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Alison and Myrden
The case was brought by Warren Hitzig, along with seven medical marijuana users ( Alison Myrden, Stephen J Vandekemp, Marco Renda, Marylynne Chamney, Catherine Devries, Jari Dvorak and Debbie Stultz-Giffen ).
* website of Alison Myrden, one of Canada's most vocal Drug Policy Activists

Alison and first
* 1995 – 33-year-old British mother Alison Hargreaves became the first woman to conquer Everest without oxygen or the help of sherpas.
* August 14 – An avalanche buries Alison Hargreaves, the first woman to climb Mt.
" Pop art " as a moniker was then used in discussons by IG members in the Second Session of the IG in 1955, and the specific term " pop art " first appeared in published print in an article by IG members Alison and Peter Smithson in Arc, 1956.
Stern married his first wife, Alison ( née Berns ), on June 4, 1978 at Temple Ohabei Shalom in Brookline, Massachusetts.
Columbus is also the birthplace of baseball announcer Red Barber ; boxing's first three-time world heavyweight champion, Henry Armstrong ; rock singer Andrew Wood ; the parents of Grammy-award winning bluegrass musician Alison Krauss ; American Idol contestant Jasmine Murray ; and bluegrass musician Ruby Jane Smith.
Alison Elliot was also the first non-minister to be chosen since George Buchanan, four centuries before.
" Todd McCarthy of Variety called Farrell " first rate " and noted that he worked well as an ensemble actor " graciously allowing star Alison Barry to steal every scene she's in.
Her first teacher was Alison Dalrymple.
He was an early and ardent proponent and user of computers as a tool for art making, dating back to the mid 1960s, when Alison Knowles and he created the first computer generated literary texts.
Dr Bruce Russell's first wife, Alison ( Julieanne Newbould ), suffered a miscarriage and was soon afterwards killed by terrorists while on holiday in Asia.
This happens when Tom Chance goes to the same hotel on a blind date to meet a girl ( who is also called Alison ), that Alison Little has arranged to meet her cousin Tom ( for the first time since they were young children ).
However, Alison has fallen in love with Tom at first sight and she is keen for their friendship to develop into something more intimate.
Hadley is the father of five children: Thomas, Toni, and Mackenzie by his first wife, Leonie Lawson, and Zara ( born 21 December 2006 ) by Alison Evers, whom he married in July 2009 at Cliveden House, Berkshire.
In 1995, Alison retired from law enforcement and was given her first prescription for Medical Marijuana by a Canadian Physician.
Alison was one of the first twenty people in Canada to receive a Federal Licence to smoke, possess and grow medical marijuana for health reasons.
Her first notable starring television role was as Alison Parker on Melrose Place from 1992 – 1997.
Gzowski was divorced from his first wife, Jennie Lissaman, from Brandon, Manitoba, whom he met while residing in Moose Jaw and with whom he had five children ( Alison, Maria, Peter, John and Mick ).
She finished second at the U. S. Women's Open four times, the last coming in 1997 when she became the first golfer to score in the 60s for all four rounds, yet she still lost to Alison Nicholas.
The book was dedicated to the author's newborn grandson Robert Alison Baum, the first child of the author's second son Robert Stanton Baum.
Costello stayed at his day job as the first two singles, " Less Than Zero " and " Alison ", were pre-released without much success.
Mariner married his first wife Alison in 1976 ; they divorced in 1989.
Since Levin's appointment, all of his provosts have gone on to head other universities: Judith Rodin ( appointed by his predecessor ) as president of the University of Pennsylvania, becoming the first female president of an Ivy League university, Alison Richard as Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cambridge, Susan Hockfield as president of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Andrew D. Hamilton as vice-chancellor of the University of Oxford.
Justice Minister Alison Redford won the following leadership contest on October 2, 2011, and was sworn in as Premier on October 7, 2011, becoming Alberta's first female Premier.

Alison and approached
In the autumn of 1991 they were approached by Central TV to write the theme music for a comedy drama series starring Harry Enfield, Alison Steadman, Jim Broadbent and Warren Clarke called Gone to the Dogs.

Alison and Law
On Wednesdays, readers can pick up a free copy of the Homes & Property supplement, edited by Janice Morley, which includes London property listings as well as articles from lifestyle journalists including Barbara Chandler, Katie Law and Alison Cork.
Walt and Elspeth provide the answers and the keys, and the Russians depart, leaving behind a young sailor, Alexei Kolchin ( John Phillip Law ), to guard the Whittakers and, subsequently, their attractive 18-year-old neighbor, Alison Palmer ( Andrea Dromm ).
* Jones, Alison and Sufrin, Brenda ( 2007 ) EC Competition Law: Text, Cases and Materials, Oxford University Press, 3rd Ed.
Hosted by Stephen Fry — accompanied each week by a selection of guests including Jim Broadbent, Emma Thompson, Phyllida Law, Robert Bathurst, Julia Hills, Alison Steadman and long-time collaborator Hugh Laurie — the show took the form of a round table discussion and sketches which veered tangentially from the sublime to the ridiculous.
The gallery was also the agent for Bob Law, Bridget Riley and Alison Wilding.
The John and Alison Kearney Library services the University in two locations on campus, the Main Library and the Law Library.
Marshall Law was an Australian television series, which aired on the Seven Network in 2002, starring Lisa McCune and Alison Whyte as lawyers and sisters.
Set in Melbourne, Marshall Law tells the story of two sisters-Ros and Verity Marshall ( played by Lisa McCune, popular after her seven-year run on Blue Heelers ; and Alison Whyte, well known for her role on Frontline )-working at the Magistrate's Court.
Alison proposed using the Scottish Poor Law to alleviate poverty as a means of assuaging disease, but the Poor Law Commissioners supported the position of English reformer Edwin Chadwick that disease was caused by filth and miasmas.
In 2002, her next project was a " comeback " role in the television series Marshall Law with Alison Whyte and former Blue Heelers cast member William McInnes.

Alison and Professor
" Professor Alison Booth of the University of Virginia similarly characterized Sexual Personae as an " anti-feminist cosmogony.
* Dean: Professor Alison Yarrington
* ' Profile: Professor Sir David King ' by Alison Benjamin, The Guardian, 27 November 2007.
Then came JG Lockhart in 1821 ; Professor Wilson, 1822 and 1850, two portraits ; Sir Archibald Alison, 1839 ; Dr Chalmers, 1844 ; a little later De Quincey, and Sir David Brewster, 1864.
The Torrance family soon included: Thomas Spear Torrance who was born on 3 July 1947 and is now an economist and philosopher of science at Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh ; Iain Richard Torrance who was born on 13 January 1949 and is now the President of Princeton Theological Seminary in New Jersey and Professor of Patristics ; and Alison Meta Elizabeth Torrance who was born on 15 April 1951 and is now a medical doctor in general practice in Edinburgh.
York University Professor Alison Halsall said of this aspect of the episode, " Again, Parker and Stone blur the sacred and the profane, in this instance, to gut holidays of their traditional meanings.
Professor Nick Parsons, voiced by H. Jon Benjamin served as an expert for Alison Krempel.

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