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Law Magazine from uk

Sharia Law - reading from The Week


There's a great magazine I get called "The Week", and in the back of a recent edition there was a piece about the sudden rise of ...

The laws of gravity - Top Gear Magazine - BBC


Sir Isaac Clarkson explains the law of gravity as a penny and a Ford Scorpio are dropped from the top of a 150 feet crane! Great clip taken from ...

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Oct 28, 2011
Law Magazines From HR Magazine: Leaked Beecroft document could spell 'draconian change' for employment law: hr ...


Oct 28, 2011
Law Magazines From HR Magazine: Employment law ramifications of Olympus CEO dismissal: hr ...


We are not cartoon villains, landowners tell RSPB

Mr McAdam wrote: “The ‘villain’ you portray looks uncannily like a stereotype of a landowner or manager, in green boots and a jacket, carrying a dead pheasant and living in a big house with a long drive.

“Your organisation repeatedly states that you wish to work positively with landowners, land managers and farmers and yet you still revert to such tactics in the pursuit of funding.

“Many landowners do a huge amount of good work for the conservation of birds of prey, indeed the majority of birds of prey live on habitat managed and maintained by landowners, and yet to seek to vilify them in this way.”

He warns it will do nothing to assist efforts by landowners to work with the charity and would instead “create more conflict and reinforce the attitudes of those that are critical of the RSPB and your motives”.

The latest row follows a dispute this summer when gamekeepers complained the RSPB upset their children by demonising ‘keepers in school presentations by giving a pupils a deerstalker hat, a toy gun and a jar with “poison” written on it, in a talk about wildlife crime.

The Countryman magazine – British countryside news – nature and ...

I spent my ‘extra’ hour on Sunday by walking alongside the Leeds-Liverpool canal. This particular four-mile stretch of towpath has been surfaced most of the way and is well used by walkers and cyclists. The views across the countryside are tremendous here and there’s something about being beside water that always makes a stroll a bit special. Walkers and cyclists alike gave a cheery ‘Morning’ and in fact the only annoyance along the journey came unusually from a boatman who insisted that we all listened to his Best of the 1990s CD as he chugged along the canal – the music seemed totally incongruous as it echoed down the canal cutting. One trouble I find with a surfaced path is that as I daydream and gaze at the countryside I don’t hear cyclists approaching from behind. They really need to warn silly old fools like me before I suddenly veer off course and send them into the murky waters. Which brings me to the point of this little ramble… the use of paths and tracks by different factions. A TV programme on Sunday evening highlighted, in a somewhat laboured fashion in my opinion, the problems faced when walkers, horse riders and cyclists come face to face with off-road vehicle users. Isn’t it time the government, through law making, took hold of this problem instead of leaving local councils or worse, national parks, to sort it out? These organisations are always going to be caught between a rock and a hard place. The creation of clearly marked special areas for off-roaders to carry out their activities where they are least likely to cause a nuisance, damage or injury to other countryside users is one logical way to clear up some of the mess. For off-roaders to be able to claim a legal right of way through some ancient law is ludicrous – laws have to be adapted to cater for changes in society and technology....

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Casino Forum calls for UK law reforms, 17th October 2011 ...

Restrictions on the location of casinos in the UK should be lifted, it has been claimed.

A group representing the UK casino industry will give evidence to MPs on Tuesday.

The National Casino Industry Forum is to call for the present law, which designates which areas in the UK casinos are permitted to be run, to be reformed. This, chairman Malcolm Moss said, will drive further economic growth, create jobs and generate new tax revenues.

"If the Chancellor wants to boost growth, we are ready to invest in sensible modest reforms of casinos,” he told The Independent. “These businesses can be part of the growth agenda, domestically and through the tourist market."

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Law Magazine from uk News

French government defends magazine firebombed over Muhammad cartoon

The Guardian - Dec 31, 1969

French government defends magazine firebombed over Muhammad cartoon Muhammad cartoon sparks attack on French magazine Charlie Hebdo. Source: guardian.co.uk Link to this video The French government has rushed to the defence of the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo after an arson attack on its headquarters as it published
Has Justin Bieber fathered a baby?

ParentDish UK - Dec 31, 1969

By parentdish.co.uk, Nov 2, 2011 The US magazine Star is claiming that teen idol Justin Bieber has fathered a baby. The cover story shows a photograph of Mariah Yeater and her three-month-old son, Tristyn Anthony Markhouse Yeater, with the headline
Global Law Firm Greenberg Traurig Receives North America M&A Law Firm of the ...

MarketWatch (press release) - Dec 31, 1969

In the US, the firm has more offices than any other among the Top 10 on The National Law Journal's 2011 NLJ 250. In Mexico, the firm operates as Greenberg Traurig, SC, and in the UK, as Greenberg Traurig Maher LLP. Greenberg Traurig has a strategic
It's a crime to love Insane Clown Posse

The Guardian - Dec 31, 1969

It's a crime to love Insane Clown Posse In 2003, US rock magazine Blender had voted ICP "the worst band of all time". All of which is fuel to the us-against-the-world siege mentality promoted in ICP's songs and interviews. And while their lyrics may lack something in intelligence,