal & Max Reynal & Max Reynal
Ghosts Of Reykjavik by Shannon Wells
Ghosts Of The South by Courtney Miller & Chris Miller
Ginger Ale by Murat Buldanlioglu
Girl Disrupted by Monique
Girl On A Swing by Shanna L Reed
Go West by John Jarzemsky
Grace Note by Katherine Botts & Mischa Marcus
Grifters by Phillip Rogers
Grip by Craig Cambria (Aka Daniel Jay)
Harm’s Way by Ted Campbell
Harvest by Ash Calder
Have You Heard About Harvey? by Sam Wright
Haven by Hannah Mccarthy
Headlights On The Highway by Jason Habel
Heart OfDoble
The Andes Project by Jose R. Casado
The Announcer by Justin Wescoat Sanders
The Annulet by Jerold Wallace
The Architect by Adam Burch
The Asgardians by Andrew Hall
The Atropos Tours by Christine Carstairs
The B Symphony by Cindy S. Yantis
The Backslider’s Club by Mckenzie Hamilton
The Balladeer by Fred Calvert
The Beatitude Murders by Dominick Bagnato
The Bitterroot Chronicles by Debbie Castanha
The Black Patch by Ian Dasilva Hamill
The Blue Door Retreat by Scott Kirkpatrick & Erin Zukowski
The Book Of Yoth by Daniel Wolff
The Box by Brian Macevilly
The Boy With The Pink Triangle by Amy Reedy Asbjørnsen
The Broken Mile by Scott Byrnes
The Bush League Kid by Al Goodrum
The Cage Of La Llorona by Karen Mcdermott
The Casting Of Lots by Matthew Brown
The Catacombs by Stimson Snead
The Causeway by Stanley Wong & Patrick T. Dorsey
The Changer by J. Motos | {
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leg being shorter than the other. Enroute to jail defendant
requested an attorney and when defendant arrived at the jail she
was permitted to telephone her attorney. After contacting her
attorney the booking process was completed. She was videotaped
during sobriety testing and the video tape was shown at trial.
Defendant argues that her leg being shorter than the other is a
physical impairment and the field sobriety tests should have been
geared to her physical impairment. The video tape was shown to the
jury and presumably it reflects that she did not do well on the
sobriety tests. She further argues she should have had an attorney
at the time of making a video tape of the sobriety testing.
Pre-complaint refusal to allow defendant to consult with an
attorney before performing sobriety teststransgender men, a lesbian, the American Civil Liberties Union of North Carolina and Equality North Carolina want a judge to declare the state law, House Bill 2, unconstitutional and a violation of federal laws banning sex discrimination.
The suit was filed Monday in U.S. District Court for the Middle District of North Carolina.
The defendants are Gov. Pat McCrory, state Attorney General Roy Cooper III, the board of governors of the University of North Carolina and board Chairman W. Louis Bissette Jr. Two of the plaintiffs are university system employees, and one is a university student.
Stephen Glassman, Executive Director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Connecticut, released a statement on Malloy’s executive order:
“As a defender of equality, justice, and individual freedom, the ACLU of Connecticut supports Governor Malloy’s executive | {
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of the conditions of his community
supervision, including failing to meet with his probation officer. The State filed its motion to
adjudicate guilt and revoke community supervision based on the violations.
Appellant was arrested on January 19, 2009, following a traffic stop. When the patrol
officer stepped away from Appellant's vehicle to verify Appellant's identification, Appellant
jumped out of the car and started running. Once Appellant was apprehended, the officer placed
him under arrest. After Appellant was in custody, the officer searched the vehicle and located a
handgun. Subsequently, the State amended its motion to adjudicate guilt to include two
additional probation violations; evading arrest and possession of a firearm.
Counsel points out what is arguable that the handgun was discovered incident to an illegal
search of Appellant's vehicleaddenda, as "Gearold H. Jurgensmeier P.R." The contract nowhere indicates that the property involved was property of the Bentzinger estate.
The contract originally provided that the sale would be closed, and possession of the property delivered, "on or before the 31st day of March, 1987." Later addenda postponed closing and transfer until July 12, 1987 (addendum of May 18, 1987), and February 12, 1988 (addendum of December 8, 1987). Apparently, the transaction was closed on May 16, 1988.
The deed offered by Jurgensmeier's agent and accepted by the Purbaughs at closing was headed "PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE'S JOINT TENANCY DEED." It identified the grantor as "GEAROLD H. JURGENSMEIER, Personal Representative of the Estate of MARY ANN BENTZINGER[,] Deceased" and was signed "ESTATE OF Mary Ann Bentzinger DECEASED By Gearold H. Jurgensmeier [signature] | {
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Crummitt and wife Lisa of
Smithsburg, Melinda Hoy of
Frederick, Dale Crummitt and
wife Lynn of Elloree, South
Carolina, and Chuck Crummitt
and wife Karen of Jefferson;
and his stepfather, Harry
Hawkins of Charles Town;
Sharon's brother, Randy
Granger and wife Terry of New
Market; grandmother, Leitha
Granger of Frederick; as well
as numerous aunts, uncles,
nieces, nephews and cousins.
The couple will also be
fondly remembered by many
extended family members and
friends, including, Claude
Huntsman, Chris Henry, Amanda
Webb, Steven Neisser, and Dee
Michaels.
They were preceded in
death by Albie's second
mother, Diane E. Crummitt, in
2005.
The family will receive
friends at the Keeney and
Basford Funeral Home, 106 East
Church Street, Frederick, on
Sunday August 20 from 2 to 4
and 7 to 9 p.m. A memorial
service will be held in the
Etchison Memorial Chapel at
the funeral home on Monday,
August 21 at 1 p.m. The Rev.
Jennifer K. Smith of Mt.
Carmel United Methodist Church
will officiate.
Intermentwill be in Mt.
Olivet Cemetery, Frederick
Mr. Carlton Eugene "Gene"
Stevens, 72, of Brunswick,
passed away Wednesday, July
19, 2006 at the Kline Hospice
House, Mt. Airy. He was the
husband for 53 years to Betty
Jones Stevens.
Born in Knoxville, Md.,
on January 22, 1934, he was
the son of the late Raymond E.
and Lena Viola Ecker Stevens.
Retiring in the mid 1980s
after a long career as an
accountant for the National
Institute of Health, Gene went
on to work for Central Tractor
in Frederick and then for D.W.
Ogg Equipment Company.
A former member of the
Brunswick Eagles and the
Brunswick Moose Lodge 1582,
Gene was an avid NASCAR fan
with Jeff Gordon being his
favorite driver. He enjoyed
WWE wrestling, inner-tubing on
the Potomac River and spending
time in Ocean City, Md.
Besides his loving wife,
Gene is survived by his
children, Raymond Stevens of
Brunswick, David Stevens and
wife Carol of Frederick and
Brenda Blamer | {
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chose to disregard it. Cardona and the decedent had
been arguing sporadically over a period of a couple of hours, he suspected she had been with another man,
and she slapped and insulted Cardona and proceeded to leave. Cardona then picked up his gun and
followed the decedent outside, where he pointed the gun in her direction and pulled the trigger not only
once, but twice, which resulted in Araujo's death. These facts support giving an instruction on
manslaughter, which the trial court did in this case, because appellant's firing the gun was arguably reckless.
However, the record does not support a finding that Cardona could be guilty of only criminal negligence,
because the evidence does not suggest that Cardona was unaware that Araujo could possibly be injured
if he shot atto call different Mexican consulates until he was able to speak with someone and
inform them that Cardona was being held by his department. Cardona was placed in contact with the
Mexican consulate on the morning of his arrest. There was no way for Cardona to speak with his consulate
sooner. In this case, the purpose of the treaty was fulfilled since communication between Cardona and the
Mexican consulate was facilitated within hours of Cardona's arrest.
The State did, however, fail to inform Cardona without delay of his right to access the
Mexican consulate. A review of the record reveals that although Detective Flores attempted to contact
a Mexican consulate as soon as practicable, Cardona was not informed of his rights under the Vienna
Convention, either at the time of his Miranda warnings | {
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contains photographs, artwork, a compact disc, videocassette tapes, and cassette tapes. Artifacts includes such miscellaneous items as oversized photographs, plaques, personal items, and folk art.
The Benson Latin American Collection holds a number of Sagel's works, as well as a dvd copy of the film "The Unexpected Turn of Jim Sagel/La vuelta inesperada de Jim Sagel" by Pilar Rodriguez Aranda at call number DVD 4978 LAC-Z.
Personal and Biographical, 1947-2002
This series is comprised of materials pertaining to Sagel’s personal and family life, and to his death. It includes correspondence from his wife, Teresa Archuleta-Sagel, numerous newspaper and magazine articles about Sagel, and three Master’s theses and a film script concerning Sagel and his work. The materials relating to Sagel’s death consist of his autopsy, a police report from the Sevilletacuentos: Revision, Ricardo Aguilar
5
Garden of Stories/Jardín de cuentos: Contract, Red Crane Books
6
Garden of Stories/Jardín de cuentos: Book
7
Garden of Stories/Jardín de cuentos: Reviews and Publicity
8
Garden of Stories/Jardín de cuentos: Signed book review, New Mexico Magazine
Individual essay collections are listed alphabetically at the beginning of the subseries. Published essays follow; they are listed first by place of publication, and then chronologically. The places of publication are in the following order: Albuquerque Journal and Albuquerque Journal North, other newspapers, New Mexico Magazine, other magazines, the Albuquerque Museum, and book and movie reviews. Each article listed features a subheading describing the subjects of that article. Unpublished articles, listed alphabetically, and notes for which no draft could be found are at the end of the subseries.
Essay Collections
Buena Carga:
1
Draft A
2
Draft B
3
Correspondence, 9 April 1990
Dancing | {
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researching JPS
and eventually learned about the deaths of Lettie McGhee and Charles O=Keefe,
former JPS patients. Through their
research, which included discussions with family members of McGhee and O=Keefe,
they learned that Dr. Grotti had allegedly removed McGhee from a life support
system without consulting McGhee=s family
and that O=Keefe had died from a morphine
overdose while under Dr. Grotti=s care.
Beginning in the summer of 2001, Williams and
Shucker investigated numerous reports and allegations involving Dr. Grotti and
the circumstances surrounding the deaths of McGhee and O=Keefe as
part of their continuing investigation into JPS, including the following:
Texas Department of Health Report: Williams and Shucker obtained a Texas
Department of Health (ATDH@) report
that concluded in part that the ICU physician (Dr. Grotti) had disconnected
McGhee from a ventilator and discontinued life-sustaining drugs without first
speaking with McGhee=s spouse orwere conducting a Aserious
investigation@ of Dr. Grotti and her
involvement in the deaths of McGhee and O=Keefe. Williams conducted an on-camera interview
with a FWPD lieutenant confirming this fact.
Independent Prosecutor: In the summer of 2001, Williams and Shucker
learned that an independent prosecutor had been appointed to handle the
criminal prosecution against Dr. Grotti.
Both had conversations with the special prosecutor in which he confirmed
that there was a homicide investigation of Dr. Grotti.
JPS Investigation: During their investigation, Williams and
Shucker also learned that JPS, through a peer review committee, was
investigating Dr. Grotti for her involvement in the deaths of McGhee and O=Keefe. JPS ultimately suspended Dr. Grotti from the
hospital in June 2001, just before WFAA=s first
broadcast in which Dr. Grotti was mentioned.
Texas State Board of Medical Examiners=
Investigation: Williams
and Shucker learned that the Texas State | {
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