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Page "Linacre College, Oxford" ¶ 23
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Common and Room's
The Phoenix Common Room's continuous history until the present day is a matter of great pride to the college.

Common and elected
On 8 July 1970, he was elected Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, but resigned in 1972 because he supported entry to the Common Market, while the party opposed it.
The Lord Mayor is elected each year at Michaelmas ' Common Hall ', and takes office on the Friday before the second Saturday in November, at ' The Silent Ceremony '.
The Lord Mayor is elected by Common Hall, all Liverymen of the City's Livery Companies.
However, the Alderman was appointed by the Court of Aldermen and no Common Councilmen were ever elected.
Therefore, between 1750 and 1978 Southwark had two persons ( the Alderman and the Recorder ) who were members of the City's Court of Aldermen and Common Council who were elected neither by the City freemen or by the Southwark electorate but appointed by the Court of Aldermen.
* Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas ( elected )
The elected Common Pleas Court include: Judge Nadine Allen, Judge Kim Wilson Burke, Judge Ethna M. Cooper, Judge Pat DeWine, Judge Dennis S. Helmick
The city's elected officials consist of the mayor, the clerk-treasurer and a seven-member Common Council.
Aldermen are elected from eight aldermanic districts to the Common Council.
The 8 member Common Council is the elected body that represents the citizens of New Berlin.
In 1821, the Common Council, which included elected members, gained the authority to choose the mayor.
The Common Cuckoo's behaviour was firstly observed and described by Aristotle and the combination of behaviour and anatomical adaptation by Edward Jenner, who was elected as Fellow of the Royal Society in 1788 for this work.
Finally, in 1376, four representatives of the " mystery " or trade are elected to the Common Council in London.
the title " Baron of the Cinque Ports " is now reserved for Freemen elected by the Mayor, Jurats, and Common Council of the Ports to attend a Coronation, at which they hold the canopy above a new monarch, and is solely honorary in nature.
In 1995, after being elected on the " Common Sense Revolution ", a Reagan-style program of tax cuts and government cutbacks, Eves was appointed Harris ' Minister of Finance and Deputy Premier.
Reuther remained active in the Socialist Party and in 1937 failed in his attempt to be elected to the Detroit Common Council.
Automatically granted United States citizenship, he was elected to the Los Angeles Common Council in 1853, but he did not assume office.
b ) The Chief Commoner who is elected by the Common Councillors alone and serves for one year ; until recently chaired all of the Bridge House Estates and property matters committees but is now honorific.
However, this position did not capture the electorate's imagination, and they switched to supporting the UDA's Common Sense position, which suggested an assembly and executive for the region, elected by proportional representation.
The police authority is the Common Council of the City, and unlike other territorial forces in England there will not be an elected commissioner replacing that police authority by way of the Police Reform and Social Responsibility Act 2011.
While at Queen's, he was elected to the presidency of the Junior Common Room as a Conservative.
He was elected President of the college Junior Common Room in his second year.
When Chartism again gained momentum he was elected in 1847 MP for Nottingham and organised the Chartist meeting on Kennington Common, London, in 1848.
Soon after, he was elected to represent Salem in the Massachusetts General Court and served as a justice in the Essex County Court of Common Pleas.

Common and executive
Common law ( also known as case law or precedent ) is law developed by judges through decisions of courts and similar tribunals ( as opposed to statutes adopted through the legislative process or regulations issued by the executive branch ).
Common use of the phrase " The Great Depression " for the 1930s crisis is most frequently attributed to British economist Lionel Robbins, whose 1934 book The Great Depression is credited with ' formalizing ' the phrase, though US president Herbert Hoover is widely credited with having ' popularized ' the term / phrase, informally referring to the downturn as a " depression ", with such uses as " Economic depression cannot be cured by legislative action or executive pronouncement ", ( December 1930, Message to Congress ) and " I need not recount to you that the world is passing through a great depression " ( 1931 ).
The mayor is the city's chief executive officer and chairs the Common Council and the Board of Public Works and Safety.
Beginning in 1903, officer training of military and engineering students was reformed by the Selborne-Fisher scheme, and engineering and executive officer candidates began to enter the Navy in the same way, which was termed ' Common Entry '.
He joined the executive group of the party behind François Mitterrand, and participated notably in the negotiations of the Common Program of the Union of the Left.
Common Cause's current president and chief executive officer is Robert W. Edgar, a former Democratic congressman from Pennsylvania.
A chamber of commerce executive who also served on the Rapid City Common Council, Brady moved to Texas to work for the Beaumont Chamber of Commerce and later the South Montgomery County Woodlands Chamber of Commerce.

Common and committee
Scheme predates CL, and comes not only from the same Lisp tradition but from some of the same engineers — Guy L. Steele, with whom Gerald Jay Sussman designed Scheme, chaired the standards committee for Common Lisp.
The North and South American Committees of the AOU and the IOC have voted on or before July 2011 to split the American forms into a new species Common Gallinule, however, no other committee has voted to change taxonomy yet.
After graduating he became a state civil servant, working in the Common Market division of the Ministry of Economy between 1967 and 1969, when he became the Permanent Secretary of the tariff committee.
Many UK halls also have a JCR ( Junior Common Room ) committee, usually made up of second year students who stayed in that hall during their first year.
* The public rights in Boston Common: Being the report of a committee of citizens.
On September 12, 2006, Taft co-signed ( along with 28 other retired military or defense department officials ) a letter to the chairman and ranking member of the Senate Armed Services committee in which he stated his belief that the Bush Administration's attempt to redefine Common Article 3 of the Geneva Convention " poses a grave threat " to U. S. service members.
The SRC does however contain a special postgraduate committee and maintains the physical Junior and Middle Common Rooms, both in the Hild Building.
Shortly after, Priestley and most of the moderate members left, and under the guidance of Richard Acland the committee merged with his organisation ' Forward March ' to create the Common Wealth Party in July 1942.
He chaired the committee that wrote the first Presbyterian printed liturgy, The Book of Common Worship of 1906.
The X3J13 committee was formed in 1986 to draw up an ANSI Common Lisp standard based on the first edition of the book Common Lisp the Language ( also known as " CLtL ", or " CLtL1 "), by Guy L. Steele, Jr., which was previously a de facto standard for the language.
These issue writeups, while not themselves part of the standard, were deemed sufficiently useful for the Common Lisp HyperSpec to include and cross-reference them for the benefit of readers, providing information about the original intent of the committee in its decisions.
This usage of the term " signal " is different than the typical operating system's notion of signals ( except on Lisp machines where this variant usage of the term evolved ); the operating system notion of signaling was out of scope for this committee, and consequently was not addressed in the ANSI Common Lisp standard.
The final standard produced by the X3J13 committee was published as American National Standard X3. 226, and also in hypertext form as the Common Lisp HyperSpec.
The book Common Lisp the Language, although mostly authored by Guy L. Steele, Jr., was the product of an ad hoc committee that had formed around 1980 and had worked collaboratively to produce the original de facto standard for Common Lisp prior to the formation of X3J13.
Documents published by X3J13 were later used, together with quotations from certain committee members, in the production of the Second Edition, which was released in 1990, allowing the Common Lisp community a way to preview many features that were expected to appear in the committee's final standard document.
* Working files for the X3J13 Ansi Common Lisp committee
This committee was composed of Ellesmere, Popham, Thomas Fleming, two judges from the Court of Common Pleas and two from the Court of King's Bench.

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