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Medical Malpractice Cases: Trends And Insights ... An incidence of medical malpractice can be a difficult matter to prove. Recent statistics indicate that almost two-thirds of all cases result in victory for the defendant...

Waterproof Laptop Cases ... At times, the users who extensively commute might get caught in snow or rain and in such situations the waterproof laptop cases significantly protects the device from nay kind of damage... Even at office or home, it is possible that water or any other form of liquid might come in contact with the device and can impair your laptop, thus, to avert damage it is very essential to secure the laptop from water by using the waterproof laptop cases... The waterproof laptop cases are normally made from plastic that being highly water resistant is an ideal material for the waterproof cases...

Samsung Armani Is A Winner In All Cases ... Samsung Armani SGH-p520 is a perfect step by Samsung Electronics in the race of designer phones. Its a perfect blend of engineering and design to outsmart all other designer phones in the market...

Business Card Cases As Gifts ... Personalized Deluxe Card Holder - This right here is a surprisingly affordable gift for everyone in your office. This is a gorgeous leather gift for men and ladies alike...

Cases Involving Defective Products ... Each year, millions of people are being harmed by defective products. A defective product is a product that causes injury or harm to a person...

A tragic or comic plot is not a straight line: it is a parabola following the shapes of the mouths on the conventional masks. Comedy has a U-shaped plot, with the action sinking into deep and often potentially tragic complications, and then suddenly turning upward into a happy ending. Tragedy has an inverted U, with the action rising in crisis to a peripety and then plunging downward to a catastrophe through a series of recognitions, usually of the inevitable consequences of previous acts. But in both cases what is recognized is seldom anything new; it is something which has been there all along, and which, by its reappearance or manifestation, brings the end into line with the beginning.
—Northrop Frye (1912–1991)

The Sceptic being a lover of his kind, desires to cure by speech, as best he can, the self-conceit and rashness of the Dogmatists. So, just as the physicians who cure bodity ailments have remedies which differ in strength, and apply the severe ones to those whose ailments are severe and the milder to those mildly affected—so too the Sceptic propounds arguments which differ in strength, and employs those which are weighty and capable by their stringency of disposing of the Dogmatists’ ailment, self-conceit, in cases where the mischief is due to a severe attack of rashness, which he employs the milder arguments in the case of those whose ailment is superficial and easy to cure, and whom it is possible to restore to health by milder methods of persuasion.
—Sextus Empiricus (2nd or 3rd cent., A.D.)

We noticed several other sandy tracts in our voyage; and the course of the Merrimack can be traced from the nearest mountain by its yellow sand-banks, though the river itself is for the most part invisible. Lawsuits, as we hear, have in some cases grown out of these causes. Railroads have been made through certain irritable districts, breaking their sod, and so have set the sand to blowing, till it has converted fertile farms into deserts, and the company has had to pay the damages.
—Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)