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Page "Integrity" ¶ 31
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persons and who
For example, there are persons who are in physical science, in the field of mineralogy, trained in crystallography, who use only X-rays, applying only the powder technique of X-ray diffraction, to clay minerals only, and who have spent the last fifteen years concentrating on the montmorillonites ; ;
So all-important are ideas, we are told, that persons successful in business and happy in social life usually fall into two classes: those who invent new ideas of their own, and those who borrow, beg, or steal from others.
Often these listeners would refer Sandburg to persons who had similar ballads or ditties.
Among measures in anticipation of crisis are plans to inject into the turmoil as assistants of key decision makers qualified persons who are cognizant of the corrosive effect of crisis upon personal relationships and are also able to raise calm and realistic voices when overburdened leaders near the limit of self-control.
For example, he captured some persons from York County, who with teams were taking to Philadelphia the furniture of a man who had just been released from prison through the efforts of his wife, and who apparently was helpless to prevent the theft of his household goods.
Before them stalked the beadle, proclaiming as he went, `` Thus the Council deals with those who break its laws -- adulterers, thieves, murderers, and lewd persons.
who were more ingratiating than gracious, more personalities than persons.
Those persons who were lucky enough to see and hear the performance of his work at the Brest-Silevniov Festival in August, 1916, will certainly welcome his return to public notice ; ;
In repetitions of the experiment from couple to couple, the votes of the two persons in a couple probably agree more often than independence would imply, because couples who visit the museum together are more likely to have similar tastes than are a random pair of people drawn from the entire population of visitors.
This information was accepted with the frequent interpretation that those persons who did not show arm-levitation must be preventing it.
When informed that there were some persons who did not have their arm go up, she commented, `` I don't see how they can prevent it ''.
A somewhat less fragmented hebephrenic patient of mine, who used to often seclude herself in her room, often sounded through the closed door -- as I would find on passing by, between our sessions -- for all the world like two persons, a scolding mother and a defensive child.
These people are practically always upper- or upper-middle-class persons, who attempt to act in what they regard as the interest of the entire society.
Of course, the perspective of those who are dealing directly with the world-wide problems of the People of God will always be different from the perspective of those who are dealing with the nearby problems of particular persons in a particular place.
The justification in Christian conscience of the use of any mode of resistance also lays down its limitation -- in the distinction between the persons against whom pressure is primarily directed, those upon whom it may be permitted also to fall, and those who may never be directly repressed for the sake even of achieving some great good.
After reading his statement discharging the 23d ward case, Karns told Wexler that if the seven cases scheduled for trial also involved persons who had been subpenaed, he would dismiss them.
The aged care plan carries these benefits for persons over 65 who are under the social security and railroad retirement systems: 1
Cocktails and a buffet supper were served to more than 100 persons who had known Dr. Swim when he practiced in Los Angeles.
Few persons who join the Church are insincere.

persons and have
No other names among the young men in residence at the time seem to have been even suggested by Milton as those of persons with whom he in any way consorted.
If launched in a careful but determined way within the next few weeks, the Peace Corps could have several hundred persons in training this summer for placement next fall.
Even though the registers may have an incomplete record of persons present in a particular area or include persons no longer living there, they contain precise information on ages, by date of birth, for some of the persons present ( especially children in relatively stable communities ) and supplementary information ( such as records of marital status ) for many others.
Emerson, in his lecture, refers to the `` startling experience which almost every person confesses in daylight, that particular passages of conversation and action have occurred to him in the same order before, whether dreaming or waking, a suspicion that they have been with precisely these persons in precisely this room, and heard precisely this dialogue, at some former hour, they know not when ''.
`` In 35 years we have opened 7,000 churches '', the Rev. Mr. Brandt said, adding that the denomination had a national goal of one church for every 10,000 persons.
The work of Lay Visitation Evangelism is not completed when all of the persons on the Responsibility List have been interviewed.
Some interfaith tensions are not occasioned by theological differences at all, but by the need of men to have persons they can blame, distrust, denounce, and even hate.
A person with a good reputation for reciprocity have a higher chance of receiving help even from persons they have had no direct interactions with previously.
So British subjects voluntarily naturalized in a foreign state are deemed aliens from the time of such naturalization, unless, in the case of persons naturalized before the passing of the act, they have declared their desire to remain British subjects within two years from the passing of the act.
Abbesses are, like abbots, major superiors according to canon law, the equivalents of abbots or bishops ( the ordained male members of the church hierarchy who have, by right of their own office, executive jurisdiction over a building, diocesan territory, or a communal or non-communal group of persons — juridical entities under church law ).
Whether two or more persons have been confused in this account of Hippolytus
That said, he provides some reasons why we may have a basis for trust in the testimony of persons: because a ) human memory can be relatively tenacious ; and b ) because people are inclined to tell the truth, and ashamed of telling falsities.
In addition to representing persons and organizations in lawsuits, the ACLU lobbies for policies that have been established by its board of directors.
In the practice of ahimsa, the requirements are less strict for the lay persons who have undertaken anuvrata ( Lesser Vows ) than for the monastics who are bound by the Mahavrata " Great Vows ".
Some have speculated that this was to allow multiple persons to use the same identity.
Chiefs and other leaders preside over customary, traditional courts, though all persons have the right to request that their case be considered under the formal British-based legal system.
Large numbers of internally displaced persons have been unable to produce their own food and are largely dependent on international humanitarian assistance.
As there are no explicit references in the book to datable persons or events, scholars have assigned a wide range of dates to the book.

persons and low
* general assessment: services only fair ; in 2006 the government sold a 51 percent stake in the national telephone company and ultimately plans to retain only a 23 percent stake in the company ; fixed-line connections stand at less than 1 per 100 persons ; mobile-cellular usage, fostered by multiple providers, is increasing rapidly from a low base
Competition is strong in mobile cellular systems but the teledensity rate remains as low as 16. 6 phone lines per 100 persons ( 2004 ).
domestic satellite system with 3 earth stations ; recent substantial improvement in telephone service in rural areas ; substantial increase in digitalization of exchanges and trunk lines ; installation of a national interurban fibre-optic network capable of digital multimedia services ; fixed-line teledensity, at 16 per 100 persons, is low by regional standards ; mobile-cellular subscribership jumped 50 percent in 2006
Many self-employed persons felt ( and financial advisors agreed ) that 401 ( k ) plans did not meet their needs due to the high costs, difficult administration, and low contribution limits.
general assessment: inadequate ; requires considerable expansion and modernization ; teledensity of 15 main lines per 100 persons is low ; mobile-cellular penetration is increasing and is currently about 50 telephones per 100 persons.
The 1920 Blind Persons Act provided assistance for unemployed blind people and blind persons who were in low paid employment, while the Agriculture Act of 1920 provided allotment tenants with the right to compensation for disturbance.
Meurman resigned from the board of governors of the Housing Foundation in 1954 following a shift from developing a town with low population density ( six persons per acre ) and low-rise buildings dwellings, as advocated by Meurman, to more multi-storey buildings and a higher population density ( 30 persons per acre ) as recommended by other architects and the Housing Foundation.
The cost of running a landline or owning a mobile telephone is out of reach for most of Yemen ’ s poor population, resulting in very low telephone usage rates — 3. 9 fixed-line subscribers and 9. 5 mobile subscribers per 100 persons in 2005.
* Almost all cases of SHC involve persons with low mobility, due to advanced age or obesity, along with poor health.
Addon ()- low, one of the persons named in the Neh.
* that persons who have " low integrity " report more dishonest behaviour
* that persons who have " low integrity " try to find reasons in order to justify such behaviour
* that persons who have " low integrity " think others more likely to commit crimes — like theft, for example.
* that persons who have " low integrity " exhibit impulsive behaviour
" He felt that the United States should temporarily shut out all further entries, particularly persons of low education or skill, in order to more efficiently assimilate the millions who had come.
the earliest date is put around the 14th century where a copperplate inscription of Parakarama Bahu IV ( 1302-1326 ) refers to two persons who were declared exempt from certain taxes which included " gun licenses ". http :// www. island. lk / index. php? page_cat = article-details & page = article-details & code_title = 22207 many also believe that it was the Portuguese who first brought over actual muskets during their invasion of the Sri Lankan Coastline and low lands in 1505 as they regularly used short barrelled matchlocks during combat, however, P. E. P. Deraniyagala points out that the Sinhala term for gun, ‘ bondikula ’ matches the Arabic term for gun, ‘ bunduk .’ Also that certain technical aspects of the early Sinhalese matchlock were similar to the matchlocks used in the Middle East, thus forming the generally accepted theory that the musket was not entirely new to the island by the time the Portuguese came, but it was only in a short matter of time that native Sri Lankan kingdoms, most notably the kingdom of Sitawaka and the Kandyan Kingdom where Sinhalese muskets with a unique bifurcated stock, longer barrel and smaller calibre, which made it more efficient in driving out the energy from the gunpowder, where manufactured by the hundreds and mastered by soldiers to the point where according to the Portuguese invader, Queyroz, they could " fire at night to put out a match " and " by day at 60 paces would sever a knife with four or five bullets " and " send as many on the same spot in the target.
Investigations by the Polish authorities came to the conclusion that the persons responsible for the scandal were low level commanders ; Wojskowe Służby Informacyjne, the Polish Army's intelligence service, had not verified their claims before they were leaked to the press.
While discussions were still going on with the barons about the release of those in the city who were deemed to be Catholics, the servants and other persons of low rank and unarmed attacked the city without waiting for orders from their leaders.
Those that appear promising, defined by the authors as " programs for which the level of certainty is too low to make firm conclusions, but for which based on the limited evidence there is some reason to expect some successful reduction in crime ," include: proactive drunk driving arrests with breath testing may reduce accident deaths ; Community policing with meetings to set priorities may reduce perceptions of crime ; police showing greater respect to arrested offenders may reduce repeat offending ; polite field interrogations of suspicious persons may reduce street crime ; making arrest warrants to domestic violence suspects who leave the scene before police arrive may reduce domestic violence ; higher number of police officers in cities may reduce crime ; and gang monitoring by community workers and probation and police officers may reduce gang violence.
As a rule, used and obsolete goods ( but not antiques ) marketed to persons of low income as closeouts are inferior goods at the time even if they had earlier been normal goods or even luxury goods.
1. 0, which discriminates fairly well ; persons with low ability do indeed have a much smaller chance of correctly responding than persons of higher ability.

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