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privilege and was
How many women had longed for the privilege that was hers.
However, a similar privilege was not specifically provided in section 168 for a person acquiring emergency facilities.
Regardless, for Agrippina ’ s seduction, it was a help that she had the niece ’ s privilege of kissing and caressing her paternal uncle.
He was reckoned by some ancient authors as one of the Seven Sages of Greece, and it is said that he was initiated into the Eleusinian Mysteries of the Great Goddess, a privilege denied to those who did not speak fluent Greek.
Fleming was the first to discover the properties of the active substance, giving him the privilege of naming it: penicillin.
In line with the statement that Nabonidus " entrusted the kingship " to Belshazzar in his absence, there is evidence that Belshazzar's name was used with his father's in oath formulas, that he was able to pass edicts, lease farmlands, and receive the " royal privilege " to eat the food offered to the gods.
The last attempt was in 2000, when the project was rejected by the Constitutional Court, because it allocated funds from the national budget, which, under the Chilean Constitution, is a privilege of the President.
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.
In honor of this event, the Colonna family was granted the privilege of using the imperial pointed crown on top of their coat of arms.
By prescribing recent advances in medicine, the Boston ministers modified the doctrine of theological pathogenesis in an attempt to maintain the old order according to which it was the clergy ’ s duty and privilege to interpret illnesses and their cures.
" This was an unprecedented step by Eisenhower to protect communication beyond the confines of a cabinet meeting, and soon became a tradition known as Executive privilege.
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.
In comparison, when “ white privilegewas used, white participants felt more collectively responsible for the harm done, which increased collective guilt.
The exclusive privilege of a guild to produce certain goods or provide certain services was similar in spirit and character with the original patent systems that surfaced in England in 1624.
The privilege was waiting for me.
The proclaimed Roman Catholic dogma states " that the most Blessed Virgin Mary, in the first instance of her conception, by a singular grace and privilege granted by Almighty God, in view of the merits of Jesus Christ, the Saviour of the human race, was preserved free from all stain of original sin.

privilege and first
* Beowulf's landing, an awkward reception at first, and stay at Heorot, being begged to stay there to fight king Hrothgar's enemies paralleling Aeneas ' landing and stay at Carthage, again, awkward at first, including being begged to stay there to fight the queen's enemies, but the hero decides to leave in spite of being promised great wealth and privilege.
Ribbentrop used this privilege to go through the incoming diplomatic messages, snatching certain messages, taking them to Hitler and having a reply written without Neurath or von Bülow being informed first.
The first is executive privilege, which allows the president to withhold from disclosure any communications made directly to the president in the performance of executive duties.
George Washington first claimed privilege when Congress requested to see Chief Justice John Jay's notes from an unpopular treaty negotiation with Great Britain.
Plutarch said the inhabitants of Caria carried the emblem of the rooster on the end of their lances and relates that origin to Artaxerxes, who awarded a Carian who was said to have killed Cyrus the Younger at the battle of Cunaxa in 401 B. C " the privilege of carrying ever after a golden cock upon his spear before the first ranks of the army in all expeditions " and the Carians also wore crested helmets at the time of Herodotus, for which reason " the Persians gave the Carians the name of cocks ".
On 12 April 2007, Pete Tong again had the privilege of giving the world the very first preview of a Chemicals track.
Janus, however, has the privilege of being invoked first in rites, since in his power are the beginnings of things ( prima ).
President Bush acknowledged this by beginning his speech with the words, " Tonight, I have a high privilege and distinct honor of my own — as the first President to begin the State of the Union message with these words: Madam Speaker ".
In most jurisdictions, only two types of objections are allowed: The first is to assert a privilege and the second is to object to the form of the question asked.
By exception the three surviving lodges that formed the world's first known Grand Lodge in London ( today called the United Grand Lodge of England ) have the unique privilege to operate as time immemorial i. e. without such warrant ; only one other lodge operates without a warrant-this is the Grand Stewards ' Lodge in London, although it is not also entitled to the " time immemorial " title.
Strafford arrived in Ireland in 1633 as Lord Deputy, and at first successfully deprived Boyle of much of his privilege and income.
The town was first mentioned in 1408 when Prince Alexander the Good of Moldavia ( 1400 – 1432 ) listed the customs points in the principality in his privilege for Polish merchants.
Henry James discusses his concerns about " the romantic privilege of the ' first person '" in his preface to The Ambassadors, calling it " the darkest abyss of romance.
The first issuance of a papal privilege granting a monastery freedom from episcopal oversight was that of Pope Honorius I to Bobbio Abbey, one of Columbanus's institutions.
This was the first government to do so in the British Empire and three years before the ' Persons Case ' decision of the Privy Council in London would grant the same privilege to women throughout the Empire.
" Speaking about the best and worst part about playing a Star Trek captain, she said: " The best thing was simply the privilege and the challenge of being able to take a shot at the first female captain, transcending stereotypes that I was very familiar with.
Myrtilus was offered as bribe the privilege of the first night with Hippodameia.
In an otherwise seemingly thorough account, Cicero makes no mention of Bona Dea's May festival, and claims the goddess ' cult as an aristocratic privilege from the first ; the impeccably patrician Clodius, Cicero's social superior by birth, is presented as an innately impious, low-class oaf, and his popularist policies as threats to Rome's moral and religious security.
The name Dunkirk ( Dutch for “ Church in the dunes ”) was first mentioned in a tithe privilege of 27 May 1067, issued by Count Baldwin V of Flanders.
In 1530, the inhabitants obtained from the Count of the Genevois the privilege of holding two fairs a year, while the valley was often visited by the civil officials and by the bishops of Geneva ( first recorded visit in 1411, while St. Francis de Sales came there in 1606 ).
Ultimately, on August 8, 1974, after the U. S. Supreme Court voted by 8 to 0 to reject Nixon's claims of executive privilege and release the tapes ( with then Associate Justice William H. Rehnquist recusing himself because, as an assistant attorney general during Nixon's first term, he had taken part in internal executive-branch discussions of the scope of executive privilege ), Nixon announced his decision to resign as President.

privilege and extended
An 1894 law extended the same privilege to honorably discharged 5-year veterans of the Navy or Marine Corps.
The privilege also extended the jurisdiction of the Orthodox hierarchy over all Orthodox people.
* Supper Leave / Pub Leave: A recent privilege extended to Sixth Formers, whereby pre-approved groups of people may go into town for supper or visit a pub for one night.
In 1409, Emperor Ruprecht extended the de non Evocando privilege to include the royal High Court as well.
An undated document reveals that the şoltuz in Bacău, that is the head of the town elected by its inhabitants, had the right to sentence felons to death, at least for robberies, which hints to an extended privilege, similar to the ones that royal towns in the Kingdom of Hungary enjoyed.
( In 1547, the privilege of claiming benefit of clergy more than once was extended to peers of the realm, even illiterate ones.
But he was surely the most trusted general of Cao Cao, as he was said to often ride in the same carriage as his master, a privilege not even extended to Cao's personal bodyguards Dian Wei and Xu Chu.
However, the Federal Circuit determined that the waiver of attorney – client privilege should not be extended to trial counsel.
In bilateral reciprocal relationships a particular privilege granted by one party only extends to other parties who reciprocate that privilege, while in a multilateral reciprocal relationship the same privilege would be extended to the group that negotiated a particular privilege.
Bock was also uncommonly outspoken, a privilege Hitler extended to him only because he had been successful in battle.
One of the primary differences between the samurai and peasant class was the right to bear arms ; this ancient privilege was suddenly extended to every male in the nation.
In 1952 a Supplementary Royal Charter extended the privilege of eligibility to the orphan children of deceased officers of the Royal Navy, Royal Marines and Royal Air Force.
A recent change early in 2006 extended the privilege to the orphan children of deceased servicemen or servicewomen of Her Majesty's Armed Forces irrespective of rank, and to the orphan children of persons who, in the sole opinion of Governors, died in acts of selfless bravery.
This privilege is extended to the separate Welsh Conferences, Conferences of English regions and to the Liberal Democrats ' English Council ( the confederal body through which the regional parties of England make joint decisions ).
Individual privileges that did exist have fallen into disuse — for example the Lord of the Manor of Worksop ( which is not a peerage ) was extended the privilege and duty of attending the coronation of the British monarch until 1937, but the right was not exercised at the 1953 coronation of Queen Elizabeth II.
St. Pius V extended the privilege to the sees in which it was customary to have auxiliary bishops.
A privilege of 1388 extended that compensation for losses incurred when defending the country, confirmed that the nobles were to receive a monetary wage for their participation, and that they should be consulted with by the king beforehand.
Also, guests who hold Universal Orlando's Premier Annual Pass receive the same privilege extended to hotel guests, though only after 4 pm, and are limited to one time through each attraction per day.
In 1955, this privilege was extended until 1999.
The Terry doctrine was markedly extended in the 2004 Supreme Court case Hiibel v. Sixth Judicial District Court of Nevada,, which held that a state law requiring the suspect to identify himself during a Terry stop did not violate the Fourth Amendment prohibitions of unreasonable searches and seizures or the Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination.
Most states of the United States and most other English-speaking jurisdictions have extended this privilege to members of their legislatures on the theory outlined above.

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