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lawyer's and clerk
Holloway was born in Manor Park, Essex ( now in the London Borough of Newham ), the younger child and only son of George Augustus Holloway ( 1860 – 1919 ), a lawyer's clerk, and Florence May née Bell ( 1862 – 1913 ), a housekeeper and dressmaker.
The press excitedly reported that the solicitor had flown to Simpson accompanied by a gynaecologist and an anaesthetist ( who was actually the lawyer's clerk ).
John Lamb ( father ), who was a lawyer's clerk, spent most of his professional life as the assistant and servant to a barrister by the name of Samuel Salt who lived in the Inner Temple in London.
Other candidate murders involve Charlotte Benfield, a sixteen-year-old shop assistant found dead of multiple head injuries, with two young men under suspicion ; Lesley Ferrier, a lawyer's clerk who was stabbed in the back ; and Janet White, a schoolteacher who was strangled.
The marquis, noticing his ability, had him educated, and got him a place as a lawyer's clerk.
His father had been posted to the Malayan town as a lawyer's clerk for a firm that serviced rubber plantations, but the Great Depression and rubber slump of the 1930s sent the family's fortunes crashing.
After the lawyer's clerk recopied the draft as a finished patent application, Bell's lawyer hand-delivered the finished application to the patent office just before noon on Monday, a few hours after Gray's caveat was delivered to the patent office by Gray's lawyer.
He started in life as a lawyer's clerk.
Obliged to find a job in order to support his family, he became a lawyer's clerk, and was later an employee of the Ordnance Survey and an assistant in the Library of Trinity College, Dublin.
The Abdul Gafoor Mosque, built in 1859 and named after a Tamil lawyer's clerk, features Arabian-and Renaissance-style architecture.
The highest ranks equivalent to Commander or Commissar were generally involved in legitimate business, gaming and a number in the position of Lutsze-yeh a managing or controlling lawyer's clerk.

lawyer's and first
The National Lawyers Guild ( NLG ) is an association of progressive attorneys and legal workers, founded as the first national lawyer's association with membership open to all races and religions.
In 1837 appeared the first series of Proverbial Philosophy, long series of didactic moralisings composed in a lawyer's chambers in Old Square, Lincoln's Inn, during part of the previous year.
The drudgery of a lawyer's office was uncongenial to the ardently poetical youth, and, encouraged by the encomiums pronounced by the Hungarian Academy upon his first play, Zsidó fiú ( The Jewish Boy ), he flitted, when barely twenty, to Pest in 1845 with an MS. romance in his pocket ; he was introduced by Petőfi to the literary notabilities of the Hungarian capital, and the same year his first notable romance Hétköznapok ( Working Days ), appeared, first in the columns of the Pesti Divatlap, and subsequently, in 1846, in book form.
" Torain's lawyer's defended his broadcasts on first amendment grounds.

lawyer's and .
nor was she moved by a letter from Wright pointing out that if he was not `` compelled to spend money on useless lawyer's bills, useless hotel bills, and useless doctor's bills '', he could more quickly provide Miriam with a suitable home either in Los Angeles or Paris, as she preferred.
`` Purely from the business man's standpoint and without regard to the lawyer's view '', commented a trade journal, `` the matter of patents in the automobile and accessory trade is developing some phases and results that challenge thought as to how far patents are to become weapons of warfare in business, instead of simple beneficient protection devices for encouraging inventive creation ''.
As the election to maintain an accused person's right to silence prevents any examination or cross-examination of that person's position, it follows that the decision of counsel as to what evidence will be called is a crucial tactic in any case in the adversarial system and hence it might be said that it is a lawyer's manipulation of the truth.
Unable to sustain the loss from lawyer's fees, Data General ended up being taken over by EMC Corporation.
These organizations require a lawyer to demonstrate special training, experience and knowledge to ensure that the lawyer's recognition as a certified specialist is meaningful and reliable.
... By keeping all of the little people in focus, Coppola shows the variety of a young lawyer's life, where every client is necessary and most of them need a lot more than a lawyer.
At the lawyer's office he meets a downtrodden individual, Block, a client who offers K. some insight from a client's perspective.
After several days, Rockefeller was found at his lawyer's estate, Taconic Farm in northwestern Massachusetts, and was served with the subpoena.
He proved to be an able Pope, with an unlimited capacity for work and a lawyer's eye for detail, and a wise statesman, the general object of whose policy was to free the Papacy from its dependence upon Spain.
* Herman Melville's classic short story Bartleby, the Scrivener is subtitled A Story of Wall Street and provides an excellent portrayal of a kind and wealthy lawyer's struggle to reason with that which is unreasonable as he is pushed beyond his comfort zone to " feel " something real for humanity.
Contested divorces mean that one of several issues are required to be heard by a judge at trial level — this is more expensive, and the parties will have to pay for a lawyer's time and preparation.
They were later re-worked into the Syntagma, a practical lawyer's edition, by Athanasios of Emesa during the years 572 – 77.
He has since taken a very critical stance towards Oracle in interviews, noting that " During the integration meetings between Sun and Oracle, where we were being grilled about the patent situation between Sun and Google, we could see the Oracle lawyer's eyes sparkle.
In general jurisdiction state courts, it is not uncommon for all pre-trial matters to be conducted outside the court, with attorneys negotiating scheduling matters, pre-trial examinations of witnesses taking place in lawyer's office through depositions, and a settlement conference conducted by a private mediator at the mediator's office.
Bonanno later claimed that he was kidnapped in front of his lawyer's apartment at 36 East 37th Street in New York City by Buffalo Family members, Peter Magaddino and Antonino Magaddino.
" And in The Case of the Moth-Eaten Mink ( 1952 ), a judge who has just witnessed one of the lawyer's unusual tactics says: " Mr. Mason ... from time to time you seem to find yourself in predicaments from which you extricate yourself by unusual methods which invariably turn out to be legally sound.
One day, Andy hears from another prisoner, Tommy Williams, whose former cellmate had bragged about killing a rich golfer and a lawyer's wife ( Andy latches onto the idea that the word " lawyer " could easily have been mixed up with " banker ," the professions being similarly viewed by the general public ), and framing the lawyer for the crime.
In a half-hour radio drama, Butter in a Lordly Dish ( 1948 ), Agatha Christie has her protagonist drug a lawyer's coffee ; after revealing her true identity, she hammers a nail into his head.
Conversely, the definition of " unauthorized practice of law " is variable, and is often conclusory and tautological, i. e., it is the doing of a lawyer's or counselor's work by a non-lawyer for money.
Although he started with a " gut feeling " that Richard was innocent of murdering his nephews, the Princes in the Tower, Fields claims to have investigated the facts as he would for a client he was representing, and he structured the book like a lawyer's brief, identifying the evidence and then drawing the logical implications from the facts.
Bernard Brandon Scott, a member of the Jesus Seminar, questions the authenticity of the parable's context, suggesting that " the parable originally circulated separately from the question about neighborliness " and that the " existence of the lawyer's question in and, in addition to the evidence of heavy Lukan editing " indicates the parable and its context were " very probably joined editorially by Luke.

clerk and made
So a quick count could be made at any time, even by an illiterate clerk, of the number of registered persons in four age-and-sex classes.
Back at the Factory-to-You with the other old maids, back there she was the youngest clerk and she was thirty-four, which made her young enough to resent the usual ideal working conditions, like the unventilated toilet with the door you had to hold shut while you sat down.
Cassie stayed on as file clerk until the end of the second season, when she disappeared for reasons never made clear.
The Metropolitan Borough of Southwark made a number of applications, but in 1955 the borough's town clerk was told not to pursue the matter any further.
" He served as the first town clerk, represented the town in the Massachusetts General Court, made the first map of Massachusetts, and wrote the first history of the colony.
John Reed was made presiding judge, Thomas Mosely, Jr. clerk, John Haskins assessor, and Isaac Gibson sheriff.
Some say the " u " in " Mount " was accidentally dropped by a town clerk filling out official papers ; some say the change was made deliberately to draw attention to the town ; some say it uses the French spelling of " mont " as a nod to what was then the region's large French-Canadian population.
He made a number of other minor journeys and his last years were spent as a clerk in the Inspector of Mines ' office at Coolgardie, where his great knowledge of the interior was always available for prospectors.
The damper had a reservoir for water that wet a cloth, and the clerk wiped the cloth over the tissues on which copies were to be made.
The copying clerk arranged the portion of the letter book to be used in the following sequence starting from the front: a sheet of oiled paper, then a sheet of letter book tissue, then a letter placed face up against the back of the tissue on which the copy was to be made, then another oiled paper, etc.
" These moves were somewhat irregular as Marsh remained, until 1937, officially a clerk at the Colonial Office, but many exceptions were made, possibly at a cost to Marsh's official advancement.
When an Act is published, the signature of the clerk is omitted, as is the Norman French formula, should the endorsement have been made in writing.
But in 1935, after West had made several hit movies, a filing clerk discovered West's marriage certificate and alerted the press.
He became a member of the ruling oligarchy of the guild, serving as its clerk ; it is mainly through his writings that history is familiar with the watermen's disputes of 1641 – 42, in which an attempt was made to democratize the leadership of the Company.
He was made clerk of the closet to the Princess Dowager, Augusta of Saxe-Gotha, in 1761.
He claimed that John Daunger, a parish clerk in Northampton, could attest that Jacquetta had made two other images, one for the king and one for the queen.
In 1837 he was made clerk of appeal and then registrar to the judicial committee of the Privy Council.
When a call of the house is ordered, Robert's Rules provides that the clerk should call the roll of members and then call the names of absentees, " in whose behalf explanations of absence can be made and excuses can be requested.
In 1737, Pendleton was made clerk of the vestry of St. Mary ’ s Parish in Caroline and with the small profits made there he procured a few law books.
In 1740, he was made clerk of the Caroline Court-Marshall.
His title was disputed, but Cardinal Wolsey decided in his favour, and also made him clerk of the Privy Council.
On the 20 January 1807 Soane was made clerk of works of Royal Hospital Chelsea, he held the post until his death thirty years later, it paid a salary of £ 200 per annum.
He started work as a junior clerk in the ledger department of a City firm, but was made redundant after pressing his fellow clerks to join a trade union.

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