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Public and execution
Public disorder regarding the Roses dynasties was always a threat until the 17th century Stuart / Bourbon re-alignment occasioned by a series of events such as the execution of Lady Jane Grey, despite her brother in law, Leicester's reputation in Holland, the Rising of the North ( in which the old Percy-Neville feud and even anti-Scottish sentiment was discarded on account of religion ; Northern England shared the same Avignonese bias as the Scottish court, on par with Valois France and Castile, which became the backbone of the Counter-Reformation, with Protestants being solidly anti-Avignonese ) and death of Elizabeth I of England without children.
Although he actually disagreed with the use of the death penalty in principle, in October 1922 he enacted a Public Safety Bill, which allowed for the execution of anyone who was captured bearing arms against the state or aiding armed attacks on state forces.
On November 15, 1990, Public Law 101-551, " The National Capital Transportation Amendments of 1990 ", authorized an additional $ 1. 3 billion in federal funds for construction of the remaining of the system, completed via the execution of full funding grant agreements, with a 63 % federal / 37 % local matching.
On his return, Billaud-Varenne was included to the Reign of Terror's Committee of Public Safety, which had decreed the mass arrest of all suspects and the establishment of a revolutionary army, caused the extraordinary criminal tribunal to be named officially " Revolutionary Tribunal " ( on 29 October 1793 ), demanded the execution of Marie Antoinette, and then attacked Jacques René Hébert and Danton.
The brochure for the new center provided a description of the concept: “ Public diplomacy … deals with the influence of public attitudes on the formation and execution of foreign policies.
Public torture and execution was a method the sovereign deployed to express his or her power, and it did so through the ritual of investigation and the ceremony of execution — the reality and horror of which was supposed to express the omnipotence of the sovereign but actually revealed that the sovereign's power depended on the participation of the people.
The Hangman's Tree Public House was named after an elm tree that grew opposite the public house ; it was said to have been used for at least one public execution in the 18th or 19th century.
In 1946, an execution of anti-communist activists took place there ( Public execution in Dębica ( 1946 )).
On September 16, 1968, Rothko executed a two-page will, drafted by and its execution supervised by his friend Bernard Reis, an unlicensed law-school graduate and Certified Public Accountant, leaving all of his residual estate to the non-profit Rothko Foundation which Rothko organized shortly before his death.
The work was taken for execution by the Andhra Pradesh Public Works Department as a deposit work in 1964 and was completed and commissioned in June 1966.
According to the results of a Public Information Act request submitted by Texas Moratorium Network to the office of Governor Rick Perry, 12, 201 people contacted the governor asking him to stop Newton's execution and 10 people contacted him in support of her execution.

Public and woman
Public interest was high, and Condit's reputation suffered from the contrast between his " pro-family " politics, adultery with a woman two years younger than his daughter, and his attempts to mislead the police regarding the nature of his relationship with her.
* Christine Reynolds — First woman to hold a post in the Tennessee Cabinet, Commissioner of Public Welfare under Governor Frank G. Clement 1953-1959
An important piece of legislation carried through was the Public Schools Act 1866, introduced by Parkes, of which an essential part was that no man or woman would be allowed to act as a teacher who had not been properly trained in teaching.
She then became the first woman in Louisiana elected to the Public Service Commission, where she served seven years, where she was chosen to preside as the first woman chair of the PSC.
She was appointed Iraq's Minister for Municipalities & Public Works in September 2003, the only woman minister on the interim Iraqi Governing Council.
In a poll conducted by the ­ The All-Russian Center for the Study of Public Opinion in 2012, respondents named Oxana Fedorova the most beautiful woman in Russia.
She became the first woman elected to statewide office in Florida by winning a seat on the Florida Public Service Commission in 1972.
Also with a million books on its shelves, a circulation of over eight million a year, and the good will of the entire population of Cleveland, each man, woman and child having been sold the idea that the Public Library is his own private library, to serve him according to his needs ".
Public toilets may be segregated by gender as indicated by written signs or pictograms of a man or a woman or may be available without distinction ( see Gender-neutral toilet ).
* Grace Hartman ( trade unionist ) ( 1918 – 1993 ), former president of the Canadian Union of Public Employees and the first woman to lead a major labour union in North America
* Lane Carlson ( Alpha Delta )-Former head of Public Affairs of US Army ; First woman to be named full Colonel in Army ( 1968 ).
Hennicot-Schoepges was elected Mayor of Walferdange and then moved on to become the first woman President of Luxembourg ’ s Parliament followed by her appointment as Luxembourg ’ s Minister of Culture, Higher Education and Research and Public Works.
Dr. Anna Wessels Williams ( 1863 – 1954 ) worked as a bacteriologist at the first municipal diagnostic laboratory in the United States, helped develop the diphtheria antitoxin and was the first woman to be elected chair of the laboratory section of the American Public Health Association.
In 1931 she was elected to an office in the laboratory section of the American Public Health Association and the following year became the first woman appointed chair of the section.
* Rosemary Rue (? th-2001 ): first woman president of the Faculty of Community Medicine ( now the Faculty of Public Health ) and pioneer of women in medicine
* On April 10, 1989, the Graduate Center of the City University of New York inaugurated The Lucille Lortel Distinguished Professorial Chair in Theatre, the first theatre chair to be named for a woman, and later in the spring she was honored by The New York Public Library as a Lion of the Performing Arts, a distinctive group of people whose work is well represented in the vast collections on dance, music, and theatre in The Performing Arts Research Center at Lincoln Center.
To further illustrate her opinion that there was no discrimination in regard to sex in the American Library Association, she refers to Miss Caroline M. Hewins, librarian of the Hartford Public Library, who was the first woman to ask a question before a meeting of the American Library Association in 1877, the association ’ s second meeting, and Miss Mary A. Bean, the librarian of the Brookline Public Library, who was the first woman to appear on a library program, by reading a paper on “ The evil of unlimited freedom in the use of juvenile fiction ” in the 1879 meeting in Boston.
Her many other trail-blazing accomplishments included becoming the first female clerk for the State Assembly's Judiciary Committee ( 1880 ); the first woman appointed to the State Board of Corrections ; the first female licensed Notary Public ; the first woman named director of a major bank ; and, in 1930, the first woman to run for Governor of California, at the age of 81.

Public and by
On the one hand, the Public Health Service declared as recently as October 26 that present radiation levels resulting from the Soviet shots `` do not warrant undue public concern '' or any action to limit the intake of radioactive substances by individuals or large population groups anywhere in the Aj.
Recognizing the truth of the statement by the Institute of Public Administration that `` Metropolian Planning ( in Rhode Island ) means, or should mean, state planning '', the state guide plan will take into account the metropolitan nature of many of Rhode Island's problems.
From its inception in 1920 with the passage of Public Law 236, 66th Congress, the purpose of the vocational rehabilitation program has been to assist the States, by means of grants-in-aid, to return disabled men and women to productive, gainful employment.
The Colonial Light and Power Company was succeeded by the Vermont Hydro-Electric Corporation, which in turn was absorbed by the Central Vermont Public Service Corporation.
This opinion is supported by one of the nation's leading psychiatrists, Dr. Maurice E. Linden, director of the Mental Health Division of the Philadelphia Department of Public Health.
Public libraries in Nassau County have been lending books to each other by mail for a quarter-century, but the system enables this process to operate on an organized and far more comprehensive basis.
Public displays such as public weeping for dead celebrities and participation in demonstrations may be influenced by a desire to be seen as altruistic.
This matter is addressed by the use of the Apostille, a means of certifying the legalization of a document for international use under the terms of the 1961 Hague Convention Abolishing the Requirement of Legalization for Foreign Public Documents.
Public demonstrations usually take place without government interference, though one rally in November 2000 by an opposition party was followed by the arrest and imprisonment for a month of its organizer.
Public entities must comply with Title II regulations by the U. S. Department of Justice.
Public swimming pool owners and operators must gear up for compliance with the 2010 Standards for Accessible Design with regard to existing swimming pools, wading pools and spas by January 31, 2013.
; Assault on a secure training centre custody officer: This offence is created by section 13 ( 1 ) of the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994 ( c. 33 ).
As Chairman of the Committee on Public Expenditures, he also attempted but failed to reduce by one-fifth all federal salaries over $ 1, 000.
These bills were endorsed by public health and medical organizations, including the American Holistic Nurses ’ Association, the American Medical Association, and the American Public Health Association ( APHA ).
: The American style is used by most American newspapers, publishing houses and style guides in the United States and Canada ( including the Modern Language Association's MLA Style Manual, the American Psychological Association's APA Publication Manual, the University of Chicago's The Chicago Manual of Style, the American Institute of Physics's AIP Style Manual, the American Medical Association's AMA Manual of Style, the American Political Science Association's APSA Style Manual, the Associated Press ' The AP Guide to Punctuation and the Canadian Public Works ' The Canadian Style ).
Out of the 17 parliamentary votes considered by the Public Whip website to concern equal rights for homosexuals, Widdecombe took the opposing position in 15 cases, not being present at the other two votes.
It is created by section 3 of the Public Order Act 1986 which provides:
* Belgium, entry on the Public Diplomacy wiki monitored by the USC Center on Public Diplomacy
He was presented with the Medal for Distinguished Public Service by Secretary of Defense William S. Cohen in 2001.
Public entry to the island is by special-use permit from the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service only and is generally restricted to scientists and educators.
It is part of Barbados ' political system and supported by the Public service.
Public radio in Belgium is controlled by the VRT for the Dutch speaking region ( Flanders and Brussels ) the RTBF for the French speaking region ( Wallonia and Brussels ) and the BRF for the German community in Belgium.

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