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Some Related Sentences

Presumption and work
In the detective novel A Presumption of Death, taking place in the early days of World War II, the plot centers on Harriet Vane and Lord Peter Wimsey trying to solve the murder of a land girl who had come to work at a village in Hertfordshire.

Presumption and on
* A Presumption of Death, ( 2002 ) ( novel by Jill Paton Walsh, based loosely on The Wimsey Papers )
Jill Paton Walsh followed it in 2002 with another Wimsey / Vane novel, A Presumption of Death, set during World War II and based on some short wartime writings of Sayers known as " The Wimsey Papers ".
A Presumption of Death is a mystery novel by Jill Paton Walsh, based loosely on The Wimsey Papers by Dorothy L. Sayers.
" Presumption of innocence " serves to emphasize that the prosecution has the obligation to prove each element of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt ( or some other level of proof depending on the criminal justice system ) and that the accused bears no burden of proof.
Presumption of race based on countries or regions given in the ancestry question is used only when a respondent has answered the ancestry question but not the race question.
The interview has been the source of some minor controversy, centering on claims made in the interview's preface regarding the scope and nature of Flew's beliefs, and his subsequent contradictory statements endorsing atheism, the latter being a misnomer, for Flew clearly no longer supports the inference or verdict of atheism, but rather the evidential method or route by which one may secure such a verdict, i. e., the " Presumption of Atheism " is default, nullified only on the condition that the degree of proof is met.

Presumption and presumption
* examples of presumption without basic facts: Presumption of innocence

Presumption and is
The story " Talboys " and Jill Paton Walsh's recent continuations Thrones, Dominations and A Presumption of Death continue this into the early 1940s, while Paton Walsh's third continuation The Attenbury Emeralds is set in the postwar era.
* Rebuttable Presumption Procedure is Key to Easy Intermediate Sanctions Compliance
Restoring the Lost Constitution: The Presumption of Liberty is a 2003 book about the United States Constitution written by Randy Barnett, a professor of law at the Georgetown University Law Center.
1942 Talboys ( in Striding Folly Short stories published 1973 Action 1942 ) This story is oddly placed in the middle of the war, and Bunter is only mentioned as a servant: one who sleeps in the attic ( see A Presumption of Death ).
( or he might not be in the existence, Re Vandervall case ) Presumption is Constructive Trust
Bacillus coagulans has been added by the EFSA to their Qualified Presumption of Safety ( QPS ) list and has been approved for veterinary purposes as GRAS by the U. S. Food and Drug Administration's Center for Veterinary Medicine, as well as by the European Union and is listed by AAFCO for use as a direct fed microbial in livestock production.

Presumption and such
At the present state of scientific research, governmental food safety organizations such as the European Food Safety Authority deny QPS ( Qualified Presumption of Safety ) status to enzymes produced especially by these molds.

Presumption and .
It establishes the Presumption of innocence and forbids double jeopardy.
Jill Paton Walsh referenced " The Wimsey Papers " in writing A Presumption of Death, set at the beginning of the Second World War, in which Harriet takes a leading role.
Presumption and Burden of Proof in Richard Whately's Historic Doubts Relative to Napoleon Boneparte.
Mary Shelley herself attended a performance of Presumption, the first successful stage adaptation of her novel.
Brady opposed the Rebuttable Presumption Bill ( House Bill 122 ) that assumed an injured worker who refused to take a drug and alcohol test up to 36 hours following an accident was at fault and automatically lost his or her benefits.
1940 A Presumption of Death ( DLS with Jill Paton Walsh published 2002 ) Harriet with children moves from London to Talboys at Paggleham, Hertfordshire.
In 2002, she followed this up with another Lord Peter novel, A Presumption of Death.
In fact, the character of Fritz first appeared in an 1823 stage adaptation, Presumption: or the Fate of Frankenstein by Richard Brinsley Peake, being played by Richard Keeley.

competence and legal
Doctrine holds that the competence of the court is determined by the nature of the legal rule on which the plaintiff founds his claim.
:: Example: The Court indirectly recognized as much when it stated in McMann v. Richardson, supra, 397 U. S., at 770, 771, 90 S. Ct., at 1448, 1449, that a guilty plea cannot be attacked as based on inadequate legal advice unless counsel was nota reasonably competent attorney ” and the advice was not “ within the range of competence demanded of attorneys in criminal cases .” See also Cuyler v. Sullivan, supra, 446 U. S., at 344, 100 S. Ct., at 1716.
In legal terminology, a competence vested in ' the King ' thus very often means the government, as opposed to formal laws which require a ( sometimes qualified ) parliamentary majority.
After some preliminary legal skirmishing, Cardigan sought an indictment for criminal libel in 1863, but his action failed, although the bench made plain that it was only his competence, and not his courage, that was in doubt.
The legal issues surrounding paranoia include judgment of competence to stand trial, conditions for involuntary hospitalization, involuntary medication, and a focus upon awareness or not of unreality at the moment when the defendant " snapped ".
In common law systems, a superior court is a court of general competence which typically has unlimited jurisdiction with regard to civil and criminal legal cases.
The Roman legal concept of imperium meant that an " imperial " magistrate or promagistrate had absolute authority within the competence of his office ; a promagistrate with imperium appointed to govern a province, therefore, had absolute authority within his capacity as governor of that province ; indeed, the word provincia referred both to the governor's office or jurisdiction and to the territory he governed.
More than most specialties, they must consider whether the patient has the legal responsibility and competence to understand the facts and make decisions.
In 1994, the Law Society affirmed its role by adopting this Role Statement: " The Law Society of Upper Canada exists to govern the legal profession in the public interest by ensuring that the people of Ontario are served by lawyers who meet high standards of learning, competence and professional conduct, and upholding the independence, integrity and honour of the legal profession, for the purpose of advancing the cause of justice and the rule of law.
( Objectives: 1 ) Promote the highest quality legal education ; 2 ) Promote competence, ethical conduct and professionalism ; 3 ) Promote pro bono and public service by the legal profession.
Nervous about the will, the glasses, the suspicions of the police, and Matty's loyalty, Ned happens upon a lawyer who once sued him over a mishandled legal case who reveals that to make amends, he recommended Ned to Matty Walker, and admits to telling her about his lack of competence as a lawyer.
The standards of competence required for registration are techniques plus hands-on practice, anatomy and physiology, business, legal and ethical issues.
( 3 ) Acting pursuant to its jurisdiction in its competence under section b )- d ) of paragraph ( 2 ), the Constitutional Court will annul laws and other legal norms, judicial decisions that it finds to be unconstitutional, pursuant to its jurisdiction under section e ) of paragraph ( 2 ) annul laws or legal norms deemed to be in conflict with international treaties and will also rule on other issues set forth in super majority laws.
In civil law the phrase sui juris indicates legal competence, the capacity to manage one ’ s own affairs ( Black's Law Dictionary, Oxford English Dictionary ).
A user profile should focus on the following competencies: The users ' legal competence in their " native " field of law ; the users ' legal competence in the foreign field of law ; the users ' legal-language competence in their native language ; the users ' legal-language competence in the foreign language.

competence and systems
Accordingly, the N-Ach, N-Aff and N-Pow scoring systems simply count how many components of competence people bring to bear whilst carrying out activities they have a strong personal inclination ( or motivation ) to undertake.
State-wide university systems and individual colleges and universities are undertaking strategic planning to determine information competencies, to incorporate instruction in information competence throughout the curriculum and to add information competence as a graduation requirement for students.
ATG administration very substantially reduces immune competence in patients with normal immune systems, through a combination of actions, some explicitly understood and some more hypothetical.
SSC provides specialized competence in space subsystems, space and satellite operations, rocket and balloon systems including experiment equipment, launch services, aerospace engineering services as well as airborne maritime surveillance systems.
Demanding " full revamp of the Comelec ", it sought for the appointment of people with " unquestioned integrity and competence, especially in systems and management " to succeed Chair Abalos and the five other members.
Six main elements of the SOSI role were: programme management ; systems of systems engineering and integration ; alliance development and management ; development of the MoD's SOSI competence ; through-life capability management ; and through-life technology management.
The National Members are senior and experienced judges, prosecutors, or police officers of equivalent competence, who are seconded in accordance with their respective legal systems and hold permanent seats in The Hague.
National Members are seconded in accordance with their respective legal systems and are judges, prosecutors or police officers of equivalent competence.
In bacterial efflux systems, certain substances that need to be extruded from the cell include surface components of the bacterial cell ( e. g. capsular polysaccharides, lipopolysaccharides, and teichoic acid ), proteins involved in bacterial pathogenesis ( e. g. hemolysis, heme-binding protein, and alkaline protease ), heme, hydrolytic enzymes, S-layer proteins, competence factors, toxins, antibiotics, bacteriocins, peptide antibiotics, drugs and siderophores.
As the veliger stage reaches metamorphic competence, the foot becomes sufficiently developed to allow crawling on the substratum and internal development has established the organ systems necessary for juvenile life.
In traditional AI, intelligence is often programmed from above: the programmer is the creator, and makes something and imbues it with its intelligence, though many traditional AI systems were also designed to learn ( e. g. improving their game-playing or problem-solving competence ).
In the generativist tradition competence is the only level of language that is studied, because this level gives insights into the Universal Grammar, that generativists see as underlying all human language systems.

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