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By and appointment
By this time Yan was well known for his adaptability, and Chiang welcomed his appointment.
By the end of that year he was frustrated with court life and started seeking another appointment.
By 1209 the situation showed no signs of resolution, and Innocent threatened to excommunicate John if he did not acquiesce to Langton's appointment.
By the end of August 1861, Grant was given charge of the District of Cairo by Maj. Gen John C. Fremont, an outside Lincoln appointment, who viewed Grant as " a man of dogged persistence, and iron will.
By way of the intervention of a family friend, Sabath, himself a Czech Jewish immigrant, nominated Rickover for appointment to the United States Naval Academy.
By his appointment letter of February 1524, John III granted Vasco da Gama the privileged title of " Viceroy ", being only the second Portuguese governor to enjoy that title ( the first was Francisco de Almeida in 1505 ).
By 1865 the Delegacy had ceased to be ' perpetual ,' and evolved into five perpetual and five junior posts filled by appointment from the University, with the Vice Chancellor a Delegate ex officio: a hothouse for factionalism that Price deftly tended and controlled.
By 1669 Wren's career was well established and it may have been his appointment as Surveyor of the King's Works in early 1669 that persuaded him that he could finally afford to take a wife.
By his senior year, LeMay was listed on the ROTC rolls as a " cadet lieutenant colonel " but had not actually received an appointment in the regular United States military.
" By Odin's appointment, Njörðr and Freyr became priests over offerings of sacrifice, and they were recognized as gods among the Æsir.
By the terms of the late king's will she had sacrificed her position ; before the month was out she was obliged to consent to the appointment of Albany.
By the end of the twentieth century, however, all of these rules had been abolished one by one, so that appointment is now a matter of status and prestige only, with no formal disadvantages.
By this time, he was a well-known and revered figure, and the appointment was meant to free him from the labour of teaching and to facilitate his research.
By the fall of 2009, facing a $ 9 million deficit and a federal corruption probe, Governor of Michigan Jennifer Granholm declared a financial emergency for the city, paving the way for the appointment of an emergency financial manager.
By definition, with the unification of the CF into one service, the rank of Sergeant included the naval rank of Petty Officer 2nd Class, and Corporal includes the Naval rank of Leading Seaman ; Corporal also includes the appointment of Master Corporal ( Naval Master Seaman ).
By the time of Dunglass's appointment Chamberlain was generally seen as the heir to the premiership, and in 1937 the incumbent, Stanley Baldwin, retired, and Chamberlain succeeded him.
1960 – 63: By appointment of the Dalai Lama, serves as spiritual advisor to the Young Lamas ' Home School in Dalhousie, India.
By convention, female judges of the High Court of Justice are created Dames Commander after appointment, while male judges become Knights Bachelor.
By the end of his tenure as governor general, Cavendish had overcome all of the initial suspicions that had surrounded his appointment ; both men who served as his Canadian prime minister Borden and Arthur Meighen came to view him as a personal friend not only of theirs, but also of Canada's.
By appointment, he was Captain General of the Lowlands under Charles V, knight of the Golden Fleece from 1546, and Imperial Chamberlain.
By the end of 1933, he received an appointment as Lecturer in German Art and Culture at Harvard University with the help of a professor of government there.
By 1415 the Abbey had de facto control over the appointment of parish priests in the entire valley.
It was rumoured that no important government appointment could happen without the Family's support By 1999, the Family also included two of Berezovsky's associates, his former AVVA partner Alexander Voloshin, who replaced Yumashev as Yeltsin's chief of staff, and Roman Abramovich.
By the time of his appointment to chief of staff for the Austro-Hungarian armed forces in November 1906, he had established a reputation as a teacher and writer.
By January 1984, Benazir was being referred to as the party's chairman and subsequently secured the legal appointment by the senior leadership of Central Executive Committee at the convention held in 1984.

By and Supreme
" Caplan comments on the impact of the Supreme Court's decision making it necessary for there to be evidence of guilt in such a plea, " By requiring that there be some evidence of guilt in such a situation, the decision attempts to protect the ' really ' innocent from the temptations to which plea-bargaining and defense attorneys may subject them.
By virtue of practice directions issued under section 75 ( 1 ) of the Supreme Court Act 1981, an indictment must be tried by a High Court judge, a Circuit judge or a recorder ( which of these it is depends on the offence ).
By 1997, the phrase had entered the legal lexicon as seen in an opinion by Supreme Court of the United States Justice John Paul Stevens, ' An example of " junk science " that should be excluded under the Daubert standard as too unreliable would be the testimony of a phrenologist who would purport to prove a defendant ’ s future dangerousness based on the contours of the defendant ’ s skull.
By 1855, he had organized a " Supreme Constellation " in New York, which chartered chapters throughout the United States.
By 1968 all forms of segregation had been declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court, and by 1970 support for formal legal segregation had dissolved.
* The Constitution Of The United States Of America Analysis And Interpretation Analysis Of Cases Decided By The Supreme Court Of The United States To June 28, 2002, United States Senate doc.
By permitting the publication of Fanny Hill, the U. S. Supreme Court set the bar for any ban so high that Rembar himself called the 1966 decision " the end of obscenity ".
By removing the jurisdiction of federal courts, including the Supreme Court, from cases involving the Pledge, this legislation sets a dangerous precedent: threatening religious liberty, compromising the vital system of checks and balances upon which our government was founded, and granting Congress the authority to strip the courts ' jurisdiction on any issue it wishes.
By late May 1940 the military disaster in France after the German invasion was such that the Supreme Commander-and politically neutral-Maurice Gamelin, was dismissed, and Weygand-a figurehead of the right-recalled from Syria to replace him.
By the Submission of the Clergy, the English clergy and religious orders subscribed to the proposition that the King was, and had always been, the Supreme Head of the Church in England.
By the early 1990s, a new leadership had emerged on the Shankill Road following the killing of powerful South Belfast Brigadier and the UDA's Deputy Commander John McMichael in 1987 by a booby-trap car bomb planted by the IRA ; less than three months later, the Supreme Commander Andy Tyrie resigned after an attempt was made on his life.
By Hukam ( Supreme Command ), He created His ten incarnations,
By Hukam ( Supreme Command ), He created His ten incarnations,
By Hukam ( Supreme Command ), He created His ten incarnations,
By this time, the Blow family had relocated to Missouri and become opponents of slavery, granting the Scotts emancipation by Henry Taylor Blow on May 26, 1857, less than three months after the Supreme Court ruling. Scott went to work as a porter in St. Louis for nearly 17 months before he died from tuberculosis in September 1858.
By December 8, 2000, there had been multiple court decisions regarding the presidential election in Florida and on that date the Florida Supreme Court, by a 4-3 vote, ordered a statewide manual recount.
By 1904, the Arkansas Supreme Court allowed the town to annex the Eighth Ward ; the modern City of North Little Rock considers this its founding date.
By 1959, tensions rose to the point where the Metropolitan Municipalities Commission, a predecessor of the Twin Cities-wide Metropolitan Council, asked the then-State Attorney General Walter Mondale to contest the Hilltop charter to the Minnesota Supreme Court.
" By World War II, such restrictive language had largely disappeared from real estate transactions, and all were voided by the Supreme Court's 1948 decision in Shelley v. Kraemer.
* By statute, the Supreme Court of the United States uses the writ of certiorari to review cases from the United States courts of appeals or from the state courts.
By a vote of 7 – 2, the Supreme Court invalidated the law on the grounds that it violated the " right to marital privacy ".
By a unanimous vote of its Supreme Soviet, Turkmenistan declared its sovereignty in August 1990.
By a decision issued on March 7, 2008, this test was removed from the law by the Supreme Court of Canada in David Dunsmuir v. Her Majesty the Queen in Right of the Province of New Brunswick as represented by Board of Management.
By comparison, the Supreme Court was made almost entirely independent, and the General Assembly assumed many of the powers taken from the governor.
By the end of the year, Mahathir had been sacked from UMNO's Supreme Council and expelled from the party ; Abdul Rahman had to be persuaded not to have him arrested.

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