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Competent and have
Competent authorities have generally recognised his capabilities as a soldier.
Competent Authorities generally have the power to bind their government in specific cases.
• The Competent Authority in one Member State does not have jurisdiction in any other Member State, but they do exchange information and try to reach common positions.
Highly qualified and independent Competent Bodies have been appointed in each EU Member State to administer the certification of the label at national level.
Ammonium Perchlorate is classed as an explosive by the UK Health and Safety Executive, so Ammonium Perchlorate Composite Propellant ( AP ) motors formerly required the purchaser to have an Explosives Licence and Recipient Competent Authority Transfer Document ( RCA ).
Protein expression in E. coli is usually faster than in Pichia pastoris for several reasons: Competent E. coli cells can be stored frozen, and thawed immediately before use, whereas Pichia cells have to be produced immediately before use.

Competent and works
* Ferdinand Waldo Demara-A real-world Competent Man whose exploits inspired numerous biographical and fictional works including The Pretender TV Series.

Competent and be
Competent, well-intentioned researchers and professors rely on handwaving when, given a limited time, a large result must be shown and minor technical details cannot be given much attention — e. g., " It can be shown that z is even.
Competent attorneys in those states must be able to switch seamlessly between citation styles depending upon whether their work product is intended for a federal or state court.
" Competent Master " is another common formulation: the Master must be competent in the sense of having been commissioned by God, not just a person who feels like working in the role of a guru:
The objective of Jesuit education is to encourage students to be Open to Growth, Intellectually Competent, Religious, Loving, and Committed to Doing Justice.
In October that year, the Government issued a white paper entitled Competitive Salaries for Competent & Honest Government which proposed that the salaries of ministers and civil servants be pegged at two-thirds the average principal earned income of the top four earners in six professions: accounting, banking, engineering, law, local manufacturing firms and multinational corporations.
In 1913 Harrington Emerson proposed 12 principles of efficiency, the first three of which could be related to principles of war: Clearly defined ideals-Objective, Common sense-Simplicity, Competent counsel-Unity of Command.

Competent and women
In the field of Social Psychology, prejudice studies like the “ Who Likes Competent Women ” study led the way for gender-based research on prejudice This resulted in two broad themes or focuses in the field: the first being a focus on attitudes toward gender equality, and the second focusing on people ’ s beliefs about men and women Today studies based on sexism continue in the field of psychology as researchers try to understand how people ’ s thoughts, feelings, and behaviors influence and are influenced by others.
" Competent, well connected, and educated, these women worked with Freedom Summer and the Freedom Schools.

Competent and .
Competent teachers are well versed in the technique of leading students to pre-set conclusions without destroying the students' illusion that they are making their own decisions.
Competent People Managers will promote this employee for the betterment of the company.
* Goldberg, David E ( 2002 ), The Design of Innovation: Lessons from and for Competent Genetic Algorithms, Addison-Wesley, Reading, MA.
Competent in housework and doing her chores, she is often the foil to Herb's fun.
The equivalent meaning in English is Competent.
Competent people with relevant technology, and 3.
* Tasting Food, Tasting Sustainability: Defining the Attributes of an Alternative Food System With Competent, Ordinary People.
On yachts in Australia a Competent Crew course is usually the first formal learn to sail course.
The Normal Tidal Limit ( NTL ) of the river is Bigsweir and navigation below this point is under the control of the Gloucester Harbour Trustees as Competent Harbour Authority.
These are typically referred to as a Notified or Competent Body.
Competent in Latin, French and Italian, he translated Andrea Pozzo's treatise on perspective as Rules and Examples of Perspective, proper for Painters and Architects ( 1707, 2nd edition c. 1725 ) and from the French of Claude Perrault, A Treatise of the Five Orders of Columns in Architecture ( 1708 ), and from the French of Dezallier d ' Argenville, The Theory and Practice of Gardening ( 1712, 2nd edition 1728, 3rd edition 1743.
Generally, the government agency responsible for conducting dispute resolution procedures under the treaty is referred to as the “ Competent Authority ” of the country.
The treaty mechanism often calls for the Competent Authorities to attempt to agree in resolving disputes.
Competent diving instructors may work independently or through a university, a dive club, a dive school or a dive shop.
Competent and proud of their Chinese heritage, these roles worked against the prevailing U. S. film portrayals of Chinese-Americans.

judges and have
County judges, commissioners, engineers, assessors, and others who have lived in the area for a long time may have valuable knowledge regarding the site or opinions to offer from their varied professional experiences.
However, many have argued that the usefulness of these laws is vastly inadequate in terms of controlling government actions, largely because of institutional and systemic obstacles like a weak judiciary, poorly trained judges and lawyers, and corruption.
The lawyers involved have a very good idea of the scope of agreement and disagreement of the issues to present at trial which develops much in the same way as the role of investigative judges.
Some scholars have inferred that the minor judges were actual adjudicators, whereas the major judges were leaders and didn't actually make legal judgements.
Despite their appearance at the end of the Book of Judges, certain characters ( like Jonathan, the grandson of Moses ) and idioms present in the epilogue show that the therein " must have taken place ... early in the period of the judges.
If, however, the court finds that the current dispute is fundamentally distinct from all previous cases ( called a " matter of first impression "), judges have the authority and duty to make law by creating precedent.
( a ) The law evolves, this evolution is in the hands of judges, and judges have " made law " for hundreds of years.
Most of the U. S. federal courts of appeal have adopted a rule under which, in the event of any conflict in decisions of panels ( most of the courts of appeal almost always sit in panels of three ), the earlier panel decision is controlling, and a panel decision may only be overruled by the court of appeals sitting en banc ( that is, all active judges of the court ) or by a higher court.
The felt necessities of the time, the prevalent moral and political theories, intuitions of public policy, avowed or unconscious, even the prejudices which judges share with their fellow men, have had a good deal more to do than the syllogism in determining the rules by which men should be governed.
Some ecclesiastical officials are required to have the doctorate ( JCD ) or at least the licentiate ( JCL ) in canon law in order to fulfill their functions: judicial vicars ( c. 1419. 1 ), judges ( c. 1421. 3 ), promoters of justice ( c. 1435 ), defenders of the bond ( c. 1435 ).
After the regional events, videos of all the teams that competed are sent to a new panel of judges and rescored to rank teams against those against whom they may never have had a chance to compete.
Rosenthal suggests that Mather might have had guilty feelings — feigned or not — for choosing not to restrain the judges during the trial, though he was in the best position to do so.
Judges in common law systems usually have more extensive power to declare someone in contempt than judges in civil law systems.
Randi ’ s offer has been publicized for three decades and dozens of people have been tested, sometimes under the scrutiny of an independent panel of judges.
Each group of judges will have the highest and lowest scores dropped, leaving the middle score for each diver's execution and the three middle scores for synchronization.
In the Vatican copy the e of Dagome might have an s adscriptum ( similar to cedilla ), though just the Vatican copyist read iudex literally, relating it to Sardegna and its four " judges ".
First you have the National Court of Justice, which seats 21 judges elected for a period of 9 years.
Aeschylus gained thirteen victories as a dramatist, Sophocles at least twenty, Euripides only four in his lifetime, and this has often been taken as an indication of the latter's unpopularity with his contemporaries, and yet a first place might not have been the main criterion for success in those times ( the system of selecting judges appears to have been flawed ) and merely being chosen to compete was in itself a mark of distinction.
For example, most insurance policies in the English language today have been carefully drafted in plain English ; the industry learned the hard way that many courts will not enforce policies against insureds when the judges themselves cannot understand what the policies are saying.
Since the U. S. Supreme Court ruling in Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc., lay judges have become " gatekeepers " of scientific testimony.
Some commentators say the name comes from the verb śœarar (" to rule, be strong, have authority over "), thereby making the name mean " God rules " or " God judges ".

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