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Tuan Boston
Oct 10, 2006, 11:38 PM
Among the many tourist sights which people around the world often wish to visit in America the Disney Parks hold a rather special and prominent place. They are more than just an average vacation spot for a typical American family. They are a total experience which is both exciting and enjoyable. They are self-contained worlds of magic, mystery and fun.



These Disney Parks are places where fantasy and reality freely mix with each other and one can indulge oneself totally at whichever age level one wants to be.

One can become part of the past or journey into the future. Attractions in the park are based on the tales and legends which nurture the imagination of a child's world and take the adult back on a journey into his own past.



These parks are places where adults can once again become a child, and children can live in the dreams of their youth. The Disney characters made popular through animated films come alive and invite the visitors of the park to become part of their world. Children can take a picture with Snow White and shake hands with Mickey Mouse himself. Donald Duck, Goofy, and the Seven Dwarves walk about the streets and avenues of the park like living celebrities ever ready for a photo or a signature. The magical world of Disney creates an innocent homespun mythology which speaks directly to the child within each of us.



Although the first Disney park was opened several decades ago in a suburb of Los Angeles in Anaheim, California, a second park was later established on the East Coast of America in Orlando, Florida. It was not long before a Disneyland opened near Tokyo and later one was built in Paris. One wonders which other cities will become future satellite centers for the Disney characters and Sleeping Beauty's castle to weave their magic.



Since the advent of Disneyland, other theme parks have emerged throughout the country using Disney as their model for success. Over the years they also have established themselves and have grown and expanded offering wholesome entertainment for the family. In America alone Busch Gardens and Six Flags Over Texas are representative of this kind of holiday destination.



Obviously their popularity is based on the need to offer a valuable service to the public. They provide vacationing families with a wholesome atmosphere especially designed for children but which offers enough diversity to entertain adults as well.





Doctor sues girl, 11, over inline-skating collision

Says her negligence caused injuries in Chester Twp.



BY PEGGY WRIGHT

DAILY RECORD

Thursday, March 1, 2007



46 Comments

A bicycling doctor has sued his then-11-year-old inline-skating neighbor for pain and suffering after they collided on their Chester Township street in 2003.



Their trial is under way in Morristown this week.



Lauren Ellis was inline-skating down her street on a fall afternoon when she collided with an adult neighbor, a prominent fertility doctor, who was bicycling.



Dr. Alexander Dlugi, now 54, sued the child, claiming she was negligent and caused the collision by reacting unreasonably when he approached her from behind on Sugar Maple Row, shouted "watch out" and rang his bicycle bell.



This week, the seven-member jury in the civil trial pitting the endocrinologist against Ellis, now a 15-year-old freshman at West Morris-Mendham High School, heard testimony from the teenager and Dlugi, and opinions from an accident-reconstruction specialist.



The accident expert said on Wednesday Dlugi could have avoided the collision by simply riding around the skater.



Doctor's case



Dlugi was an owner of the Bedminster-based Center for Reproductive Endocrinology at the time of the accident, and remains a fertility specialist and part-owner of the center. He broke his collarbone when he tumbled from his bike. His attorney, Thomas Jardim, said the doctor's injury did not heal properly or quickly, so he underwent surgery in February 2004, and missed a significant amount of work and income.



The doctor has difficulty sleeping well, has lost mobility in his right shoulder and enjoyment of sports he used to excel at, including biking, swimming and tennis, Jardim said.



Ellis was bruised when the collision knocked her to the ground, but her parents, Jon and Janet Ellis, did not file a counter-suit.



"It may seem like an odd thing," Jardim said, of the lawsuit against the child. "But people are responsible for their actions." He said the law recognizes that minors over the age of 7 are presumed responsible for their actions, as adults are.



A defense witness



For Wednesday's testimony from John Desch, the president of an accident-reconstruction firm based in Riverdale, diagrams, photographs, an easel and ruler were used for an analysis of the encounter between the exercising neighbors on Oct. 19, 2003. Desch, who was called as a witness by Ellis' attorney, Joe Accardi, concluded that the girl did not do anything wrong, under the circumstances.



The girl was skating, generally on the right side of Sugar Maple Row, and Dlugi had passed her once on his first bicycle loop around the neighborhood. Ellis stopped skating and stepped to the curb when she noticed two approaching vehicles. She stepped back into the road -- with Dlugi a distance behind her on his bicycle -- and resumed skating. Then Dlugi decided to overtake and pass the girl on the road, Desch said.



Wrong move to left



Dlugi, who was traveling at no more than 8 mph, rang his bell and called out as he neared her. Hearing the noises, the girl turned around to see Dlugi waving at her and drawing near, and she tried to get out of his way but actually moved into his path and they collided, Desch explained.



"She's startled by the presence of the bicyclist. She takes evasive action to avoid an impending collision and moved further to the left," Desch said. "I don't find any fault with her actions at all."



He opined further that Dlugi should have fully braked, or maintained better control of his bicycle, and could have avoided the entanglement with the skater by riding around her in silence.



Jardim, the doctor's lawyer, sought to discredit Desch's opinions by noting he never investigated a collision between a bicyclist and a skater, and misidentified on his diagram the actual point of their crash. But Desch stuck fast to his opinion that the girl, ahead of the doctor on the same side of the road, had more rights than Dlugi did to her position on the street.



The trial before Superior Court Judge W. Hunt Dumont resumes today with testimony from medical doctors. Closing arguments are set for Monday.