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turn and lawyers
Fidler warned that according to California law, the Board of Prison Terms could later change the sentence to a lesser term ; at the time, Olson's lawyers asserted that due to discrepancies between 1970s laws and current California laws, their client would most likely serve only five years, which could turn into two years for good behavior.
Bull was vocal about this turn of events, calling the Liberal government of the day " second-rate lawyers and jumped-up real-estate salesmen ".
The Brookhaven community attracted numerous doctors and lawyers, and at the turn of the century, was a popular locale for Sunday outings amongst residents of the river tier communities.
This in turn makes lawyers more efficient by allowing them to concentrate solely on the substantive legal issues of the case, while paralegals have become the " case managers.
From 1938, lawyers acting for Anderson in Germany contested the distribution of the Tsar's estate to his recognized relations, and they in turn contested her identity.
An early industrial city that earned great wealth for many of its citizens by the turn of the 20th century, Watertown also developed an educated professional class of doctors and lawyers.
The guidelines were considered tough because they require that to claim cooperation, companies must ( 1 ) turn over materials from internal investigations, ( 2 ) waive attorney-client privilege, and ( 3 ) not provide targeted executive with company-paid lawyers.
young Portland lawyers at the turn of the century ... rose to civic prominence, ... became actively involved in the Oregon Historical Society, and ... were instrumental in fabricating an " Oregon Story " that was heavily laden with mythology, hero worship and pioneer idolization.
The merchants, in turn, would rely on lawyers and the court to settle the debate.
On 14 August, lawyers representing Megrahi announced that he had applied to the High Court in Edinburgh two days previously to withdraw his second appeal, and that his condition had " taken a significant turn for the worse ".
As a Navy man, Sanders was prevented from boxing professionally, so he continued to box in the amateur ranks while lawyers and commissions analyzed his applications to turn pro.
His first two lawyers were disbarred for attempting to turn the trial into an indictment of the governor.

turn and judges
Historically, common law courts relied little on legal scholarship ; thus, at the turn of the twentieth century, it was very rare to see an academic writer quoted in a legal decision ( except perhaps for the academic writings of prominent judges such as Coke and Blackstone ).
Scots law reports in the nineteenth century show frequent judicial usage of ' Scotch ' as referring to people ; by the turn of that century, and since, practically no examples ( other than by English judges ) can be discovered.
Other characters the Judge meets are U. S. Army Captain Byers ( William Shatner ), who is assigned to the American party hearing the cases, and Irene Wallner ( Judy Garland ), who is afraid to bring testimony that may turn the case against the judges in favor of the prosecution.
* Prosecutors using multidefendant trials to get defendants to turn on one another in the courtroom, as judges may be reluctant to allow separate trials in multi-defendant cases.
We can do this because people are good judges of what they are acquainted with, but this in turn implies that the young ( in age or in character ), being inexperienced, are not suitable for study of this type of political subject.
Harold Vilmes, one of the judges for the pageant, is said to have died from lyme's disease from a deer tick bite ; in turn, leaving his mentally-disabled little brother, Hank, their hardware store.
The judges for each ring will examine each animal in turn and decide on awards.
The three members of the Constitutional Council, who can act by majority, are determined automatically by constitutional formula, with places going first to former Governors-General ( with priority to the most recently retired ), and excess places going ( on the same basis ) in turn to former state governors, lieutenant-governors ( or equivalent ), judges of the High Court or judges of the Federal Court.
In most competitions, it is considered incumbent on the judge to comment on each animal as it exits the arena in turn, explaining the basis for his or her decision ( the majority of judges are men ).
In both apnea and immersion races, turn and technique judges often disqualify competitors if their faces can be seen, as this indicates that they might be breathing above the surface.
Refusing to acquiesce in the sentence passed upon him, he withdrew with the other bishops excomunicated to Philippopolis, where he in turn helped to secure a sentence of excommunication and deposition against his judges, including Pope Julius and Hosius of Cordoba.
It took Ben seven words into his song, before three of the four judges selected him, pushed their button and had their chairs turn towards him.
"), and then poll the judges in turn (" Does the attack land ?").

turn and who
Old Commodore Forsythe, who had once lost a fifty-dollar bet on whether he could get both motors started and turn on the running lights without accidentally turning on something else first.
These proposals would go far toward creating the economic atmosphere favoring growth of the individual, who, in turn, would help us to cope with runaway technology.
Again the student of evolutionary biology will find a fascinating, if to our minds grotesque, anticipation of the theory of chance variations and the natural elimination of the unfit in Lucretius, who in turn seems to have borrowed the concept from the philosopher Empedocles.
Those who walk on it may encounter at any turn ministers of grace or damnation.
Until such work is done, there must remain the nagging suspicion that alienation may be little more than an expression of the malaise of the intellectual, who, rejected by and in turn rejecting the larger society, projects his own fear and despair onto the broader social screen.
Except for the wine waiter in a restaurant -- always an inscrutable plenipotentiary unto himself, the genii with the keys to unlock the gates of the wine world are one's dealer, and the foreign shipper or negociant who in turn supplies him.
This is important because, despite all the efforts of the French government, an appreciable segment of France's export trade in wines is still tainted with a misrepresentation approaching downright dishonesty, and there are many too many negociants who would rather turn a sou than amass a creditable reputation overseas.
The statement also points to a classic paradox: The more men turn toward God, who is not only in himself the paradigm of all unity but also the only ground on which human unity can ultimately be established, the more men splinter into groups and set themselves apart from one another.
The policemen who come to Alex's rescue turn out to be none other than Dim and former gang rival Billyboy.
Paneloux's death is in contrast to Tarrou's, who fights valiantly against death when his turn comes.
His labor theory of value influenced the thinking of Thomas Jefferson, who in turn shaped the way many nineteenth-century American homesteaders understood ownership of their farms.
He acquired much favor with the Emperor Hadrian, who adopted him as his son and successor on 25 February 138, after the death of his first adopted son Lucius Aelius, on the condition that Antoninus would in turn adopt Marcus Annius Verus, the son of his wife's brother, and Lucius, son of Aelius Verus, who afterwards became the emperors Marcus Aurelius and Lucius Verus.
" They in turn originate a second series, who create a second heaven.
However, according to Xenophon, Polydorus was murdered by his brother Polyphron, who was, in turn, murdered by his nephew Alexander — son of Jason, in 369 BC.
Anaxarchus is said to have studied under Diogenes of Smyrna, who in turn studied under Metrodorus of Chios, who used to declare that he knew nothing, not even the fact that he knew nothing.
Upon the death of the previous king, Tullus Hostilius, the Roman Senate appointed an interrex, who in turn called a session of the assembly of the people who elected the new king.
Selection by lottery was the standard means as it was regarded as the more democratic: elections would favour those who were rich, noble, eloquent and well-known, while allotment spread the work of administration throughout the whole citizen body, engaging them in the crucial democratic experience of, to use Aristotle's words, " ruling and being ruled in turn " ( Politics 1317b28 – 30 ).
Maria Comnena had borne Amalric two daughters: Isabella, who would eventually marry four husbands in turn and succeed as queen, was born in 1172 ; and a stillborn child some time later.
Their loss, however, was compensated by the tender solicitude and care of his paternal grandfather and grandmother, the latter of whom lived to experience in her turn the kindest personal attention from her grandson, who, when he had the means, gave her an asylum in his house at Rome.
The Lord Jesus Christ gave His Spirit to His Apostles ; they in turn laid their hands on those who should succeed them ; and these again on others ; and so the sacred gift has been handed down to our present bishops, who have appointed us as their assistants, and in some sense representatives.
Two years later, the Emperor Valens, who favored the Arian position, in his turn exiled Athanasius.

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