Summer Fragrance Giveaway – Closed
GIVEAWAY CLOSED. Winners announced on my blog: www.katiepuckriksmells.com Here are the seven sunshiney fragrances in my Summer Fragrance Giveaway: L’Artisan Parfumeur Nuit de Tubéreuse Estée Lauder Bronze Goddess Christian Dior Homme Sport Fresh Sugar Lychee Fresh Sugar Lychee rollerball Guerlain Homme Ulrich Lang Anvers 2 More information on the scents can be found on my blog: www.katiepuckriksmells.com RULES How to enter: To enter, you must be a subscriber to my YouTube channel. Enter by commenting under this Summer Fragrance Giveaway video only — not on the front page. Post a comment below the video with the name of the fragrance you want to win. You can enter up to SEVEN times — one for each scent, or any combination you like for up to seven. IMPORTANT: only one fragrance per comment. Entries marked as spam count. Entry deadline: GIVEAWAY CLOSED Giveaway closes midnight EST August 5, 2010. Winners will be chosen by a random drawing, and announced on my blog, KatiePuckrikSmells.com, on August 7, 2010. Only one prize per winner. Notes for the winners: Winners, please private message me on my YouTube channel with your mailing address. If a winner does not claim their prize within two weeks of announcement, the perfume will go to a lucky stand-by winner. Reasonable care will be taken in the packaging and mailing of your prize, but if the contents are lost, damaged, or held up by Customs, I sincerely apologize in advance that I cannot replace it. Customs policies vary …
Donoghue -v- Stevenson: The Snail & the Ginger Beer
This is a review of the case by reference to Matthew’s Chapman’s excellent book published in 2010. Here is the written review: BOOK REVIEW THE SNAIL AND THE GINGER BEER The Singular Case of Donoghue v Stevenson By Matthew Chapman ISBN: 978-0-85490-04-97 Wildy, Simmonds & Hill Publishing www.wildy.com YES, NO SNAIL… AND AREN’T YOU GLAD IT’S NOT YOUR NEIGHBOUR YOU DRINK WITH! An appreciation by Phillip Taylor MBE and Elizabeth Taylor of Richmond Green Chambers This book is a most welcome piece of legal history for all students, lawyers and laymen interested in how we have arrived at the modern law of negligence. It is a “must” for all who have ever wondered what really happened to the snail and the jurisprudence of the judiciary of the time! Many will recall that on an August evening in 1928 May Donoghue, a shop assistant, entered a café in Paisley. The circumstances of her visit made famous legal history. A ginger beer was ordered for Mrs Donoghue who famously complained that, to her surprise and shock, a decomposed snail had tumbled from the bottle into her glass. Mrs Donoghue sued for the nervous shock she claimed to have suffered as a result. The question whether she had a case in law against the manufacturer of the ginger beer was argued as far as the House of Lords. It is hard to overstate the importance of Donoghue v Stevenson because it represents, perhaps, the greatest contribution made by English and Scottish lawyers to the development of the common law even …
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