But Sue Burke, 58, owner of an industrial-filter wholesaler in Kansas City, is against the streetcar project.
But Sue's skeleton, excavated in 1990 from South Dakota's Black Hills, is more than 90 percent original.
"Apple and the Beatles are, once again, left with no choice but to sue EMI, " Aspinall added.
But editor Sue Butler says it will be expanded to ''entrenched prejudice against women'' in the next edition.
But Dr Sue Mayer, director of independent policy research group Genewatch UK, said fruit growers should not be swayed by "bullying biotechnology companies".
Neal Sher, an attorney for the victims, said the government has "ignored these claims and under the law we really have been left with no choice" but to sue.
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They must persuade angry bond-holders and utility companies not to sue but rather to accept their lot.
The firm licensed Pooh to Disney in 1983, but began to sue for what it said were missing royalties in 1991.
These are firms that buy up patents, not to turn them into products but solely to sue other firms that may have infringed them.
It seems to be set up to help defend its investors against so-called patent trolls, enterprising patent lawyers and small companies that sue but have few or no products for sale.
During his campaign, Bush had said he believed U.S. citizens whose assets were seized should have the right to sue but two senior U.S. officials said Bush was set to issue a six-month waiver next week.
The Supreme Court agreed to hear the case, not to determine whether federal law gave Edwards the right to sue but the more more fundamental question of whether the Constitution bars uninjured plaintiffs from suing at all.
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But ask Aidan and Sue Nelson what makes the region special and they will answer without hesitation: the food and the people who produce it.
The IPS board gave its blessing last month for the district to sue, but White said he had a change of heart.
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Then there is the free-rider problem: the cost of litigation falls on those that sue, but the proceeds from putbacks flow to all investors.
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If someone tries to blackmail a software company by threatening to expose a bug then let them sue, but saying that full details can only be given to trusted insiders is surely not acceptable.
Some sellers received payments considered well below market value, but they lacked resources to sue.
But Repsol has threatened to sue to try to keep Big Oil from tapping into what it considers illegally appropriated assets.
"What will probably happen is the company is going to sue her, but she's homeless and doesn't have any money, " says Tritt.
Unsecured creditors received permission to go ahead with their plans to sue--but not before the judge sees a reorganization plan by May 15.
He matured and developed, listened and learned and, most of all, began to realise that his fate lay not as the jovial, grinning quiz show captain, the subject of wistful glances from dear old Sue Barker, but rather in the wood-panelled office at the top of the Ibrox marble staircase.
But in California your heirs can sue for up to 70 years after you die.
But limiting Americans' right to sue or to collect millions in damages will not be easy.
Watson Pharmaceuticals and Teva Pharmaceuticals sue as often, but don't go after drugs with such high profiles.
Policyholders could still sue the company, but they would hurt other members of the mutually owned firm.
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Sometimes postings about their behavior cross the line into defamation, but nannies have the resources to sue a website, said Ms. Panagiotopoulos, who is now a doctoral candidate in anthropology at CUNY Graduate Center, where her research focuses on the power relationship between domestic workers and their employers.
But the trust's chief executive Sue Holden told BBC News that there was no quick fix.
In other words, if a given board member can never vote to fire, or sue, an investment manager but only to hire managers, what good is he to the organization?
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