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Page "learned" ¶ 801
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have and applied
The working test of `` the facts '' must always be the best available description obtainable from scholars and scientists who have applied their methods of investigation to relevant situations.
After the factors just described have been computed, they are applied to the following formula: Af
It was indeed a remarkable feat that a man who had had no experience of bridge building should have applied the principle of the arch, which appears in his famous bridges at Portsmouth, Haverhill, and Philadelphia.
Drs. Howry and Holmes at the University of Colorado Medical School have applied the same sonar technique to other areas of soft tissue and have obtained extremely good results.
In the above development we have applied the thermodynamics of equilibrium ( referred to by some as thermostatics ) to the steady state.
Modifications of the last technique have been applied by several groups of investigators.
A decision to refer workers to jobs vacant because of a strike would have to be applied equally to nonagricultural situations, and might in effect place the public employment services in the position of acting as strikebreakers.
The detailed mechanisms of this type of failure have been studied extensively by Merchant for metal cutting, and the principles found can be directly applied to coatings.
There may be instances in which, if economic pressure is to be undertaken at all, this would have to be applied without discrimination against a whole people.
These terms have historically been applied to any astronomical object orbiting the Sun that did not show the disk of a planet and was not observed to have the characteristics of an active comet, but as small objects in the outer Solar System were discovered, their volatile-based surfaces were found to more closely resemble comets, and so were often distinguished from traditional asteroids.
All of these methods remain to be applied to the languages attributed to Altaic with the same degree of focus and intensity they have been applied to the Indo-European family ( e. g. Mallory 1989, Anthony 2007 ).
abate ), as commonly used in the Catholic Church on the European continent, is the equivalent of the English " Father " ( parallel etymology ), being loosely applied to all who have received the tonsure.
Ambrosians is a term that might be applied either to members of one of the religious brotherhoods which at various times since the 14th century have sprung up in and around Milan or, exceptionally to a 16th century sect of Anabaptists.
Many Athenians prominent earlier in the century would have lost citizenship, had this law applied to them: Cleisthenes, the founder of democracy, had a non-Athenian mother, and the mothers of Cimon and Themistocles were not Greek at all, but Thracian.
Clinicians have recommended that extra contraceptive measures be applied during therapies using antibacterials that are suspected to interact with oral contraceptives.
Some thinkers, for instance, have argued that the difference between fine art and applied art has more to do with the actual function of the object than any clear definitional difference.
The biographer Alexander Wheelock Thayer believes that Mozart's rivalry with Salieri could have originated with an incident in 1781 when Mozart applied to be the music teacher of Princess Elisabeth of Württemberg, and Salieri was selected instead because of his reputation as a singing teacher.
Anthroposophical ideas have been applied practically in many areas including Steiner / Waldorf education, special education ( most prominently through the Camphill Movement ), agriculture, medicine, ethical banking, organizational development, and the arts.
Unlike most Common-law jurisdictions, the majority of civil law jurisdictions have specialized courts or sections to deal with administrative cases which, as a rule, will apply procedural rules specifically designed for such cases and different from that applied in private-law proceedings, such as contract or tort claims.

have and statewide
California Democrats this weekend will take the wraps off a 1962 model statewide campaign vehicle which they have been quietly assembling in a thousand district headquarters, party clubrooms and workers' backyards.
Recent events -- particularly the necessity of providing planning information for the statewide origin/destination study of the Department of Public Works -- indicate that this schedule will have to be accelerated.
The growers have strenuously argued that I should have accepted the Superior Court decisions as conclusive and issued statewide instructions to our staff to ignore this provision in the Secretary's Regulation.
In that event, we can correctly say that we have received an authoritative interpretation of the matter, and one which we can follow statewide with confidence that the policy will not be overthrown in other Superior Courts.
In addition to the decennial federal census, local censuses have also been conducted, for example, in Massachusetts, which conducted a statewide census every five years until 1985.
When such a conflict arises, all Superior Courts have the discretion to choose which rule they like until the California Supreme Court grants review and creates a single rule that binds all courts statewide.
As of 2011, Warren was the last Supreme Court justice to have served as governor of a U. S. state, the last justice to have been elected to statewide elected office, and the last serving politician to be elevated to the Supreme Court.
Of the population aged 25 and older ( 5, 441 people ), 14. 6 percent did not have a high school diploma, while the 12. 9 statewide are without a high school diploma.
Recently, statewide Democrats have fared well here.
Some conservatives argued that Davis signed overpriced energy contracts, employed incompetent negotiators and refused to allow prices to rise for residences statewide much like they did in San Diego, which they argue could have given Davis more leverage against the energy traders and encouraged more conservation.
If Bush wins, Gore argued, every state would have to have one statewide method of recording votes to be constitutional.
A statewide recount allowing officials ' interpretation of " undervotes ," where no vote was cast for president, or " overvotes ," where votes were cast for multiple candidates, might have made Gore the winner.
Cheshire's voters have split tickets frequently in recent statewide elections.
Since the statewide average that year was $ 475, legislators have had to be careful to distinguish the phrase " average savings " from the phrase " savings by the average taxpayer.
: The ISTEP scores have averaged 13. 6 % above the statewide average for the past 7 years.
: The ISTEP scores have averaged 12. 6 % above the statewide average for the past 7 years.
: The ISTEP scores have averaged 13. 2 % above the statewide average for the past 2 years.
: The ISTEP scores have averaged 16. 0 % above the statewide average for the past 7 years.
: The ISTEP scores have averaged 10. 5 % above the statewide average for the past 7 years.

have and decisions
If any one of them has any power to veto the Secretary General's decisions the nature of the organization will have changed.
Since faculty see themselves as self-employed professionals rather than as employees, enthusiasm in a common enterprise is proportionate to the sense of ownership they have in it by virtue of sharing in the decisions that govern its course.
To provide the continuous flow of information basic to administrative decisions, a number of institutions have established offices of institutional research.
On being criticized for his arbitrary behavior -- he answered: `` I have to make decisions.
( As we have seen, the Erie and York decisions require federal courts in diversity cases to follow state decisional rules.
But there is very little frank and conscious espousal of the interests of any one social class by the people who have the power to make decisions in education.
How effective have Kennedy administration first foreign policy decisions been in dealing with Communist aggression??
Throughout `` The Making Of A President '' Mr. White shows wonderfully well how the pressures pile up on candidates, how decisions have constantly to be made, how fatigue and illness and nervous strain wear candidates down, how subordinates play key roles.
In an adversarial system, appellate courts do not have the power to review lower court decisions unless a party appeals it.
If unchallenged, these decisions have the power to settle more minor legal disputes once and for all.
However, no comprehensive environmental protection program has emerged, and decisions on environmental policy have been made on an ad hoc basis.
Open theists claim that the future is not completely knowable because people have not made their decisions yet, and therefore God knows the future in possibilities rather than certainties.
On the other hand, court decisions have made necessary " an individualized assessment to prove that an impairment is protected under the ADA.
The leadership of the ACLU does not always agree on policy decisions: Differences of opinion within the ACLU leadership have sometimes grown into major debates.
Civil law countries often have specialized courts, administrative courts, that review these decisions.
Generally speaking, most countries that follow the principles of common law have developed procedures for judicial review that limit the reviewability of decisions made by administrative law bodies.
The player whose bet is at the front of the betting box is deemed to have control over the position, and the dealer will consult the controlling player for playing decisions regarding the hand ; the other players of that box are said to " play behind ".
The decisions of a court are binding only in a particular jurisdiction, and even within a given jurisdiction, some courts have more power than others.
Common law systems place great weight on court decisions, which are considered " law " with the same force of law as statutes — for nearly a millennium, common law courts have had the authority to make law where no legislative statute exists, and statutes mean what courts interpret them to mean.
Most of the U. S. federal courts of appeal have adopted a rule under which, in the event of any conflict in decisions of panels ( most of the courts of appeal almost always sit in panels of three ), the earlier panel decision is controlling, and a panel decision may only be overruled by the court of appeals sitting en banc ( that is, all active judges of the court ) or by a higher court.

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