Word: rowed
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...second year in a row, Harvard University Health Services (UHS) is going into dining halls and other campus locations to offer free influenza vaccines to students, faculty and staff...
...loss to the Hawks was Harvard's fourth in a row, its longest losing streak since 1989. The recent skid will make for nervous times when the NCAA Tournament seedings are announced on November 5th. An Ivy League title is all but out of reach...
...abuses can be found, it is very easy to point an accusatory finger at the public official charged with ensuring the integrity of the Texas justice system. However, from the perspective of those who are sentenced to die, it is truly unfortunate that any attack on the Texas death row has been characterized as an attack on Bush and lost amid the general election-year hubbub. Fixing a justice system that takes innocent lives should not be a political issue, as the Republican governor of Illinois, George Ryan, showed when he declared a moratorium on executions in his state. Rather...
...Project, show that such nightmare scenarios as a sleeping lawyer are anything but uncommon in the Texas legal system. The reports documented a system in which incompetent lawyers are regularly appointed to defend people on trial for their lives: one quarter of all those now on the Texas death row were represented by attorneys that have been disciplined, disbarred or suspended by the State Bar. Texas has no specific competency standards for capital-case attorneys, and appointed lawyers are compensated at rates less than one-fifth what an attorney in private practice would charge, meaning that every minute spent litigating...
...Beathard was the gunman and secured a death sentence, but at a second, the same prosecutor argued that Hathorn was the gunman and secured another capital conviction. One of those theories has to be factually incorrect--yet Beathard was executed in 1995, and Hathorn remains on the Texas death row. Other cases abound where Texas prosecutors relied on discredited scientific "experts," concealed important evidence from the defense or paid jailhouse informants with reduced sentences in exchange for what turned out to be false testimony...