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practice and many
and many a hopeful incipient business executive decides it were better to teach the theory of business administration than to practice it.
In many societies, what we regard as corruption, favoritism, and personal influence are so accepted as consistent with the mores of officialdom and so integral a part of routine administrative practice that any attempt to force their elimination will be regarded by the local leadership as not only unwarranted but unfriendly.
Once many significant phrases are found in theory or in recurrent practice to provide for prosodic necessity, they are not to be defended for their semantic properties in isolated contexts.
Scarcity of paper caused many Southerners to adopt the practice of cross-writing, i.e., after writing from left to right of the page in the usual manner, they gave the sheet a half turn and wrote from end to end across the lines previously written.
* Commissioned: Publishers made publication arrangements, and authors covered all expenses ( today the practice of authors paying for their publications is often called vanity publishing, and is looked down upon by many publishers, even though it may have been a common and accepted practice in the past ).
However, for many acts the " off season " does not mean a period of inactivity, they use time for maintenance and practice.
Balls were only replaced if they were hit into the crowd and lost, and many clubs employed security guards expressly for the purpose of retrieving balls hit into the stands — a practice unthinkable today.
* They hold that the continuing practice among many Independent clergy of one person receiving multiple ordinations in order to secure apostolic succession, betrays an incorrect and mechanistic theology of ordination.
In this case, is the smallest σ-algebra that contains the open intervals of R. While there are many Borel measures μ, the choice of Borel measure which assigns for every interval is sometimes called " the " Borel measure on R. In practice, even " the " Borel measure is not the most useful measure defined on the σ-algebra of Borel sets ; indeed, the Lebesgue measure is an extension of " the " Borel measure which possesses the crucial property that it is a complete measure ( unlike the Borel measure ).
Pharmaceutical Engineering is sometimes regarded as a branch of biomedical engineering, and sometimes a branch of chemical engineering ; in practice, it is very much a hybrid sub-discipline ( as many BME fields are ).
This is notably not the case in many other countries, where a license is as legally necessary to practice engineering as it is for law or medicine.
In practice, as before the Reformation, many received communion rarely, as little as once a year in some cases ; George Herbert estimated it as no more than six times.
Although much of Calvin's practice was in Geneva, his publications spread his ideas of a " correctly " reformed church to many parts of Europe.
There are also many Pentecostal churches which practice celibate ministry.
In practice, many hundreds of thousands of Appendix II animals are traded annually.
Because the remit of the Convention covers millions of species of plants and animals, and tens of thousands of these taxa are potentially of economic value, in practice this negative list approach effectively forces CITES signatories to expend limited resources on just a select few, leaving many species to be traded with neither constraint nor review.
This phrase is frequently used when discussing the value of an electric current, especially in older texts ; modern practice often shortens this to simply current but current intensity is still used in many recent textbooks.
In practice, the transfer of electrons will always change the oxidation number, but there are many reactions that are classed as " redox " even though no electron transfer occurs ( such as those involving covalent bonds ).
Under the influence of the Enlightenment, many mainstream denominations had relegated spiritual healing to the realm of a one-time dispensation rather than a modern practice.
The practice is known by many other names, the most common of which is Pascal case for upper camel case.
The first of these two methods is more commonly encountered in practice because many industrial systems have many continuous systems components, including mechanical, fluid, biological and analog electrical components, with a few digital controllers.
Boston's Selectmen, consulting a doctor who claimed that the practice caused many deaths and only spread the infection, forbade Boylston from performing it again.
Orthodox Jews, unlike most Christians, still practice a restrictive diet that has many rules.

practice and customers
But the really controversial aspect of customer-cost imputation arises because of the cost analyst's frequent practice of including, not just those costs that can be definitely earmarked as incurred for the benefit of specific customers but also a substantial fraction of the annual maintenance and capital costs of the secondary ( low-voltage ) distribution system -- a fraction equal to the estimated annual costs of a hypothetical system of minimum capacity.
In another decision, Landis struck down a challenge to the Interstate Commerce Commission's ( ICC ) jurisdiction over rebating, a practice banned by the Elkins Act of 1903 in which railroads and favored customers agreed that the customers would pay less than the posted tariff, which by law was to be the same for all shippers.
The website made money from the first paying customers using an advertising method trademarked as " immersive advertising ", touted as " an evolutionary step forward in the traditional marketing practice of product placement " in television and film.
A trade secret is a formula, practice, process, design, instrument, pattern, or compilation of information which is not generally known or reasonably ascertainable, by which a business can obtain an economic advantage over competitors or customers.
In 1936 the US Supreme Court upheld a lower court decision that IBM, together with Remington, should cease its practice of requiring its customers to buy their punch cards from it alone.
It has been argued that the Elkins Act was drafted by Congress on behalf of the railroads, and that while some railroads curtailed rebates for some customers, for others the practice continued unabated.
Service Operation ( SO ) aims to provide best practice for achieving the delivery of agreed levels of services both to end-users and the customers ( where " customers " refer to those individuals who pay for the service and negotiate the SLAs ).
The additional movie also gave the program " balance "— the practice of pairing different sorts of features suggested to potential customers that they could count on something of interest no matter what specifically was on the bill.
The " free lunch " in the saying refers to the nineteenth century practice in American bars of offering a " free lunch " as a way to entice drinking customers.
Hibah usually arises in practice when Islamic banks voluntarily pay their customers a ' gift ' on savings account balances, representing a portion of the profit made by using those savings account balances in other activities.
Since investment banks engage heavily in trading for their own account, there is always the temptation for them to engage in some form of front running – the illegal practice whereby a broker executes orders for their own account before filling orders previously submitted by their customers, there benefiting from any changes in prices induced by those orders.
Boulton and Watt's practice was to help mine-owners and other customers to build engines, supplying men to erect them and some specialised parts.
The name probably originates from the cost-saving practice of requiring that customers pack their own groceries, with checkout operators simply placing the products purchased back into a second trolley.
In practice, many organisations use a mix of different channels ; in particular, they may complement a direct sales-force, calling on the larger accounts, with agents, covering the smaller customers and prospects.
Vertical tying is the practice of requiring customers to purchase related products or services together, from the same company.
This practice and others eventually lead to the famous regulation known as Assize of Bread and Ale, which prescribed harsh penalties for bakers that were found cheating their clients or customers.
While many potential customers believed that the smaller computer could run most IBM PC software and an important market for the PCjr was executives who took data home to work on, in practice it proved incompatible with about 60 % of PC applications including WordStar and two programs often used to test PC clones ' compatibility, Lotus 1-2-3 and Microsoft Flight Simulator.
The rules on minimum age for sale of these products are frequently broken so in practice drinking and smoking takes place before the age of majority ; however many UK shops are tightening restrictions on them by asking for identifying documentation from potentially underage customers.
A controversial point is the billing practice in which Highway 407 ETR customer service representatives and even collection agencies may continue to contact customers to pay bills, even in cases where the bill is incorrect or has not been incurred.
Previously, in February 2000, the Ontario government would suspend driver licenses for unpaid 407 ETR bills ; however, this practice was quickly suspended by the Ontario government and the new owner of the highway after receiving many complaints from customers about erroneous billing.
The practice started in the 1890s, at first given only to customers who paid for purchases in cash, to reward those who did not purchase on credit.
256 ) for all of its customers, a practice they had previously only applied to areas where they were legally required.

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