Sentences with phrase «golden rule in this case»

Not exact matches

He is brave and kind, he tries to obey the Ten Commandments, or in any case the last six, and he gives full intellectual assent to the Golden Rule.
The golden rule, in case you've forgotten, goes like this: «Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.»
The Volusia case is still pending appeal, but a judge in Duval County (which contains Jacksonville) ruled today that Proctor did not need to surrender The Golden Holocaust for cases in Duval.
In some cases, auscultation by a board certified cardiologist is indicated to rule out the presence of a murmur (for example breeds with a pre-disposition for Subaortlc Stenosis include Golden Retrievers, Rottweilers, German Shepherds, Newfoundlands and Boxers).
Golden Rule: Bring carry - on luggage and load it with travel essentials — a swim suit, flip flops, sunscreen, underwear, one a la carte dinner - appropriate outfit, and any important medications you may need — in case your luggage is lost or delayed.
But a very real danger exists that this ruling might inform other actions by the judiciary in the Phillipines, and that has direct implications for «Golden Rice», a species of rice modified to include beta carotene, which could help supply vitamin A to the 190 million children and 19 million pregnant women in 122 countries who suffer vitamin A deficiency (VAD), a type of malnutrition that kills 1 — 2 million people a year and causes 500,000 cases of irreversible blindness.
The Golden Rules Case puts CO2 emissions on a long - term trajectory consistent with stabilising the atmospheric concentration of greenhouse - gas emissions at around 650 parts per million, a trajectory consistent with a probable temperature rise of more than 3.5 degrees Celsius (°C) in the long term, well above the widely accepted 2 °C target.
The litigation process for VMLO has become exclusively focused on building a case rather than taking care of Opponent; to steer the Judge in just following the facts and state the law — this is the golden rule in courts.
A number of recent cases involving testamentary capacity have raised questions on the golden rule... In Sharp v Adam [2006] EWCA Civ 449 the rule was observed, but the trial judge held, largely on the basis of the evidence of experts who had not seen the deceased, that the will was invalid, and the Court of Appeal upheld his decision.
Perhaps a stronger sanction, or any sanction at all, against those solicitors w ho fail to follow the golden rule in the most obvious cases, might result in fewer cases getting to court.
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