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Page "belles_lettres" ¶ 270
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Professionally and lawyer
Professionally, McCreadie is a lawyer, called to the Ontario Bar in 2001.

Professionally and is
Professionally, it affected his ability to maintain an erection, as is apparent from his flaccid performance in the 1980 film Insatiable.
* Professionally, " what it means to criticize " has become a much more specialized and technical matter, where " inside knowledge " is required to understand the criticism truly ; this development is linked to the circumstance, that the right to criticize, or the propriety ( appropriate use ) of criticism, is regarded nowadays much more as depending on one's position, or on the context of the situation (" I would like to say something, but I am not in a position to criticize ").
Professionally, Rogers is a senior partner with the Rogers & Duncan Law Firm.
Professionally he is a barrister-at-law, the first on the order of precedence of Senior Counsels in Hong Kong.
Professionally, he is a professor in Computer Science at the National Taiwan University.
" Sputnikmusic said, " Professionally written and recorded, Bruce Dickinson once again pours his soul into his music, and the result is spectacular ," and went on to deem it " one of the best metal albums of the late 90's.
Professionally, Rodgers is the NFL's all-time career leader in passer rating during both the regular season with a rating of 104. 1, and the postseason with a rating of 105. 5 – among passers with at least 1, 500 and 150 pass attempts respectively.
Professionally, he is a Chartered Banker, Chartered Corporate Secretary and a Chartered Accountant.
Professionally, he is a member of the Society of College and University Planners, the American Planning Association, and of course the American Institute of Architects.
Professionally he is a theoretical mathematician, working as a project manager and security expert in the online gaming and lottery branch.
Professionally, Ansoff is known worldwide for his research in three specific areas:

Professionally and with
Professionally, his career with WJM-TV ended in the final episode.
Professionally, Chauvenet worked with computers as a civilian employee of the U. S. Department of Defense from 1948 until his retirement.
As veteran screenwriter Nikolay Erdman put it ( in conversation with Lyubimov ), " Professionally, I can well understand how Mayakovsky or Seryozha < Yesenin > were doing it.
Professionally, he served as president of Merritt, Petway, Mills & Hockaday, an accounting & auditing firm with offices in Zebulon and Raleigh, prior to being elected State Auditor.
Professionally she remains dedicated to promoting issues of disability rights and empowerment for individuals with disabilities in resource-poor regions.
" Professionally, Benton and Corday attempt to outdo each other several times, and both are eventually given the opportunity to work with Dr. Robert Romano.
Professionally, Smith joined with Ben Goodrich and Webster Street to found the legal firm of Goodrich, Street & Smith.

Professionally and by
Professionally operated support groups are facilitated by professionals who do not share the problem of the members, such as social workers, psychologists, or members of the clergy.
Professionally, building models are used by architects and salesmen.
Professionally, Dowson was a machinist as a youth and later a lithographer and printer by training, but spent almost his entire working life as a full-time paid staffer ( at times the only one ) for the organization.
Professionally, he was survived by Lou Scheimer and his colleagues at Filmation Associates.

Professionally and himself
Professionally, he stayed at Club Brugge for 13 years, endearing himself to his country when he turned down an offer from Italian giant A. C. Milan.

Professionally and .
Professionally, an architect's decisions affect public safety, and thus an architect must undergo specialized training consisting of advanced education and a practicum ( or internship ) for practical experience to earn a license to practice architecture.
Professionally raced karts typically weigh, complete without driver.
Professionally, Muncie was once home to a National Football League team.
Professionally, Zündel worked as a graphic artist and printer.
Professionally, Lamport worked as a computer scientist at Massachusetts Computer Associates from 1970 to 1977, SRI International from 1977 to 1985, and Digital Equipment Corporation and Compaq from 1985 to 2001.
Professionally, Di Rupo was at the same time cabinet member and then Deputy Head of Cabinet of the minister of finance of that time of the Walloon region and consequently Deputy Head of Cabinet of the minister of finance and energy of the Walloon region at that time Philippe Busquin ( 1981 – 85 ) and superintendent of the energy-inspection of the ministry of the Walloon region.
Professionally printed material typically does not indent the first paragraph, but indents those that follow.
Professionally, O ' Duffy became the first Commissioner of the Garda Síochána, the police force of the new Irish state.
Professionally and socially, she has used variants of her name.
Professionally, while a covert CIA officer, she used her given first name and her maiden surname, " Valerie Plame.
Professionally fitted belts that mount to the vehicle's chassis are the safest option.
Professionally, Hayakawa was a linguist, psychologist, semanticist, teacher and writer.
Professionally, Carrington rose to become CEO of the Sirchie Group, a company specializing in evidence-collection gear for police and top-dollar security products for businesses.

lawyer and is
It is but justice to Mr. Steele for us to add that, in the above remarks, nothing is intended to his disparagement, either as a lawyer or as a printer.
Mr. Smith, like the present Secretary General, is a lawyer ; ;
Sheeran, a lawyer and former FBI man is running against the Republican organization's candidate, Freeholder William MacDonald, for the vacancy left by the resignation of Neil Duffy, now a member of the State Board of Tax Appeals.
`` My experience as public safety commissioner '', Roos said, `` has shown me that the office of sheriff is best filled by a man with law enforcement experience, and preferably one who is a lawyer.
The 53-year-old Shea, a prominent corporation lawyer with a sports background, is generally recognized as the man most responsible for the imminent return of a National League club to New York.
What otherwise could `` the lawyer, doctor, minister, the men of science and letters '' do when told that they had `` become the cherubim and seraphim and the three archangels who stood before the golden throne of the merchant, and continually cried, ' Holy, holy, holy is the Almighty Dollar ' ``??
If a defendant has been convicted and can prove that his lawyer did not adequately handle his case and that there is a reasonable probability that the result of the trial would have been different had the lawyer given competent representation, he is entitled to a new trial.
In many other jurisdictions it is for the defense lawyer to mitigate on his client's behalf, and the defendant himself will rarely have the opportunity to speak.
The lawyer is an officer of the court and knows that a false swearing by him, if found out, could be grounds for severe penalty up to and including disbarment.
Equally, the acceptance that a lawyer is an officer of the court ( for swearing the affidavit ) is not a given.
* Atonement – Wesley's atonement is a hybrid of the penal substitution theory and the governmental theory of Hugo Grotius, a lawyer and one of the Remonstrants.
* Attorney ( England and Wales ), a person, who may be but is not necessarily a lawyer, who is authorised to act on someone else's behalf in either a business or a personal matter
Middle aged Fredrik Egerman is a successful lawyer.
The reality is that Micheline Musseli Pozzo di Borgo, a French aristocrat who at 20 was France's youngest lawyer ever, brought considerable wealth to her marriage to Lerner and lost most of it through him, including nearly $ 600, 000 from the sale of her Parisian apartment, which Lerner placed in investments that either failed or were looted by him during periods of financial desperation.

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