Word: sues
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...president of the Undergraduate Council. --David Bonfili '96 Manisha Bharti '98 Phil Kaufman '98, Hahrie Han '97 Eugene Kim '96 Sandip Madhavareddy '98-'97 Joseph Sena '99 Catherine Rucker '99 Aarti Shah '97 Bert Huang '96 Aldonna Clottey '96 Adriane Smith '96 Sheila Swaroop '97-'96 John Turner '97 Sue S. Lee '96 Kevin Scott '97 Andwele Lewis '98 Nisha Hitchman...
Graham's first victim is his school friend Mick, who was planning to take young Sue the librarian to the "Dickie Boon Show." Mick did not know, however, that Sue was the object of Graham's affection. Soon after Mick, Graham decides to use the poison on his step-mother. When she doesn't go quickly enough, Graham decides to try another poison that he'd read about in the comic books, thallium. Excited about his new discovery, Graham starts to use thallium on other members of his family, until he is caught by the police and sent...
...Then Sue Foggo came in to pitch, and she didn't do too much better at first. A walk to Kreuder let in one more run, and a bases-clearing double by junior Katina Lee ended the scoring at six runs...
...effectively decided that Congress cannot force lawsuits against the states. "The decision will have some impact on negotiations over Indian gambling, but the implications could go well beyond the specific gambling issue," says TIME law correspondent Adam Cohen. The case involved a federal law that allowed Indian tribes to sue if states do not negotiate gambling permits for reservations in good faith. TIME's Cohen says the decision fits within broader agendas of Justice Sandra Day O'Connor and Chief Justice William Rehnquist, who have voted in several cases to expand states' rights. Justice John Paul Stevens, who opposed them...
...repeal the bill; the Florida Supreme Court is expected to rule soon. Although last year Governor Lawton Chiles vetoed the legislature's repeal of the legislation, the lawmakers are expected to override that veto next month. Many have been swayed by lobbyists' arguments that if the state can sue the tobacco industry no one is safe, and the liquor industry and manufacturers of high-fat foods had better start worrying. "There is, after all, such a thing as equal protection," notes Donahue, "even for the tobacco industry." But Chiles, vehemently anti-tobacco, has proclaimed his determination to make hash...