Walter Dellinger and Paul Smith performed very well for plaintiffs' amici, as can be expected for lawyers of their caliber. |
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The name amicus curiae is generally acknowledged as something of a misnomer, in that very few amici intend primarily to help the court. |
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The insurers and their amici argue that the rule of construction which directs the court to construe ambiguities in favour of the insured should not apply in the instant case. |
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I wish to thank Ron Atkey and Gordon Cameron, amici curiae, who performed their roles with skill and balance. |
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With respect to the record already made, amici are at a disadvantage because of their inability to obtain and examine the full transcript of the trial to date. |
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The statement was accompanied by a petition from these two nongovernmental organizations in which they requested permission to participate in the advisory proceedings as amici curiae. |
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In the Day litigation, for example, some amici argued that constitutionalizing a property right to in situ groundwater would sound the death knell for sensible regulation. |
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Within the court were his officials, misteriales, his friends, amici, and the familiares regis, the king's informal inner circle of confidants and trusted servants. |
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Easily manageable Amici binoculars with 5-lens object lenses with fluoride achromatic lens system. |
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The camera lucida is generally taken to be an early 19th-century invention, with the credit shared between the Scotsman Wollaston and the Italian Amici. |
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He had maintained an interest in science and in Europe met the Italian astronomer Giovanni Amici, who was working on achromatism in microscopes. |
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If you're in a party and want a sociable buzz, the long Con Amici table is perfect. |
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The Association Amici Thomae Mori bought to the cup in 1970, for £1000, and the agent, a Jew from Switzerland, added a paten to it to make a chalice of it. |
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Amici curiae may also present oral argument on behalf of one party if that party agrees. |
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