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long and tenure
Throughout their long tenure the Stoics believed that the major tenets of their philosophy derived from the thought of Heraclitus.
In the 2006 offseason, the team signed Preston Wilson and moved Berkman to first base, ending the long tenure of Jeff Bagwell.
Lynch spent the five months preceding the election relentlessly attacking Governor Craig Benson, the first-term Republican incumbent, for what Lynch claimed was a lack of integrity following a long series of scandals during Benson's tenure.
Moench continued for a long tenure, though the title did not again receive the same level of acclaim as the Gulacy period until Gene Day, who had previously been inking the book, took over penciling in # 100 ( 1981 ).
Regardless, Dowiyogo's tenure did not last for long.
During his long tenure, Wiedeking has transformed Porsche into a very efficient and profitable company.
On February 29, after a " long walk in the snow ", Trudeau decided to step down, ending his 15-year tenure as Prime Minister.
During Bradshaw's long tenure, his government slowly moved into a statist approach to economic development.
While the Twenty-Second Amendment generally restricts the President to two terms, there is no similar limitation on the office of Vice President, meaning an eligible person could hold the office as long as voters continued to vote for electors who in turn would renew the Vice President's tenure.
Pardee's tenure did not last long though, for he was fired after posting a 6 10 record in 1980.
Chinese Americans, as a whole, have had a ( relatively ) long tenure in New York City.
Albert had been responsible for giving a rule to the Humiliati during his long tenure as Bishop of Vercelli, and was well-versed in diplomacy, being sent by Pope Innocent III as Papal Legate to what was known as the Eastern Province.
Their long tenure meant that their seniority in the Senate gave South Carolina a good measure of clout in national politics, despite its modest population.
During a long tenure of office, mainly as Chancellor of the Exchequer, he was a key figure in the introduction of many reforms which laid the foundations of the modern welfare state.
Despite Andropov's hard-line stance in Hungary and the numerous banishments and intrigues for which he was responsible during his long tenure as head of the KGB, he has become widely regarded by many commentators as a reformer, especially in comparison with the stagnation and corruption during the later years of his predecessor, Leonid Brezhnev.
Olmsted's tenure as park commissioner in New York was a long struggle to preserve that idea.
One way to promote judicial independence is by granting life tenure or long tenure for judges, which ideally frees them to decide cases and make rulings according to the rule of law and judicial discretion, even if those decisions are politically unpopular or opposed by powerful interests.
The novel tells the story of a much-beloved schoolteacher and his long tenure at Brookfield, a fictional British boys ' public boarding school ( a private school in American terminology ).
Also impeding his progress was the Senate, where the Liberals had a large majority due to their previous long tenure in power.
Most of the underwriters throughout the show's tenure included: Martin Marietta, Lockheed ( soon to merge long after stopping their share of funding ), Prudential Securities ( and its precursor, Prudential-Bache Securities ), Primerica Financial Services, Hilton Hotels Corporation ( and its subsidiary, Conrad International Hotels ), Sperry Corporation, CSX, Enron Corporation, Enron Foundation, Hanson Trust, Unisys, Travelers Insurance, Ameritech ( before the big switch to SBC, which merged AT & T ), MFS Investment Management, Oppenheimer Funds, A. G. Edwards, The Kaufmann Fund, Deloitte and Touche, The Corporation for Public Broadcasting, and all local PBS affiliates and their viewers / contributors.
Mortimer L. Schiff After a long tenure as vice-president of the BSA beginning in 1910, during which he also appeared on the cover of Time magazine on February 14, 1927, Mortimer L. Schiff was elected as president in 1931, but died after serving one month and Walter Head returned until 1946.
However, at the time the following references have been made, there is no plausible reason to believe the content indicated appears without the consent of any copyright holders ( express or through knowledgeable acquiescence ) on account of the very public and popular nature of these hosting sites and the very long unmolested tenure of the particular items at issue.
However, the 100th AD's tenure at Whiteman did not last long as SAC inactivated the unit on July 26, 1991.

long and wartime
" During the Russo-Japanese War in 1904, the commander of the torpedo boat destroyer IJN Akatsuki described " being in command of a destroyer for a long period, especially in wartime ... is not very good for the health.
A great number of wartime airfields exist with various lengths, usually built into roads, and are usually less than 1000 m long )
Subsequent German wartime aircraft design took account of the discovery, evident in the slim mid-fuselage of aircraft such as the Messerschmitt P. 1112, P. 1106, and the indisputably wasp-waisted Focke-Wulf Fw 1000x3 type A long range bomber, but also apparent in delta wing designs like the Henschel Hs 135.
Thus began a long wartime association between the two different personalities.
When the film was released, the U. S. government's Office of Censorship declined to approve it for export overseas during wartime, because of the " long sequence showing life in a prison chain gang which is most objectionable because of the brutality and inhumanity with which the prisoners are treated.
On February 23, 1942, not long after the outbreak of war in the Pacific, the Japanese submarine I-17 surfaced offshore and lobbed 16 shells at the Ellwood Oil Field, about west of Santa Barbara, in the first wartime attack by an enemy power on the U. S. mainland since the War of 1812.
During World War I, the town ’ s mills all obtained federal wartime contracts and did well financially, but long before the Great Depression hit, many factories owners were already laying off employees, seeking mergers with other companies, or looking for buyers for their facilities.
* Veteran, a person with long experience in a particular area, most often in military service during wartime
Working from memory alone ( he had destroyed his wartime notes upon completion of the corresponding parts of Text I ), he was able to complete this " Text II ", 400, 000 words long, in three months.
The Iron Cross has a long history, having been awarded as a military wartime decoration for all ranks since 1813, and earlier associated with the Teutonic knights.
During wartime, when large numbers of ships and men might be lost in battle, most passed midshipman would be promoted in a year or two, but during peacetime the wait might be so long that the midshipman would eventually be considered too old and lose his chance for a commission.
In the long run the wartime experiences of the numerous commissions modernized public welfare, and set the stage for large -- scale community philanthropy in America based on fund raising campaigns and private donations.
With the benefit of hindsight, the consensus on the German wartime nuclear program is that it was a long way from producing a bomb, even had the Norwegian heavy water been produced and shipped at the maximum rate.
He allowed that wartime circumstances might justify a different understanding, but that Nebraska had not demonstrated sufficient need " in time of peace and domestic tranquility " to justify " the consequent infringement of rights long freely enjoyed.
The wartime, one mile long runway was removed and a new almost two mile long one was constructed on totally new, deep foundations, strong enough to take the Boeing B-47 Stratojet nuclear bomber.
Another German long range U-boat was the Type IX D2 " Monsun ", used in the Indian Ocean and Far East Area based in Penang ( Occupied Malaya ) during wartime.
Most famously, the British Royal Navy held command of the sea for long periods from the 18th to the early 20th century, allowing Britain and its allies to trade and to move troops and supplies easily in wartime while its enemies could not ( the importance of which is reflected in the famous British patriotic song, " Rule, Britannia !," which contains the exhortation, " Rule Britannia!
" I needed a hobby, the wartime evenings in the black-out were long and dark, so I started to furnish the house, to make carpets and curtains for it.

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