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Washington-based &Pizza promoted a new menu item Monday called Marion Berry Knots, a dessert with marionberries. &Pizza on U Street in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday. A statue of the four-term mayor stands outside the Wilson Building downtown, and Southeast Washington has Marion Barry Avenue SE. D.C. Council member Marion Barry at the end of an unfinished streetcar line in the Anacostia neighborhood of Washington on Oct. 14, 2014. She “requested that the attorneys for the Estate of Marion Barry Jr. look into the matter and act accordingly,” the representative said.
Persons: Life ” Marion, Pizza, Marion Berry Knots, , Craig Hudson, Austin Lee, Mike Burns, that’s, ” Barry, Marion Barry, Barry, Evelyn Hockstein, Akosua Ali, Marion Barry’s, Ron Moten, ” Moten, Barry's, Cora Masters Barry, , Marion Barry Jr, Peyton Sherwood Organizations: Protesters, D.C, Life, NBC Washington, Washington , D.C, The Washington, Getty, Pizza, Marion, FBI, Washington, Ward, NAACP Locations: WASHINGTON, Washington, Washington ,, Skyland, Southeast Washington, Wilson, Anacostia, Maryland , Virginia , New Jersey, Pennsylvania
“Do you think I really want to be on a stand saying, like, ‘I don’t have a future,’” said Mesina DiGrazia-Roberts, 16, another of the plaintiffs in the Hawaii case, who lives on Oahu. “As a 16-year-old who just wants to live my life and hang out with my friends and eat good food, I don’t want to be doing that. The state filed two motions to dismiss the case, but this month a judge set a trial date for next year. A nonprofit legal organization called Our Children’s Trust is behind the Montana and Hawaii cases, as well as active litigation in three other states. But in June, a different judge ruled the case could once again proceed toward trial.
Persons: ’ ”, Mesina DiGrazia, Roberts, , Juliana v Organizations: state’s Department of Transportation Locations: Hawaii, Oahu, , Montana, United States
CNN —A Montana judge handed a significant victory on Monday to more than a dozen young plaintiffs in the nation’s first constitutional climate trial, as extreme weather becomes more deadly and scientists warn the climate crisis is eroding our environment and natural resources. While Seeley’s ruling won’t prevent mining or burning fossil fuels in the state, it will reverse a recently passed state law that prohibits state agencies from considering planet-warming pollution when permitting fossil fuel projects. “Their same legal theory has been thrown out of federal court and courts in more than a dozen states. The federal climate case alleges the federal government’s activities allowing further fossil fuel development, including permitting and leasing for oil and gas drilling, is violating young people’s constitutional rights to life, liberty and property. Olson recently told CNN she hopes the state case will boost the Juliana case.
Persons: Kathy Seeley, Montana’s, ” Seeley, , Julia Olson, Montana didn’t, general’s, Emily Flower, Austin Knudsen, ” Flower, , Pat Parenteau, Olson, Biden, Daniel Farber, Juliana, it’s, ” Olson, ” Michael Gerrard, Gerrard, ” Farber Organizations: CNN, Trust, Montana, CNN Experts, Montana Supreme, Environmental, Vermont Law School, University of California, United, Children’s Trust, Biden administration’s Department of Justice, Court, Sabin, Climate, Columbia University Law School Locations: Montana, ” Montana, Hawaii, University of California Berkeley, United States
CNN —A landmark youth climate trial is playing out in Montana, as more than a dozen young plaintiffs aged 5 to 22 said they are already being hurt by climate change-fueled wildfires, drought, reduced snowpack and impacts to wildlife. It is the first youth climate case to make it to trial in the United States, even as several others are working their way through the court system. Still, the ruling could set an important legal precedent for upcoming youth climate cases in various stages. The Montana plaintiffs first filed their case three years ago, while the Juliana case was first filed in 2015. “I know that climate change is a global issue, but Montana needs to take responsibility for our part of that,” plaintiff Rikki Held, 22, testified.
Persons: , Michael Russell, Sariel Sandoval, Kathy Seeley’s, Seeley, Juliana, general’s, Rikki Held Organizations: CNN, United Locations: Montana, United States, Helena , Montana, ” Montana, Bitterroot, Upper Pend d’Oreille, Diné
Here are four climate and environment lawsuits that are likely to make headlines in 2023. The oil companies in the nation's high court are hoping to upend a series of circuit court decisions saying the cases belong in state courts where they were filed. If the court takes the appeal and rules for the oil companies, then the cases would be moved to federal court, the preferred venue for the industry defendants. (Bellwether trials are chosen as test cases and are used to work through common legal and factual issues.) "I think it will be a huge year for this issue," Conroy said of 2023.
Prince Mohammed was not seen at the match but had been front and centre at the tournament opening on Sunday. It was also a sweet moment for host Qatar, facing intense criticism over human rights in the conservative Muslim country. "The fact that the World Cup is in Qatar and we're Arabs - it gives us a lot of energy and excitement." TOLERANCEBefore the match kicked off, the issue of tolerance arose at a news conference between Qatar's foreign minister and his American counterpart. The Gulf Arab state, which denies discrimination and points to labour reforms enacted, welcomes everyone, its Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani said.
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