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Page "Alcman" ¶ 12
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judge and from
After the judge moved all the dogs individually, she selected several from the group and placed them in the center of the ring.
If the superintendents do not receive more cooperation from Handlers, it has been suggested that licensed Judges also be qualified to judge this Class.
What you were looking for ( unless you make a hobby of collecting old tennis rackets and fly screens ) eludes me, but to judge from phonograph records scattered about a fumed-oak Victrola.
The judge listened quietly as the young woman poured out her frustrations -- then discussing with her the possibility of seeking aid from Family Service before going to a lawyer.
Many of the Anti-Taurus peaks apparently are recently extinct volcanoes, to judge from extensive lava flows.
* 1970 – California judge Harold Haley is taken hostage in his courtroom and killed during in an effort to free George Jackson from police custody.
Johnson appointed one judge to the United States Court of Claims, Samuel Milligan, who served from 1868 to 1874.
Other major ideas in the book of Amos include: social justice and concern for the disadvantaged ; the idea that Israel's covenant with God did not exempt them from accountability for sin ; God is God of all nations ; God is judge of all nations ; God is God of moral righteousness ; God made all people ; God elected Israel and then liberated Israel so that He would be known throughout the world ; election by God means that those elected are responsible to live according to the purposes clearly outlined to them in the covenant ; if God destroys the unjust, a remnant will remain ; and God is free to judge whether to redeem Israel.
: from thence he shall come to judge the quick and the dead.
He resigns from his political office and appoints Nephihah as chief judge and governor of the land.
An enquiry from the judge as to which Wivens that would be elicits the response " E. D. Wivens ".
In addition to de facto renunciation through apostasy, heresy, or schism, the Roman Catholic Church envisaged from 1983 to 2009 the possibility of formal defection from the Church through a decision manifested personally, consciously and freely, and in writing, to the competent church authority, who was then to judge whether it was genuinely a case of " true separation from the constitutive elements of the life of the Church ... ( by ) an act of apostasy, heresy or schism.
" He had been " un-baptized " in 2000, and ten years later he demanded to have his name stricken from the baptismal records, a request granted by a judge in Normany, a decision appealed by the church.
" The stories follow a consistent pattern: the people are unfaithful to Yahweh and he therefore delivers them into the hands of their enemies ; the people repent and entreat Yahweh for mercy, which he sends in the form of a leader or champion ( a " judge "); the judge delivers the Israelites from oppression and they prosper, but soon they fall again into unfaithfulness and the cycle is repeated.
Scholars agree that the Deuteronomists ' hand can be seen in Judges through the book's cyclical nature: the Israelites fall into idolatry, God punishes them for their sins with oppression by foreign peoples, the Israelites cry out to God for help, and God sends a judge to deliver them from the foreign oppression.
This is the theme played out in Judges: the people are unfaithful to Yahweh and he therefore delivers them into the hands of their enemies ; the people then repent and entreat Yahweh for mercy, which he sends in the form of a judge ; the judge delivers the Israelites from oppression, but after a while they fall into unfaithfulness again and the cycle is repeated.
Cardinals have in canon law a " privilege of forum " ( i. e., exemption from being judged by ecclesiastical tribunals of ordinary rank ): only the pope is competent to judge them in matters subject to ecclesiastical jurisdiction ( cases that refer to matters that are spiritual or linked with the spiritual, or with regard to infringement of ecclesiastical laws and whatever contains an element of sin, where culpability must be determined and the appropriate ecclesiastical penalty imposed ).
A finding of contempt of court may result from a failure to obey a lawful order of a court, showing disrespect for the judge, disruption of the proceedings through poor behaviour, or publication of material deemed likely to jeopardize a fair trial.
It is relatively rare that a person is charged for contempt without first receiving at least one warning from the judge.
Only one provision appears to impose obligations on an official ; this provision establishes that a judge who reaches an incorrect decision is to be fined and removed from the bench permanently.

judge and larger
As such he was the supreme judge in his territory with specific enumerated powers delegated upwards from him toward the larger Kingdom.
State court judges are typically paid less, have smaller staffs available to them, and handle larger caseloads than their federal judge counterparts.
Although the cars ended up slightly larger than the Tempo and Topaz, and the Mondeo was marketed as a large family car in Europe, reviewers would judge the car too small for American tastes compared to Japanese product lines where Toyota's Camry was their next size up from compact cars.
The provinces ( eyalets ) were divided into sanjaks ( also called livas ) governed by sanjakbeys ( also called Mutesarrifs ) and were further subdivided into timars ( fiefs held by timariots ), kadiluks ( the area of responsibility of a judge, or Kadı ) and zeamets ( also ziam ; larger timars ).
Although in larger counties today the county judge usually functions solely as county chief executive, in smaller counties, the role of the county judge continues to have many of the combined judicial and administrative functions of the alcalde.
Although the recognition heuristic predicts that participants would judge the actual ( recognizable ) cities to be larger, participants judged the fictional ( unrecognizable ) cities to be larger, showing that more than recognition can play a role in such inferences.
According to the kid's new companion, an ex-priest named Ben Tobin, the Glanton gang first met the judge while fleeing from the onslaught of a much larger group of Apaches.
This difference in emphasis can be seen in participation in the 1993 World Debating Championships when the smaller society sent 2 teams ( Derek Sheahan & John McElligott, Diarmuid Scully & Niamh Lyons ) and a judge ( Mark Dowling ) to the championships while the larger society only sent one team ( Matthew Hamilton & Hugh Gallagher ).
Some judges who are regulars at the larger English or American dog shows become well-known among dog show participants and breeders and gain respect from large audiences for their ability to recognise good examples of the breeds that they judge.
Depending on the importance and nature of the question to be adjudicated, the judges sit as Single ( one judge ), Division ( two judges ), Full ( three judges ) or such other benches of larger strengths.

judge and fragments
The some twenty fragments that remain show that he was less successful as an author than as a judge and patron of literature.
Besides Adonis, other myths that appear in his work are those of Hyacinthus and the Cyclops ; to judge from references in the Epitaph on Bion, which frequently alludes to Bion's work, he also wrote a poem on Orpheus, to which some of the extant fragments may have belonged.
To judge from the scattered fragments that remain of his translation, Symmachus tended to be periphrastic in representing the Hebrew original.
The third division would consist of the collections of the so-called Pseudo-leges Canuti, the so-called Leges Edwardi Confessoris (" Laws of Edward the Confessor "), of Henry I, and the great compilation of the Quadripartitus, then, a number of short notices and extracts like the fragments on the " wedding of a wife ," on oaths, on ordeals, on the king's peace, on rural customs ( Rectitudines singularum personarum ), the treatises on the reeve ( gerefa ) and on the judge ( dema ), formulae of oaths, notions as to wergeld, & c.
To judge from the fragments we have, Heracleon's bent was rather practical than
Indeed, Roman marble copies must have abounded, to judge from the number of recognizable fragments and complete works, including a head at the Louvre, a complete example at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and another complete example of somewhat different character, the somewhat below lifesize Roman marble Farnese Diadumenos at the British Museum, which preserves the end of the ribband falling from the right hand.
His work on the apostasy of the Academy from Plato, to judge from its rather numerous fragments, contained a minute and wearisome account of the outward circumstances of those men, and was full of fabulous tales about their lives, without entering into the nature of their skepticism.
As far as we can judge from the fragments, the work gave the history not only of Greece and Macedonia, but likewise of Aegypt, Cyrene, and the other states of the time ; and in narrating the history of Greece, Phylarchus paid particular attention to that of Cleomenes and the Spartans.

judge and poetry
To judge from these, his elegiac and iambic poetry criticized and satirized a wide range of ideas, including Homer and Hesiod, the belief in the pantheon of anthropomorphic gods and the Greeks ' veneration of athleticism.
For example, the poetry contest might be judged by a pool drawn from its own previous winners, reasoning that prize-winning poets are the best to judge a poetry contest.
Entering the poem, with this phrase, into the Kamo Shrine's official poetry contest, he lost because the judge thought he was writing about a river that did not exist.
His father was Fujiwara no Shunzei ( 1114 – 1204 ), a well known and greatly respected poet ( and judge of poetry competitions ), who had compiled the seventh Imperial anthology of waka ( the Senzai Wakashū ).
On " Al Aaraaf ", Wirt wrote that he was not the best judge of poetry but believed that it might be accepted by modern-thinking readers.
Engaged in relating poetry and science ,, Padel has written on cell migration for The Scientist, was a judge for the 2005 Aventis Science Prize for the Royal Society has written poems on genetics and zoology, and her book on migration is said to connect micro-level cell migration with macro-level social migration.
McMillan is a regular judge of poetry competitions.
The true merit of his later poetry has been difficult to judge in such a bitter environment, which is only now relaxing.
He is also known as a researcher in fiqh, a judge, and a writer who has composed many books on aqeedah, fiqh, and Arabic poetry.
She has also been a judge for the Pultizer Prize and the National Book award, in poetry.
He has served as a judge for several high school recitation contests, and says he enjoys working with students on their poetry and teaching it.
From 2006 to 2008 Frieda Hughes wrote a weekly poetry column for The Times newspaper and in 2008 was chair judge for the Forward Prizes for poetry and a judge for the National Poetry competition.

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