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was and admitted
If his circumspection in regard to Philip's sensibilities went so far that he even refused to grant a dispensation for the marriage of Amadee's daughter, Agnes, to the son of the dauphin of Vienne -- a truly peacemaking move according to thirteenth-century ideas, for Savoy and Dauphine were as usual fighting on opposite sides -- for fear that he might seem to be favoring the anti-French coalition, he would certainly never take the far more drastic step of ordering the return of Gascony to Edward, even though, as he admitted to the English ambassadors, he had been advised that the original cession was invalid.
The third name was ( John ) Ravencroft, who was admitted to the Inner Temple in November 1631.
The fourteenth name was ( Richard ) Buckenham, written Buckman, admitted to Christ's College under Scott 2 July 1625.
The fifteenth name was ( Thomas ) Baldwin, admitted to Christ's 4 March 1625 under Alsop.
He admitted that he knew it was open to him at all times, and he could have rebutted it before the hearing officer.
`` I was wrong '', I admitted.
Previously purified chlorine was subsequently admitted and the exchange was allowed to take place.
However, all admitted that the `` hindsight '' was not altogether lost.
The driver admitted he was the Dresbachs' son and all three were taken to the Edgewater Station, police said.
Bernard Parrillo, 20, of 19 Fletcher Ave., Cranston, was admitted to Roger Williams Hospital shortly before 11:30 a.m. yesterday after a hunting accident in which a shotgun he was carrying discharged against his heel.
Charlayne was `` tentatively '' admitted for next fall, after state investigators questioned her white roommate at Wayne State.
One of my private patients was being admitted and I went in to see her settled.
Others admitted he was absolutely correct -- he never slept.
Joshua, however, was admitted with his leader to the very presence of the Lord, while Aaron and Hur remained below to look after the people ( Exodus 24: 9-14 ).
Woolfson sang lead on many of the group's hits ( including " Time " and " Eye in the Sky ") and the record company pressured Parsons to use him more, but Parsons preferred " real " singers, which Woolfson admitted he was not.
Alexander of Pherae, prepared to meet his enemy in Macedonia, but the king anticipated him, and, reaching Larissa, was admitted into the city.
In 1787, he was admitted to the bar, and moved to Jonesborough, in what was then the Western District of North Carolina.
Lavoisier received a law degree and was admitted to the bar, but never practiced as a lawyer.
Though he was not admitted, he soon gained attention for his original poems and prose-poems.
She was admitted to the District of Columbia Bar in 1980 and began her law career as an associate with the Washington, D. C. firm of Wald, Harkrader & Ross.
He then began to study law and was admitted to the bar in 1837, selling the Advocate the same year.

was and Faculty
As dentist, he was the main founder of the Dentistry Faculty of the Universidad de Chile, and he was eventually elected as the first dean.
In 2007, he was elected a member of Royal Swedish Academy of Music, and in 2008 received an Honorary Doctorate from the Stockholm University Faculty of Humanities for contributing importantly both to the preservation and the growth of the Swedish folk music tradition.
It was after returning to Edinburgh in 1752, as he wrote in My Own Life, that " the Faculty of Advocates chose me their Librarian, an office from which I received little or no emolument, but which gave me the command of a large library ".
The university's Faculty of Law was also ranked third in Canada in the category of law.
The Faculty of Management was also named the most innovative business school in Canada by European CEO magazine on 17 November 2010.
He was assigned to teach Dogmatic Theology at the Jesuit Faculty of Theology of Kurseong ( later shifted to Delhi, and renamed ' Vidyajyoti College of Theology ').
In 1854, Pasteur was named Dean of the new Faculty of Sciences in Lille.
" He was heavily influenced by several teachers at the school, including the professor of ethics, Yang Changji, who urged Mao and his other students to read a radical newspaper, New Youth ( Hsien Ch ' ing-nien ), which was the creation of his friend Chen Duxiu ( 1879 – 1942 ), Dean of the Faculty of Letters at Peking University.
Moqed was a law student from the small town of Al-Nakhil, Saudi Arabia ( west of Medina ), studying at King Fahd University's Faculty of Administration and Economics.
At the same time, Aristotelian rhetoric, owing to a revival of Thomistic philosophy initiated by Rome, regained ground in what was left of Catholic education in France, in particular at the prestigious Faculty of Theology of Paris, now a private entity.
Frisch was appointed by the King-in-Council as Professor of Economics and Statistics at the Faculty of Law, The Royal Frederick University in 1931.
* Umeå School of Education-aka: USE, was inaugurated in January 2009 to replace the former Faculty of Teacher Education.
The Faculty of Law was established as a separate faculty in 1980, with legal studies and research having been conducted at the university since 1969.
The old campus was then occupied by the Faculty of Law and most of the other faculties have been transferred to the Blindern campus in the suburban West End, erected in the 1930s.
* The disciplinary domain of Arts and Social Sciences includes the Faculty of Arts *, the Faculty of Social Sciences *, the Faculty of Languages *, the Faculty of Theology, the Faculty of Law and the Faculty of Educational Sciences ( formerly the Department of Education, that was raised to the status of a faculty in its own right in 2002 ).
The Faculty of Pharmacy was originally an independent " royal institute " in Stockholm, which was moved to Uppsala and incorporated with the university between 1968 – 1972.

was and Advocates
Advocates of Callet's approach believe that this method was recommended and taught by the great brass instructors of the early 20th Century.
Advocates address the first doubt by pointing out that the first macroscale autonomous machine replicator, made of Lego blocks, was built and operated experimentally in 2002.
In reply, it was proved that the Advocates ' library at Edinburgh contained Gaelic manuscripts 500 years old, and one of even greater antiquity.
In December 2009, a 96-page report titled Human Rights in Ethiopia: Through the Eyes of the Oromo Diaspora, compiled by the Advocates for Human Rights, documented human rights violations against the Oromo in Ethiopia under three successive regimes: the Abyssinian Empire under Haile Selassie, the Marxist Derg and the current Ethiopian government of the Ethiopian People ’ s Revolutionary Democratic Front ( EPRDF ), dominated by members of the Tigray People ’ s Liberation Front ( TPLF ) and which was accused to have arrested approximately 20, 000 suspected OLF members, to have driven most OLF leadership into exile, and to have effectively neutralized the OLF as a political force in Ethiopia.
Advocates of this theory thought that every single vibration of the vocal folds was due to an impulse from the recurrent laryngeal nerves and that the acoustic center in the brain regulated the speed of vocal fold vibration.
Advocates of independence saw Pennsylvania as the key: if that colony could be converted to the pro-independence cause, it was believed that the others would follow.
Advocates of the resolution countered that foreign governments would not intervene in an internal British struggle, and so a formal declaration of independence was needed before foreign aid was possible.
Advocates for gun rights often claim that past totalitarian regimes passed gun control legislation, which was later followed by confiscation, with Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany during World War II, as well as some communist states being cited as examples.
Advocates point to the costs of emergency measures such as burning over one million cows suspected of having foot-and-mouth disease in the UK, smoke from which they calculated ( based on dioxin levels ) was to be expected to kill several hundred Britons from cancers in this generation.
" This was in conflict with Advocates for Animals ' position on captive animals.
In Scotland, where the independent Bar is organised as the Faculty of Advocates and its members known not as barristers but as advocates, the position of Queen's Counsel was not recognised before 1868.
Initially the status was reserved first for law officers ( Lord Advocate and Solicitor General for Scotland ) and soon after for the Dean of the Faculty of Advocates.
In 1897 a petition by the Faculty of Advocates for the establishment of a Scottish roll of Queen's Counsel was approved and the first appointments were made later in that year.
Advocates for the park's protection were active in the early 1960s when the Noosa Parks Association was formed at time when urban development was threatening the wilderness area.
In the two remaining years of his life he was engaged on a reduction or " abridgment " of this work, which is known as the Book of Cupar, and is preserved in the Advocates ' library, Edinburgh ( MS. 35.
The document was passed by Bannatyne to his descendants and then, via several private owners, to the Advocates ' Library of Edinburgh.
He was then elected to the Faculty of Advocates, and later to the British Parliament as an MP.
He read law and was elected to the Faculty of Advocates in 1815, still with many outside interests, and in 1816 produced a second volume of poems, The City of the Plague.
For two years after leaving Oxford he lived chiefly in Glasgow before settling to the study of Scots law in Edinburgh, where he was elected to the Faculty of Advocates in 1816.
However, Brougham chose law as his profession, and was admitted to the Faculty of Advocates in 1800.
In 1829 he was chosen dean of the Faculty of Advocates.

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