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Juries and up
Nominating Juries may select up to five nominees in each category.
Voters are made up of three groups: GLAAD staff and board, GLAAD Alliance and Media Circle members, and GLAAD volunteers & allies ( which include former Honorees, media industry allies, volunteers from the " Nominating Juries " and " Event Production Teams ").

Juries and their
Juries are often instructed to avoid learning about the case from any source other than the trial ( such as from media accounts ) and to not attempt to conduct their own investigations ( such as independently visiting a crime scene ).
These manors are still constituted by the City under a Bailiff and Steward with their Courts Leet and View of Frankpledge Juries and Officers which still meet-their annual assembly being held in November under the present High Steward ( the Recorder of London ).
Juries are not told this " rule " but essentially use their common sense to decide what an ordinarily careful person would have done under the circumstances.
At the end of the year, the Nominating Juries submit their list of recommended nominees to GLAAD's staff and Board of Directors for approval.

Juries and common
Juries are most common in common law adversarial-system jurisdictions.
Juries are less common in court systems outside the Anglo-American common law tradition.

Juries and by
Juries were appointed by lot.
Juries are selected from a jury panel which is picked at random by the county registrar from the electoral register.
The principal statute regulating the selection, obligations and conduct of juries is the Juries Act 1976 as amended by the Civil Law ( Miscellaneous Provisions ) Act 2008, which scrapped the upper age limit of 70.
New Zealand previously required jury verdicts to be passed unanimously, but since the passing of the Criminal Procedure Bill in 2009 the Juries Act 1981 has permitted verdicts to be passed by a majority of one less than the full jury ( that is an 11-1 or a 10-1 majority ) under certain circumstances.
Juries have granted acquittals in 15-20 % of cases, compared with less than 1 % in cases decided by judges.
Juries may be dismissed and skeptical juries have been dismissed on the verge of verdicts, and acquittals are frequently overturned by higher courts.
Juries are composed of jurors ( also sometimes known as jurymen ), who are by definition layman finders of fact, not professionals.
Juries were replaced by a tribunal of a professional judges and two lay assessors that were dependable party actors.
Juries were packed by hand-selecting or by bribing the jury so as to return the desired verdict.
* The extensive 1898 Local Government Act abolished the old landlord-dominated Grand Juries and replaced them by forty-nine county, urban and rural district councils, managed by Irish people for the administration of local affairs.
Juries consist of 15, and verdicts are decided by simple majority.
The fourth part of the Courts Act governs the selection of juries and related rules ; it has since been repealed by the Juries Act 1974.
Juries are composed of writers who were recommended by The Authors ’ Committee ; invitations are issued by the administrative staff based upon these recommendations.
Nominees are selected by GLAAD " Nominating Juries " consisting of over 90 volunteers with interest and expertise in the particular category they are judging.
Juries have granted acquittals in 15-20 % of cases, compared with less than 1 % in cases decided by judges.
Juries may be dismissed and skeptical juries have been dismissed on the verge of verdicts, and acquittals are frequently overturned by higher courts.
*: Juries ; Trial by Jury
The writ was finally abolished by the Juries Act 1825, except as regards jurors guilty of embracery.

Juries and such
The first statutory requirements for special jurors were introduced in the County Juries Act of 1825, which required such jurors to be merchants, bankers, esquires, or persons of higher degree.

should and weigh
He believed they should weigh the consequences of the policies being enacted.
The line was perceived as a slap at NBC Nightly News main anchor John Chancellor, who due to his background as a foreign correspondent, felt the network should weigh its news more heavily toward world events, and had kept Franco's deathwatch at the top of the headlines.
For example, the first 30 ' of a 6wt fly line should weigh between 152-168 grains, with the optimal weight being 160 grains.
However, reliance on a signed form should not undermine the basis of the doctrine in giving the patient an opportunity to weigh and respond to the risk.
With noninsulin-dependent diabetes, people have a greater risk of getting the disease if they weigh a lot more ( 20 percent or more ) than they should.
In fact, the army had stipulated a laden weight of including four battle-dressed troops, which meant that the vehicle itself should not weigh more than.
It states that when making a decision, one should make a hard-headed calculation of the extra costs one will incur and weigh these against its extra advantages.
Male Ridgebacks should stand at the withers and weigh about FCI Standard ); females should be tall and about in weight.
In 1996 the pageant held a phone-in poll asking the public to weigh in on whether or not the Swimsuit competition should be continued.
According to the OH & S regulations, a woman should not lift more than 15 kilograms ( 33 lbs ), which is only the minimum gross weight of a standard 12-bottle carton, which can weigh up to 20 kg for some types of bottles.
" Equal consideration of interests " is the name of a moral principle that states that one should both include all affected interests when calculating the rightness of an action and weigh those interests equally.
They also claim the car should weigh in at around, making it a true light-weight sports car.
Holstein heifers should be bred by 15 months of age, when they weigh over 360 kg.
When someone talks about how our method of selecting the head of state is undignified, he should first weigh the consequences of a direct vote .”
: " Before undergoing a refractive procedure, you should carefully weigh the risks and benefits based on your own personal value system, and try to avoid being influenced by friends that have had the procedure or doctors encouraging you to do so.
An average member of the breed should measure at the withers and weigh between.
* Weight: Being the equivalent of 1 kg to each 5 cm in height, i. e. a 25 cm high dog should weigh approximately 5 kg and a 30 cm high dog should weigh 6 kg.
This effort was suspended until a referendum could be held in 2009, allowing voters a chance to weigh in on the issue of whether they should continue to be encouraged to support industry by purchasing plastic bags without considering disposal costs.
The black box warning emphasizes that lindane should not be used on premature infants and individuals with known uncontrolled seizure disorders, and should be used with caution in infants, children, the elderly, and individuals with other skin conditions ( e. g., dermatitis, psoriasis ) and people who weigh less than 110 lbs ( 50 kg ) as they may be at risk of serious neurotoxicity.

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