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A traditional type of COMMON-LAW PLEADING that is used in ...
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I would like to add my voice of displeasure regarding the change of scheduling for the once-cherished New Haven jazz concerts on the Green. As pointed out in a recent letter, the concerts had achieved great things for the growing reputation of New Haven as a cultural destination. My music-loving friends around the state were envious of the excellent musicians and inviting atmosphere we enjoyed. I believe Brian Alden, who started this tradition as a way for the business community to give back to the people, would be dismayed to find how his intention had been turned on its head. Why is it necessary to ruin what was a tremendous asset for the sake of one more dinner out? I frequent the downtown eateries often enough, and resent being prodded in this way.
The change in schedule put an end ...
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Speedy trial, felony driving under the influence, R.C. 2945.71; failure to appear; multiple counts; multiple charges; triple count provision; common litigation history; consolidate misdemeanor and felony charges.
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You have the right to do things that "don't count." ? common refrain ( hear from serious hikers and backpackers is. "Oh, that doesn't count." You only spent one night in the woods and you had cell phone service the whole time? "Oh, that doesn't count." You could faintly hear the highway from your campsite and could see the distant light of a house? "Oh, that doesn't count." The trail you hiked was marked "easy" and you passed third-graders on your way up? "Oh, that doesn't count." To those serious hikers and backpackers. I say: I don't much care if it didn't "count." I care that I got into the woods, stretched my bones under some aspen trees, spent 24 hours away from my laptop and fell asleep in the dirt at 10,500 feet. That counts.
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CLEVELAND, Jan. 31, 2011 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Khalil Saddler's mother, Dawn McAlpine, still cannot understand why the doctors at Cleveland Clinic in 2003 did not ask her permission before performing brain surgery on her newborn with an unapproved medical device; especially since the manufacturer of the device specifically warned against using it on infants. In fact, according to her Complaint filed against the Clinic and two of its doctors, she did not know until after her son's death five years later, that but for the botched surgeries, Khalil would be alive and healthy today.
Her wrongful death Complaint against Defendant Cleveland Clinic and its employee-surgeons, Peter Rasmussen, M.D. and Thomas Masaryk, M.D., alleges a series of negligent acts, including the use of a surgical...
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A recent story in the Seattle Times has prompted some spirited disc-ussion about the use of mimics in the birding world.
Birding for most folks is reasonably benign. Backyard birders enjoy and count those birds that come to an easy food source. Many backyard birders learn common bird songs and calls, increasing their enjoyment as birders. Most, however, do not use a mimic.