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Gibbons and lawyer
* September 27 – William Gibbons, American lawyer and revolutionary ( b. 1726 )
* John Joseph Gibbons, an American lawyer and judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit
* Thomas Gibbons ( 1757 – 1852 ), a lawyer, mayor of Savannah, steamboat tycoon, father of William Gibbons ( 1794 – 1852 )
Gibbons was also a geologist and lawyer.
The lawsuit was settled at a meeting on 10 October 1979, in the offices of lawyer David Gibbons in Vancouver.
William Gibbons ( April 8, 1726 – September 27, 1800 ) was an American lawyer and revolutionary from Georgia.
Later, Gibbons poses as Stone's lawyer and makes a deal with him in prison.

Gibbons and Daniel
Other artists commissioned to decorate the rooms included Grinling Gibbons, Sir James Thornhill and Jacques Rousseau ; furnishings were designed by Daniel Marot.
Designers and artists whose work is on display in the galleries include Gian Lorenzo Bernini, Grinling Gibbons, Daniel Marot, Louis Laguerre, Antonio Verrio, Sir James Thornhill, William Kent, Robert Adam, Josiah Wedgwood, Matthew Boulton, Canova, Thomas Chippendale, Pugin, William Morris.
Lunt, Sandy Thackeray, Steven Peterson, Jim Palmer, Grant Orton, Daniel Bay Gibbons, Jeffrey Fishman, Hugo Diederich, Lynn Pace and Patricia Pignanelli.
Exiled Irish patriot Thomas Addis Emmet and Thomas J. Oakley argued for Ogden, while William Wirt and Daniel Webster argued for Gibbons.
Morris, Anne Tyler, Larry Brown, Horton Foote, Allan Gurganus, George Singleton, Clyde Edgerton, Daniel Wallace, Kaye Gibbons, Winston Groom, Lewis Nordan, Richard Ford, Ferrol Sams, Natasha Trethewey, Olympia Vernon, Jill McCorkle, Mik Everett, and Jesmyn Ward, who won the 2011 National Book Award for Fiction for her novel, Salvage the Bones.
Past winners include Dr. Bruce Alberts ; Dr. Craig Barrett ; the late Dr. Norman Borlaug ; Dr. Rita Colwell ; U. S. Senator Richard Lugar ( R-IN ); Dr. Yuri Ossipyan ; Dr. John " Jack " Gibbons ; Dr. King K. Holmes ; Dr. Zafra Lerman and Dr. Brian Tucker ; Dr. E. Daniel Hirleman ; and Ambassador Thomas R. Pickering.
The music score is by Bronislau Kaper, the cinematography by Arthur E. Arling, the art direction by Daniel B. Cathcart and Cedric Gibbons and costume design by Walter Plunkett and Helen Rose.

Gibbons and argued
Edmund Kerchever Chambers cast doubt on the attribution in 1923 ( Chambers, 4. 42 ), and over the course of the twentieth century a considerable number of scholars argued for attributing the play to Middleton ( Gibbons, ix ).
The critics who supported the Tourneur attribution argued that the tragedy is unlike Middleton's other early dramatic work, and that internal evidence, including some idiosyncrasies of spelling, points to Tourneur ( Gibbons, ix ).

Gibbons and Congress
Gibbons v. Ogden, 22 U. S. 1 ( 1824 ), was a landmark decision in which the Supreme Court of the United States held that the power to regulate interstate commerce was granted to Congress by the Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution.
The partnership collapsed three years later however, when Gibbons operated another steamboat on Ogden ’ s route between Elizabethtown, New Jersey and New York City, that had been licensed by the United States Congress under a 1793 law regulating the coasting trade.
Chief Justice John Marshall ruled in Gibbons v. Ogden that the power to regulate interstate commerce also included the power to regulate interstate navigation: " Commerce, undoubtedly is traffic, but it is something more — it is intercourse ... power to regulate navigation is as expressly granted, as if that term had been added to the word ' commerce ' ... he power of Congress does not stop at the jurisdictional lines of the several states.
As explained in United States v. Lopez,, " For nearly a century thereafter ( that is, after Gibbons ), the Court's Commerce Clause decisions dealt but rarely with the extent of Congress ' power, and almost entirely with the Commerce Clause as a limit on state legislation that discriminated against interstate commerce.
Since its decision in Gibbons, the Supreme Court has held that Congress may regulate only those activities within a state that arise out of or are connected with a commercial transaction and that, viewed in the aggregate, substantially affect interstate commerce.
Another example is the thirty-year government-granted monopoly that was granted to Robert Fulton by the State of New York in steamboat traffic, but was later ruled by the U. S. Supreme Court to be unconstitutional because of a conflicting inter-state grant to Thomas Gibbons by the federal Congress.
Dawn Gibbons did not move to Washington to live with her husband while he served in Congress, saying she preferred to raise their son in Nevada.
On February 15, 2007, the Journal reported that Gibbons was under federal investigation for allegedly accepting unreported gifts and / or payments from Trepp in exchange for official acts while he served in Congress ( 1997 – 2007 ).
* Investigations into the allegations that Gibbons secured defense contracts for his friend Warren Trepp in exchange for gifts and money during his time in Congress, 1997 – 2006.
In its April 2010 report, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington named Gibbons one of 11 " worst governors " in the United States because of various ethics issues throughout Gibbons term as governor and his time in Congress.
The U. S. Constitution, as interpreted in Gibbons v. Ogden ( 1824 ), gives Congress the sole authority to regulate navigable waters.
* Gibbons v. Ogden ( 1824 ), the first recognition by the U. S. Supreme Court that Congress ' power to regulate interstate commerce is plenary ( see Chief Justice Marshall's majority opinion )

Gibbons and had
Nevertheless, Portishead shared the scratchy, jazz-sample-based aesthetic of early Massive Attack ( who Barrow had briefly worked with during the recording of Blue Lines ), and the sullen, fragile vocals of Gibbons also brought them wide acclaim.
The other party, Thomas Gibbons, had obtained a federal permit under the Coastal Licensing Act to perform the same task.
Billy Gibbons, who previously formed the Moving Sidewalks in 1966, had suggested " ZZ King " as a potential name for the band after looking at posters of Z.
Gibbons traveled to Europe, Beard had gone to Jamaica, and Hill went to Mexico.
Billy Gibbons stated in an interview in August 2011 that the new album had been recorded, with initial recording taking place in Malibu, California, before moving to Houston, but was still unnamed and had yet to be mixed and mastered.
The LHA then distributed copies of many of the sermons, such as one by Cardinal Gibbons who, with the dedication fresh in mind, had written that " such a highway will be a most fitting and useful monument to the memory of Lincoln.
The master craftsmen he had patronised, however, such as Grinling Gibbons, refused to work for the lower rates paid by the Marlboroughs.
Aaron Ogden had tried to defy the monopoly, but ultimately purchased a license from the Livingston and Fulton assignees in 1815, and entered business with Thomas Gibbons from Georgia.
In the interim Gibbons also had taken on Cornelius Vanderbilt as his ferry captain, and later, his business manager.
Jim Gibbons, who was a devout Catholic and had a deep hatred of Haughey, failed to turn up and vote for this important legislation.
* Tommy Gibbons and his brother Mike Gibbons, members of the International Boxing Hall of Fame, had a summer home on Osakis Lake.
The famous sculptor of Brussels Peter van Dievoet had collaborated with Grinling Gibbons, but went back to Brussels after the revolution of 1688.
A suspicion immediately arose that Gibbons had died of the plague, which was rife in England that year.
In Gibbons, the Court struck down New York's attempt to grant a steamboat monopoly to Robert Fulton, which he had then ultimately franchised to Ogden.
Other champions of Wuorinen ’ s music include Peter Serkin, for whom Wuorinen composed three concerti including Time Regained ( based on music of Machaut, Matteo da Perugia, Guillaume Dufay, and Orlando Gibbons ) and Flying to Kahani, commissioned by Carnegie Hall ; the solo Scherzo and Adagio ; and the Second Piano Quintet with the Brentano Quartet, another ensemble with which Wuorinen has had a very fruitful relationship and for which he wrote his Fourth String Quartet.
Several Republican legislators who had initially voted against the bill, including Michael Gibbons of Kirkwood, switched sides to override Holden's veto.
Although Gibbons had endorsed Davis as his successor, Davis finished second in a four-way Democratic primary behind former Tampa mayor Sandy Freedman.
The race was initially thought to be close, especially since Sharpe had nearly defeated Gibbons in 1994 and held him to 52 percent in 1992.
A spokesman for Gibbons described the move by the governor back to the couple's Reno home, which they had owned since 1989, as a temporary situation and said there was no violation of the law.
As Gibbons was campaigning for governor in October 2006, it was brought to light that more than ten years earlier, his wife Dawn had employed Patricia Pastor Sandoval, a then-illegal immigrant from Peru, as a housekeeper and babysitter.

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