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 A Connecticut state lawmaker was suspended from his leadership post Friday amid reports he could face a criminal charge in the death of a barefoot woman who died of hypothermia after fleeing from his car this past winter.Democratic Rep. James A. O Rourke III, 45, one of six deputy speakers, will keep his House seat but is suspended indefinitely from his leadership role because the legal case could interfere with his duties, said House Speaker Christopher Donovan.O Rourke gave a written statement to police in January about the case in which he said the woman appeared to be too intoxicated to drive. At the time, police said it was not a criminal investigation. But on Friday,  stanley cup The Hartford Courant quoted unidentified sources as saying that prosecutors were considering a criminal misdemeanor charge.Prosecutors declined comment to The Associated Press.O Rourke s attorney, Jake Donovan, said he did not believe an arrest wa stanley usa rrant had yet been issued, was unsure whether one would be issued, and that a decision would probably not come for another week.         I m secure in the knowledge that no crime has been committed,  he said.Carol Jean Sinisgalli, 41, of Rocky Hill, was found dead Jan. 22 by a cross-country skier, 10 to 12 feet from railroad tracks. Police said she had walked barefoot about half a mile before collapsing in th stanley cup e snow and freezing to death.O Rourke told police he was leaving a tavern in Cromwell late on Jan. 21 when Sinisgalli, who had argued with another patron, ran  Akdc Watch Jimmy Fallon, Neil Young, and Jack White Press a Record On Stage
 For a brief period in the American saga, t stanley cup he astronaut was the man of the moment. No profession commanded as much awe and admiration. Widely regarded as the personification of all that was best in the country, the first astronauts were blanketed with the adulation usually accorded star quarterbacks, war heroes, and charismatic movie stars. Yet this was never part of NASA   agenda.     In fact, there were concerted early efforts to avoid such celebrity. However, the men chosen to be the first Americans in space were raised in a culture that revered the stoic aviator, and many saw themselves as the latest members of that select spiritual brotherhood. Celebrated in headlines, fiction, and film, the leather-jacketed pilot personified a new aristocracy during the first half of the twentieth century: a young adventurer whose courage and daring bridged continents and cultures. Prior to World War I, fledgling aviators and their early airplanes were frequently depicted on the covers of mass-circulation magazines and on advertising posters throughout Europe. Shortly after hostilities commenced in 1914, nationalistic publications enthralled stanley thermobecher  the public with stirring tales about the most decorated pilots and their bravery in the skies, feats far removed from the mechanized horror in the trenches below. During the interwar years, adventure magazines and cinema screens often stanley becher  featured romantic depictions of the solitary fighter pilot, silk scarf flowing in the wind, engaging his fellow