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In 18th century France, pigeons à la crapaudine ("toad-like squab") was a popular "dish of skill" for both rich and poor, in which the squab was arranged so that it looked like a frog, with the breast forming the frog's "face". Religious dietary laws once prohibited meat on fast days, but allowed frog's meat, as it was a water dweller.
Ironic, isn't it Smithers. This anonymous clan of slack-jawed troglodytes has cost me the election, and yet if I were to have them killed, I would be the one to go to jail. That's democracy for you! ” — Montgomery Burns ("Two Cars in Every Garage and Three Eyes on Every Fish
You Are Going to Prison is a non-fiction book by Jim Hogshire. It is a practical guide for those who are facing their first experience with incarceration. In 2006, it was loosely adapted into the film Let's Go to Prison.
It was September 1, 2016, the day before Brock Turner’s release, and Dauber had planned a protest for the next morning in front of the Santa Clara County jail. We were sitting in her office at the Stanford Law School, where Dauber was simultaneously talking to me and her two teaching assistants, fielding media calls and proudly showing off a ...
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Worth Rises, a national criminal justice organization, has long fought to lower the cost of calls from behind bars, and is pushing for legislation to make phone calls free for detainees everywhere ...
A Buckcherry song blares from a portable stereo midday as a group huddles around their go-to bench in Chapin Memorial Park on the opposite side of the adjacent library.
The Squab Farm was a comedic play about the film industry staged on Broadway in 1918. It was written by Fanny Hatton and Frederic Hatton , and staged at the Bijou Theatre on Broadway . It starred several former film directors as well as actress Alma Tell [ 1 ] [ 2 ] and a 16-year-old Tallulah Bankhead [ 3 ] in her first stage role.