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Tenure and 2009
* Gonzales, Evelina Garza, " External Funding and Tenure at Texas State University-San Marcos " ( 2009 ).
Koechner starred alongside Luke Wilson in the 2009 indie-comedy Tenure and was a lead in the 2012 horror film Piranha 3DD.

Tenure and
* Sutton, Imre, Indian Land Tenure: Bibliographical Essays and a Guide to the Literature ( NY: Clearwater, 1975 ): tribe pp. 101 – 02, 180 – 2, 186 – 7, 191 – 3.
The Tenure of Office Act restricted the President to suspend an officer while the Senate was not in session at that time, Congress sat during a relatively small portion of the year.

Tenure and first
The Radicals in the House of Representatives impeached him in 1868 ( a first for a U. S. president ), charging him with violating the Tenure of Office Act, when he sought to remove his Secretary of War without Senate approval ; his trial in the Senate ended in an acquittal by a single vote.
The Radicals in the House of Representatives impeached him in 1868 ( a first for a U. S. president ), charging him with violating the Tenure of Office Act, when he sought to remove his Secretary of War without Senate approval ; nevertheless, his trial in the Senate ended in an acquittal by a single vote.
From 1880 to 1892, the " Land War " in pursuance of the " Three Fs " ( Fair Rent, Fixity of Tenure and Free Sale ) first demanded by the Tenant Right League in 1850, was fought in earnest.

Tenure and was
Since Congress was in recess, Johnson thought he could suspend Stanton without Senate approval and avoid violating the Tenure of Office Act.
** Andrew Johnson, Democrat / National Union, was impeached in 1868 after violating the then-newly created Tenure of Office Act.
Grant's reply was a recommendation against the move, in light of the Tenure of Office Act which required Senate approval of any removal of a cabinet appointment subject to their advice and consent.
The Tenure of Office Act was a federal law ( in force from 1867 to 1887 ) that was intended to restrict the power of the President of the United States to remove certain office-holders without the approval of the Senate.
It was actually unclear whether Johnson had violated the Tenure of Office Act.
In 1887, the Tenure of Office Act was repealed.
In reaching that decision, the Supreme Court stated in its majority opinion ( though in dicta ), " that the Tenure of Office Act of 1867, insofar as it attempted to prevent the President from removing executive officers who had been appointed by him by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, was invalid ".
Although Sumner stated he was an " Administration man ", in addition to having stopped Grant's Dominican Republic treaty attempt, Sumner had defeated Grant's full repeal of the Tenure of Office Act, blocked Grant's nomination of Alexander Stewart to U. S. Secretary of Treasury, stalled diplomatic appointments, and conducted his own foreign policy from the Senate.
However, this was overruled by the Senate, and Stanton barricaded himself in his office when Johnson tried again to replace Stanton with General Thomas, while radical Republicans initiated impeachment proceedings against Johnson on the grounds that Johnson's removal of Stanton without Senate approval violated the Tenure of Office Act.
Tenure in Bromley-by-Bow ward was predominantly rented with only 15 % of households being owner-occupiers.
Under her Tenure the Red River Community College expanded and was granted new nomenclature, becoming Red River College.
Tenure for new faculty was suspended in 2008 but reinstated in 2010.
Tenure was a matter of charity only, however, and sometimes became precarious in case of disagreements.
This united practically all the different strands of land agitation and land movements since the Tenant Right League of the 1850s under a single organization and, from then until 1882, the " Land War " in pursuance of the " Three Fs " ( Fair Rent, Fixity of Tenure and Free Sale ) was fought in earnest.
Tenure, and the variety thereof, was the very essence of feudal society and the stratification thereof, and the possession of a tenure ( i. e. holding, from Latin teneo " to hold ") was legally established by the act of seisin.
Scottish Prescriptive Barony by Tenure was, from 1660 until 2004, the feudal description of the only genuine degree of title of UK nobility capable of being bought and sold ( along with the Caput, or property ), rather than passing strictly by blood inheritance.
18 months later, the State Tenure Commission concluded that Kelso was wrongfully terminated and advised him to resume his job.
A Royal manor in Anglo Saxon times, until the 16th century Condover Manor was in and out of Crown Tenure until, in 1586, Elizabeth I made a grant of the current Manor to Thomas Owen, a Member of Parliament and Recorder of Shrewsbury.
He was reelected for the third time to a two-year term ( 2012-2014 ) as Vice President of the Illinois Conference of the American Association of University Professors and is chair of the Illinois Committee A on Academic Freedom and Tenure.

Tenure and tenure
Tenure commonly refers to life tenure in a job and specifically to a senior academic's contractual right not to have his or her position terminated without just cause.
Tenure at many universities depends solely on research publications and research grants although the universities ' official policies are that tenure depends on research, teaching and service.
" The comments provide for further insights into the evaluation for tenure appointment and direct to the " 1968 Recommended Institutional Regulations on Academic Freedom and Tenure ," which recommends policy based upon the 1940 statement and a later documents on standards for faculty dismissal.
Investigations by the AAUP of the administrations of the institutions listed below show that, as evidenced by a past violation, they are not observing the generally recognized principles of academic freedom and tenure approved by this Association, the Association of American Colleges and Universities, and more than two hundred other professional and educational organizations which have endorsed the 1940 Statement of Principles on Academic Freedom and Tenure.
In 2007, Holtschneider affirmed a 4-3 vote by DePaul University's Board on Promotion and Tenure ( a faculty board ) denying tenure to controversial political scientist Norman Finkelstein.
In April 2011, Dr. Rachel Tudor, an Assistant Professor of English, Humanities and Literature was denied tenure despite having been recommended for promotion and tenure twice in the last two years by the Faculty Tenure and Promotion Committee, based on the university's criteria of teaching, scholarship and service.
" Justifying the tenure denial, McMillan has claimed that Tudor was unqualified, despite the original Tenure and Promotion Committee's findings, those of the Faculty Appeals Committee, and a resolution by the Faculty Senate in support of Tudor's application.

Tenure and at
Garfield at this time endorsed the view that the Senate, via the Tenure of Office Act, had final say on Presidential appointments, a position he would radically change when President himself.
* Tenure, at universities in Australia and New Zealand, referred to as confirmation
* Current Tenure Articles at the Chronicle of Higher Education
While it seems common sense that academic freedom aligns with the values of democratic rights and free speech, O ' Neil also notes the ideas of academic freedom at the time were not entirely well received, where even the New York Times criticized the declaration, but that today the statement remains “ almost as nearly inviolate as the U. S. Constitution ”, The AAUP notes that following a series of conferences beginning in 1934, the association officially adopted the " 1925 Statement of Principles on Academic Freedom and Tenure ," which then started to become institutionalized in universities only since the 1940s.
Norman Finkelstein's Tenure Controversy at DePaul
The Serious and Faithfull Representation ( January 1649 ) of 47 London ministers, a work against Oliver Cromwell, arose from an assembly in the College ; Milton's The Tenure of Kings and Magistrates from February of that year is in part an answer, and snipes at the ministers.
In 1885, at the request of the then Governor of Madras, Mountstuart Elphinstone Grant-Duff, Madhava Rao presided over the Malabar Land Tenure Commission.

Tenure and College
He serves on the Appointments, Tenure and Promotion Committee of the OSU College of Medicine and Public Health.

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