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Page "President of the United States" ¶ 26
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Precedent and for
' A balance must be struck between the need on one side for the legal certainty resulting from the binding effect of previous decisions, and on the other side the avoidance of undue restriction on the proper development of the law ( 1966 Practice Statement ( Judicial Precedent ) by Lord Gardiner L. C.
Precedents in Design: a Computational Model for the Organization of Precedent Knowledge, Design Studies, Vol.
Precedent exists for ending frequent-flyer programs.
Kean has also been criticized for using his role as the chairman of the 9 / 11 Commission in order to make profit, such as his book, Without Precedent.
However, the pamphlet is best known for its discussion of such things as " The Thin End of The Wedge " and " The Dangerous Precedent ":
: The Principle of the Dangerous Precedent is that you should not now do an admittedly right action for fear you, or your equally timid successors, should not have the courage to do right in some future case, which, ex hypothesi, is essentially different, but superficially resembles the present one.
* Campaign Without Precedent: Tom Ammiano's Run for San Francisco Mayor
* CRS Report for Congress " Military Tribunals: The Quirin Precedent ," March 26, 2002
#' Saint-Making ' in Ana Castillo's So Far from God: Medieval Mysticism as Precedent for an Authoritative Chicana Spirituality By: Sauer, Michelle M .; Mester, 2000 ; 29: 72-91.
* Hatching a New Filibuster Precedent: The Senator from Utah's Revisionist history John Dean writes for FindLaw arguing that Orrin Hatch has attempted to mischaracterise the Abe Fortas nomination filibuster.
" Harriet Beecher Stowe's Christian Feminism in the Minister's Wooing: A Precedent for Emily Dickinson.
The type was also used by engineers such as Joseph Armstrong on the Great Western Railway and Francis Webb on the London and North Western Railway – one of the latter's types, the Improved Precedent / Jumbo class Hardwicke famously won the " Race to the North " for the LNWR.

Precedent and when
Section 1 codified the " Tyler Precedent " regarding when a President is removed from office, dies, or resigns.
Precedent confirms that, since, in the three occasions when the 25th Amendment was invoked, there is no record of the Vice President having taken the oath.
Precedent had been established here by other native families of Scotland, something similar having already taken place in Fife ; it was a way of ensuring that the kin-group retained strong locally-based male leadership even when the newly imposed common law of Scotland forced the comital title to pass into the hands of another family.

Precedent and Thomas
* Without Precedent: The Inside Story of the 9 / 11 Commission, by Thomas H Kean and Lee H. Hamilton ( Random House, August 2006 ) ISBN 0-307-26377-0

Precedent and v
Precedent from Murdock v. City of Memphis, 87 U. S. 590 ( 1874 ) and other cases established that the U. S. Supreme Court could not review state cases if there was adequate and independent state ground.

Precedent and .
Precedent and case law figure prominently in the arguments.
Precedent is not binding, with the exception of Supreme Court and Supreme Administrative Court decisions.
Precedent of a United States court of appeals may be overruled only by the court en banc, that is, a session of all the active appellate judges of the circuit, or by the United States Supreme Court.
Precedent viewed against passing time can serve to establish trends, thus indicating the next logical step in evolving interpretations of the law.
* Blish Milling Company ( aka Blish Mill or Blish Flour ) Involved in a 1916 SCOTUS decision setting a Precedent.
Republicans used an argument they called the " Ginsburg Precedent ", which centered on Ginsburg's confirmation hearings.
Co-chairs Kean and Hamilton wrote a book about the constraints they faced as commissioners titled Without Precedent: The Inside Story of the 9 / 11 Commission.
On August 15, 2006, a book by Kean and 9 / 11 Commission Vice Chairman Lee H. Hamilton, titled Without Precedent: The Inside Story of the 9 / 11 Commission, was released regarding the September 11 attacks and the September 11 Commission.
Precedent dictated that a new map had to be issued before the November elections.

Precedent and United
Precedent in United States copyright law as of 1976 is to treat alleged cryptomnesia no differently from deliberate plagiarism.

Precedent and case
* Precedent, a legal case establishing a principle to be adhered to in subsequent rulings

Precedent and by
* Trumping Precedent with Original Meaning: Not as Radical as It Sounds, by Randy Barnett
Other sources note that the theme of Feldstein's story is itself strikingly similarly to the story " Precedent ", published by E. C.

for and privilege
Respect for personality is a privilege and a duty for us as brothers.
How many women had longed for the privilege that was hers.
For the dignity, the influence, and the power of the legislative branch of our Government -- it is a privilege for us to do honor to this great man who represents not alone his own district but all the people of our country.
The amount paid by the oil company to Tri-State for the use of its oil distribution system and the privilege of supplying all the homes, is subject to negotiation but naturally must be profitable to both parties.
For example, one hebephrenic man used to annoy me, month after month, by saying, whenever I got up to leave and made my fairly steoreotyped comment that I would be seeing him on the following day, or whenever, `` You're welcome '', in a notably condescending fashion -- as though it were his due for me to thank him for the privilege of spending the hour with him, and he were thus pointing up my failure to utter a humbly grateful, `` thank you '' to him at the end of each session.
However, a similar privilege was not specifically provided in section 168 for a person acquiring emergency facilities.
Rep. Mac Barber of Commerce is asking the House in a privilege resolution to `` endorse increased federal support for public education, provided that such funds be received and expended '' as state funds.
The Belgians would not fight for the privilege of being the detested pedagogue ; ;
Whenever New England liberalism is reminded of the dramatic confrontation of Parker and the fraternity on January 23, 1843 -- while it may defend the privilege of Chandler Robbins to demand that Parker leave the Association, while it may plead that Dr. N. L. Frothingham had every warrant for stating, `` The difference between Trinitarians and Unitarians is a difference in Christianity ; ;
I praise God for the privilege of being a nurse who has that peace through faith in the Lord Jesus Christ.
Regardless, for Agrippina ’ s seduction, it was a help that she had the niece ’ s privilege of kissing and caressing her paternal uncle.
They did, however, have to pay a tribute tax for this privilege.
She respects male privilege and consistently suppresses her desire for Li Mu Bai due to certain societal obligations.
In early times the privilege of papal election was not reserved to the cardinals, and for centuries the pope was customarily a Roman priest and never a bishop from elsewhere ; to preserve apostolic succession the rite of consecrating the pope as a bishop had to be performed by someone who was already a bishop.
Until the 1460s, it was customary for cardinals to wear a violet or blue cape unless granted the privilege of wearing red when acting on papal business.
Subsequently the French Celestines, with the consent of the Italian superiors of the order, and of Pope Martin V in 1427, obtained the privilege of making new constitutions for themselves, which they did in the 17th century in a series of regulations accepted by the provincial chapter in 1667.
One technique enforces the principle of least privilege to great extent, where an entity has only the privileges that are needed for its function.
Thus, in Wilson v. U. S. ( 1911 ), he asserted that corporate officers could not resist a subpoena for company records by invoking the Fifth Amendment's privilege against self-incrimination.
Nevertheless, in the end, as Derrida pointed out, he made of linguistics " the regulatory model ", and " for essential, and essentially metaphysical, reasons had to privilege speech, and everything that links the sign to phone ".
For instance, the privilege of the Old Town (, ) was upgraded in 1343, while in 1393 it was granted an emporium privilege for grains, metals, and forest products.
Other historians assert that it derives from the valve bugle designed by Michael Saurle ( father ) in Munich in 1832 ( Royal Bavarian privilege for a " chromatic Flügelhorn " 1832 ), which predates Adolphe Sax's work.
In the 18th century, gardens remained a privilege reserved for the upper class.

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