Appeals Sentence Examples

appeals
  • The scenery is fine, but wild and desolate in most parts, and of a kind that appeals rather to the northern genius than to the Italian, to whom, as a rule, Sardinia is not attractive.

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  • A formal appeals process and trial by jury are commonplace.

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  • Appeals and complaints may be taken from the presbytery to the synod.

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  • While governor he was a frequent contributor to the New Jersey Gazette, and in this way he greatly aided the American cause during the war by his denunciation of the enemy and appeals to the patriotism of his countrymen.

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  • The principal function of these courts is the hearing of appeals both civil and criminal from the courts of first instance; only in.

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  • It is very striking that in his appeal to tradition Vincent assigns no part to the bishops as such - apart from the council; he appeals to the ancient "teachers," not to any apostolic succession.

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  • In the same year the Lutheran reformation took hold of him, and he began to issue appeals in prose and verse against the Mass and against the pope as antichrist.

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  • But it is plain that, once convinced of the necessity for the king's execution, he was the chief instrument in overcoming all scruples among his judges, and in resisting the protests and appeals of the Scots.

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  • Clarke appeals to the immensity of time and space as involving infinity in God.

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  • Avon combined a swirl design with attractive shells in the mid 1970s to create an earring style that appeals to people who want to introduce a little marine inspired fashion into their style.

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  • Christian approved a plan by which a formal state church should be established in Denmark, all appeals to Rome should be abolished, and the king and diet should have final jurisdiction in ecclesiastical causes.

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  • The Euhemerist theory mainly appeals to ancestor worship - a fact of undoubted importance in the history of religion, especially in China and in ancient Rome.

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  • The synod hears appeals and references from presbyteries; and by its discussions and decisions business of various kinds, if not settled, is ripened for consideration and final settlement by the general assembly, the supreme court of the Church.

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  • Actions may be transferred to it, and appeals made to it, from the county courts in all cases arising within the jurisdiction of the Cinque Ports as defined by that act.

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  • Special provisions were made respecting appeals from the High Court to the sovereign in council.

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  • Either party, or the minister for Labour, may refer a determination to the court of industrial appeals, and the court, in the event of a special board failing to make a determination, may itself be called upon to frame one.

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  • The courts of appeal and cassation, too, often have more than they can do; in the year 1907 the court of cassation at Rome decided 948 appeals on points of law in civil cases, while no fewer than 460 remained to be decided.

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  • For some time all appeals to the king, to parliament, and to the courts of justice were unavailing; but on the 12th of February 1684 his application to Chief Justice Jeffreys was at last successful, and he was set at liberty on finding bail to the amount of X40,000, to appear in the House of Lords in the following session.

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  • The Act of Appeals had already prohibited any appeal from the archbishop's court.

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  • This council endeavoured to set up a system of appeals in the case of bishops, in which the see of Rome was made to play a great part.

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  • The distinguishing feature of this appeal was that the rule of the other appeals did not apply to it.

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  • They meet twice a year to hear appeals from presbyteries.

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  • It illustrates Marino Sanuto's Secreta fidelium crucis, in which its author vainly appeals to Christendom to undertake another crusade.

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  • England had already taken measures to check the papal claims. France in the Pragmatic Sanction reformulated the claim of the councils to be superior to the pope, as well as the decision of the council of Basel in regard to elections, annates and other dues, limitations on ecclesiastical jurisdiction, and appeals to the pope.

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  • This decision of the federal appeals court directly conflicts with the decision of another federal appeals court that decided student-led prayers should be banned.

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  • Be sure the style and fit appeals to you, especially if you plan on dancing a lot.

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  • While the classic chocolate truffle appeals to many couples, there is a wide range of truffle flavors and rich combinations to tickle any taste buds.

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  • Set aside a weekend to visit the beaches to see if there is one that appeals to you and your partner.

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  • It's your cake, so go for what appeals to you most.

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  • With lots of websites devoted to the subject, as well as forums and message boards, you're sure to find something that appeals to you, if that's your thing.

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  • The Anna Nicole estate was denied any money in the most recent unanimous ruling by a federal appeals court.

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  • The brand has built up a solid reputation in the children's clothing field by providing classic, but modern clothing that appeals to young kids and parents alike.

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  • Girls of this age group are generally not very picky about clothes, so as long as you choose something that appeals to their general style, you should have a nice gift picked out.

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  • Since a moon necklace with a nude woman appeals to a diverse audience, you can find moon theme necklaces at many local jewelry stores.

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  • This type of necklace will be around for a while because it appeals to a broad audience.

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  • Prayer jewelry is one of the relatively new trends that appeals to those who enjoys religious jewelry.

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  • As to appeals the mixed council of Cliff at Hoo (747) said they should go to the synod of the province.

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  • The latter was treated as a mere delegate, from whom an appeal could be made to the bishop. The former had one consistory with the bishop, so that appeals from him had to be made to the court of the metropolitan.

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  • In France the primatial sees and the course of appeals to them were well established (Fournier, p. 2 19).

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  • Appeals to Rome lay from interlocutory as well as final judgments.

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  • In the 13th centur y Archbishop Peckham, says Maitland (p. 117), as archbishop "asserted for himself and his official (1) a general right to entertain in the first instance complaints made against his suffragans' subjects, and (2) a general right to hear appeals omisso medio."

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  • In England the Constitutions of Clarendon (by chap. viii.) prohibited appeals to the pope; but after the murder of St Thomas of Canterbury Henry II.

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  • Obstacles were placed in the way of appeals to the pope omisso medio.

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  • In 1438 the council of Basel took away all papal original jurisdiction (save in certain reserved cases - of which infra), evocation of causes to Rome, appeals to Rome omisso medio, and appeals to Rome altogether in many causes.

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  • Such appeals when permissible, except the " greater," were to be tried by delegates on the spot (31st Session; Mansi, Concilia, in loco).

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  • Spain appears to have permitted and recognized appeals to the pope.

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  • The statute is aimed at appeals; but the words used in it concerning " citations and all other processes " are wide enough to take away also the " original " jurisdiction of the pope.

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  • This was copied from the then existent practice in admiralty appeals and was the origin of the so-called court of delegates.

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  • Besides contributing to the Globe newspaper, he made appeals to the people by systematic preaching, and organized centres of action in some of the principal cities of France.

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  • The Western bishops who remained confirmed the previous decisions of the Roman synod; and by its 3rd, 4th and 5th decrees relating to the rights of revision, the council of Sardica endeavoured to settle the procedure of ecclesiastical appeals.

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  • Thomas Arnold, criticizing Edward Hawkins, appeals rather to the atonement as deeper neglected truth.

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  • This different treatment shows the feeling of the poet - the feeling for which he seeks to evoke our inmost sympathy - to oscillate between the belief that an awful crime brings with it its awful punishment (and it is sickening to observe how the argument by which the Friar persuades Annabella to forsake her evil courses mainly appeals to the physical terrors of retribution), and the notion that there is something fatal, something irresistible, and therefore in a sense self-justified, in so dominant a passion.

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  • As a court of justice its main drawback is that it is wholly unable to cope with the vast mass of documents representing appeals from all parts of the empire.

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  • He established himself firmly in Tyre (refusing admission to Guy, the king of Jerusalem); and from it he both sent appeals for aid to Europe - which largely contributed to cause the Third Crusade - and despatched reinforcements to the crusaders, who, from 1188 onwards, were engaged in the siege of Acre.

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  • The Maryland Court of Appeals sustained the validity of this act.

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  • Origen's apologetic is most effective when he appeals to the spirit and power of Christianity as an evidence of its truth.

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  • Disappointed of this last hope, and moved by the despairing appeals of his sister Ulrica and the senate to return to Sweden while there was still a Sweden to return to, he quitted Demotika on the 20th of September 1714, and attended by a single squire arrived unexpectedly at midnight, on the 11th of November, at Stralsund, which, excepting Wismar, was now all that remained to him on German soil.

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  • His father, John Johnson (1770-1824), was a distinguished lawyer, who served in both houses of the Maryland General Assembly, as attorney-general of the state (1806-1811), as a judge of the court of appeals (1811-1821), and as a chancellor of his state (1821-1824).

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  • Taney; with Thomas Harris he reported the decisions of the court of appeals in Harris and Johnson's Reports (1820-1827); and in 1818 he was appointed chief commissioner of insolvent debtors.

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  • Such were the forces set in movement by Urban II., when, after holding a synod at Piacenza (March, 10 9 5), and receiving there fresh appeals from Alexius, he moved to Clermont, in the S.E.

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  • Repeated appeals had been sent to the West from the beginning of the Egyptian affair (1163) onwards; while in 1184-1185 a great mission, on which the patriarch of Jerusalem and the masters of the Templars and the Hospitallers were all present, came to France and England, and offered the crown of Jerusalem to Philip Augustus and Henry II.

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  • He had saved Tyre; and from it he sent his appeals to the West.

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  • The case was dismissed on technical grounds, but appeals were made to the court of arches and the court of delegates.

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  • In an act of 1534, with regard to ecclesiastical appeals from the courts of the archbishops to the crown, it is provided that the appeal shall be to the king in Chancery, "and that upon every such appeal a commission shall be directed under the great seal to such persons as shall be named by the king's highness, his heirs or successors, like as in cases of appeal from the Admiralty Court."

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  • Power is also given to hear appeals from vice-admirals; also "to arrest..

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  • Possibly these slight fortifications preserved the capital from the destruction which overwhelmed all the other settlements; but these measures for defence were due more to the loyalty of the inhabitants than to the efforts of the home government, which at this time remained indifferent to appeals for help from the island.

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  • These intellectual principles are, of course, not without their own ground in physical sensation; but it is evident that Debussy appeals beyond them to a more primitive instinct; and on it he bases an almost perfectly coherent system of which the laws are, like those of i 2th-century music, precisely the opposite of those of classical harmony.

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  • In the 3rd tablet, very imperfectly preserved, Gilgamesh appeals through a Shamash priestess Rimat-Belit to the sun-god Shamash for his aid in the proposed undertaking.

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  • The story of Alexander's relations with Savonarola is narrated under the latter heading; it is sufficient to say here that the pope's hostility was due to the friar's outspoken invectives against papal corruption and to his appeals for a General Council.

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  • Although there was little or no stress laid on either the joys or the terrors of a future life, the movement was not infrequently accompanied by most of those physical symptoms which usually go with vehement appeals to the conscience and emotions of a rude multitude.

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  • The dissatisfaction which this exercise of the royal prerogative aroused induced the king, in the following year, to withdraw his proclamation, and, notwithstanding appeals to him, the persecution continued intermittently throughout his reign.

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  • In 1727 they declared it to be " not a commendable or allowed " practice; in 1761 they excluded from their society all who should be found concerned in it, and issued appeals to their members and the public against the system.

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  • Many delicious stories are told of his presence of mind and the skilful appeals which he made to the better feeling of the crowd.

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  • Besides the incomparable Journal, his Appeals to Men of Reason and Religion also produced an extraordinary effect in allaying prejudice and winning respect.

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  • Two chief courts of justice (audiencias) sat at Havana (after 1832) and Puerto Principe (1800-1853); appeals could go to Spain; below the audiencias were "alcaldes mayores " or district judges and ordinary " alcaldes " or local judges.

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  • All march discipline disappeared, the men dissolved into hordes of marauders and even the sternest of the marshals wrote piteous appeals to the emperor for supplies, and for permission to shoot some of their stragglers.

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  • Provincial "juntas" (committees of government) were organized; appeals for assistance made to the British government, which granted arms, money and supplies, and it was resolved to despatch a British force to the Peninsula.

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  • This court was formerly the county court for the city and was held before the lord mayor, the sheriffs and aldermen, for pleas of land, common pleas and appeals from the sheriffs.

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  • The impressiveness and the stimulating power of the mystic ceremonies, the consciousness of being the privileged possessor of the secret wisdom of the ancients, the sense of purification from sin, and the expectation of a better life where there was to be compensation for the sufferings of this world - were all strong appeals to human nature.

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  • It was during the period 1841-1849, when he had no legal duty, except the self-imposed one of occasionally hearing Scottish appeals in the House of Lords, that the unlucky dream of literary fame troubled Lord Campbell's leisure.'

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  • Appeals can be made from the magistrates' decisions to the provincial or circuit court.

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  • Appeals from the circuit courts can be made to the provincial court; and from the provincial court appeals lie to the appellate division of the Supreme Court of South Africa, sitting at Bloemfontein.

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  • Robert Recorde in his Whetstone of Witte (1557) uses the variant algeber, while John Dee (1527-1608) affirms that algiebar, and not algebra, is the correct form, and appeals to the authority of the Arabian Avicenna.

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  • On the whole,it may be said that his position in this question as to the rights of the papal see over foreign metropolitans resembled that of his great predecessor Hincmar, to whose authority he constantly appeals.

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  • From that day the role of the Natal Field Force was changed from that of a mobile field army into that of a garrison, and two days later it was completely isolated, but not before General French had succeeded in escaping south by train, and the naval authorities had been induced by Sir George White's urgent appeals to send into the town a naval brigade with a few guns of sufficient range and calibre to cope with the heavy position artillery which Joubert was now able to bring into action against the town.

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  • Besides attending to the spiritual needs of the lepers, he managed, by the labour of his own hands and by appeals to the Hawaian government, to improve materially the water-supply, the dwellings, and the victualling of the settlement.

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  • The state has two Amtsgerichte (courts of first instance) at Bremen and Bremerhaven respectively, and a superior court, Landgericht, at Bremen, whence appeals lie to the Oberlandesgericht for the Hanseatic towns in Hamburg.

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  • The reign of !Ethelred, which witnessed the greatest national humiliation and the greatest crime in English history, is also marked by the most lavish expressions of religious feeling and the most frequent appeals to morality.

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  • Savonarola also proposed a court of appeal for criminal and political crimes tried by the Otto di guardia e balia; this too was agreed to, but the right of appeal was to be, not to a court as Savonarola suggested, but to the Greater Council, a fact which led to grave abuses, as judicial appeals became subject to party passions.

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  • In an anecdote regarding a suit which Gamaliel was prosecuting before a Christian judge, a converted Jew, he appeals to the Gospel and to the words of Jesus in Matt.

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  • In 1293 the Saxon and Wendish merchants at Rostock decided that all appeals from Novgorod be taken to Lubeck instead of to Wisby, and six years later the Wendish and Westphalian towns, meeting at Lubeck, ordered that the Gothland association should no longer use a common seal.

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  • From 1777 to 1783 he was a member of the Continental Congress, and in this body he served on three important committees, the marine committee, the board of treasury, and the committee of appeals, the predecessors respectively of the navy and treasury departments and the Supreme Court under the Federal Constitution.

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  • Still more wonderful was Savonarola's influence over children, and their response to his appeals is a proof of the magnetic power of his goodness and purity.

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  • The artists of the Koun school, however, do much work which appeals to emotions in general rather than to individual memories.

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  • The supreme courts of justice of the duchy are in Karlsruhe, Freiburg, Offenburg, Heidelberg, Mosbach, Waldshut, Constance and Mannheim, whence appeals lie to the Reichsgericht (supreme tribunal of the empire) in Leipzig.

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  • Spencer appeals alternately to the" instability of the homogeneous "and the impossibility of complete equilibration to keep up the cosmic see-saw, but he can do so only by confining himself to a part of the universe.

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  • The Imperial Review, apparently the work of one pen, has been published since 1879; the Pastoralists' Review appeals more especially to the agricultural community.

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  • The highest strains of the psalmists and the most fervent appeals of the prophets were progressively directed to the great end of praising and preaching the One true God, everlasting, with sincere and pure devotion.

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  • Strickland preferred legislation to the covering up of difficulties by governors' licences and appeals to incongruous precedents.

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  • By the end of August 1885, when a political crisis had supervened between Great Britain and Russia, under the orders of the Amir the Mosalla was destroyed; but four minars standing at the corners of the wide plinth still remain to attest to the glorious proportions of the ancient structure, and to exhibit samples of that decorative tilework, which for intricate beauty of design and exquisite taste in the blending of colour still appeals to the memory as unique.

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  • Mercy was also in correspondence with the Constitutionals, and in letter after letter to him and the emperor, the queen, strongly supported by Fersen, insisted that the congress should be formed as soon as possible, her appeals increasing in urgency as she saw that Barnave's party would soon be powerless against the extremists.

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  • The judicial system, revised by a constitutional amendment of 1891, consists of a supreme court of three members, elected for a term of six years, with civil jurisdiction only, largely appellate; a court of criminal appeals, of three members, elected for six years, with appellate jurisdiction in criminal cases; courts of civil appeals (number determined by the legislature) of three members each, elected for six years; district courts, each with one judge, elected for four years, with original jurisdiction in the more important civil and criminal (felony) cases and a limited appellate jurisdiction; county and justice of the peace courts with original jurisdiction in misdemeanours and petty civil cases.

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  • Re-elected in the municipal elections of the 2nd of December 1792, he was soon charged with the functions of procurator of the Commune, and contributed with success to the enrolments of volunteers by his appeals to the populace.

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  • The district court has general, original and exclusive jurisdiction in all matters civil, criminal and probate not expressly conferred on an inferior court, and may hear appeals from inferior courts, boards or officers.

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  • Appeals for help were sent to Frederick John Jackson (subsequently lieutenant-governor of British East Africa), who had arrived on the east of the lake with a caravan of some Soo rifles, sent by the newly-formed East African Chartered Company.

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  • By the beginning of the 3rd century, and perhaps earlier, appeals to the emperor in civil cases were handed over by him to be dealt with by the praefect.

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  • From 1343 onward, statutes were passed by parliament forbidding any one to accept a papal provision, and cutting off all appeals to the papal curia or ecclesias tical courts in cases involving benefices.

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  • All Church property was to be restored, and, perhaps most important of all, the jurisdiction of the Imperial court (Reichskammergericht), which was naturally Catholic in its sympathies, was extended to appeals involving the seizure of ecclesiastical benefices, contempt of episcopal decisions and other matters deeply affecting the Protestants.

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  • All appeals were to be tried within the realm, and suits begun before an archbishop were to be determined by him without further appeal.

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  • As supreme governor of the Church of England the sovereign strictly controlled all ecclesiastical legislation and appointed royal delegates to hear appeals from the ecclesiastical courts, to be a " papist " or to " hear Mass " (which was construed as the same thing) was to risk incurring the terrible penalties of high treason.

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  • These are individual opinions, subject to revision by that court of appeals, the institutional judgment.

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  • Literature.-Of his works the Manual of Private Devotions is the best known, for it appeals to Christians of every church.

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  • A simultaneous and uniform census of the British empire is an ideal which appeals to many, but its practical advantages are by no means commensurate with the difficulties to be surmounted..

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  • But the new constitution of that year substituted a court of appeals for the court of errors, merged the court of chancery into the supreme court, established in each county a new county court composed of a single judge, and, taking the appointment of judges from the governor, gave the election of them to the people.

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  • Some further alterations in the constitution affecting the courts were made in 1869, 1879, 1888, 1894, 1899 and 1909, and the system as at present constituted comprises a supreme court of ninetyseven justices, an appellate division of the same, a court of appeals, a court of claims and local courts.

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  • The highest judicial court in the state is not, as in most states of the Union, the supreme court, but the court of appeals.

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  • To expedite business, at the request of the court, the governor may designate not more than four justices of the supreme court to act temporarily as additional associate judges of the court of appeals.

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  • The people approved by a vote of nearly three to one, but the court of appeals declared the act unconstitutional because of the referendum.

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  • From it appeals can be made to the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court.

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  • He had some difficulties with the bishops in Africa on the question of appeals to Rome, and with the bishops of Provence with regard to the doctrines of St Augustine.

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  • But neither his courage nor his industry forsook him; and he found, in opposing the new views of his old colleague, ample scope for both voice and pen; and as a member of the House of Lords he continued almost to the last to take part in hearing and deciding appeals, and sometimes in the ordinary business of the House.

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  • Where Erasmus excelled was in prefaces - not philological introductions to each author, but spirited appeals to the interest of the general reader, showing how an ancient book might be made to minister to modern spiritual demands.

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  • That it won a permanent success, and finally took possession of the Roman world, was due to its combination of appeals.

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  • Justice, &c. - The administration of justice is entrusted to a court of appeals, circuit courts, special courts for the city of Baltimore, orphans' courts, and justices of the peace.

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  • The seven chief judges so elected, together with one elected from the city of Baltimore, constitute the court of appeals, the governor with the advice and consent of the senate designating one of the eight as chief judge of that court.

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  • Many other disputes speedily followed and when the final struggle between the English and French for possession in America came, although appropriations were made at its beginning to protect her own west frontier from the attacks of the enemy, a dead-lock between the two branches of the assembly prevented Maryland from responding to repeated appeals from the mother country for aid in the latter part of that struggle.

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  • As an advocate his sharpness and rapidity of insight gave him a formidable advantage in the detection of the weaknesses of a witness and the vulnerable points of his opponent's case, while he grouped his own arguments with an admirable eye to effect, especially excelling in eloquent closing appeals to a jury.

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  • The court of appeals is composed of from five to seven judges (seven in 1909), elected, one from each appellate district, for a term of eight years.

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  • A decision of the Clark county district court declaring this measure unconstitutional was affirmed by the court of appeals.

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  • The legislature in 1824 repealed all of the laws creating the existing court of appeals and then established a new one.

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  • He also issued numerous appeals, with the result that in 1841, when he resigned his office as convener of the church extension committee, he was able to announce that in seven years upwards of f300,000 had been contributed, and 220 new churches had been built.

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  • The superior courts of law formed part of the palace, and there were tribunals in the principal cities, over each of which presided a supreme judge or cihuacoatl, who was irremovable, and whose criminal decisions not even the king might reverse; he appointed the lower judges and heard appeals from them; it is doubtful whether he judged in civil cases, but both kinds of suits were heard in the court below, by the tlacatecatl and his two associates, below whom were the ward-magistrates.

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  • Although Exeter, in 1639, Dover, in 1640, and Strawberry Banke, not later than 1640, adopted a plantation covenant, these settlements were especially weak from lack of a superior tribunal, and appeals had been made to Massachusetts as early as 1633.

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  • Among them are some satirical sonnets describing Roman manners, and the later ones written after his return to Paris are often appeals for patronage.

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  • After several strong appeals and counter-appeals to the British government, the Canadian parliament was allowed to deal as it pleased with the question, with the result that the Reserves were completely secularized in 1854, provision being made for the life-interest of the beneficiaries at the time.

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  • The hearing extended from 17th to 10th July; counsel were heard on both sides, evidence was given in support of the appeals by two of the clergy concerned and by several other witnesses, lay and clerical, and the whole matter was gone into with no little fulness.

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  • The judges of each circuit, acting with or without the justice of the Supreme Court for the circuit, constitute a circuit court of appeals, established to relieve the Supreme Court.

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  • Some cases may, however, be appealed to the Supreme Court from the circuit court of appeals, and others directly from the lower courts.

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  • This position was only established in New Brunswick and Manitoba after violent political struggles, and frequent appeals to the highest courts of the empire for decisions on questions of federal or provincial jurisdiction.

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  • The executive officials are elected for a term of two years, and the judges of the Supreme Court and of the court of appeals for six years, while those of the superior court and of the ordinaries and the justices of the peace are chosen every four years.

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  • The extinction of the Latin kingdom might now seem imminent; and envoys were sent to the West with anxious appeals for assistance in 1169, 1171 and 1173.

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  • A Supplementary Act of the 3rd of March 1905 provides that writs of error and appeals may be taken from the Supreme Court of Hawaii to the Supreme Court of the United States " in all cases where the amount involved exclusive of costs or value exceeds the sum of five thousand dollars."

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  • Here he appeals to Schopenhauer's doctrine that will of some sort is the fundamental fact of mental life.

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  • In the course of his learned studies on the history of mechanics he became deeply impressed with Galileo's appeals to simplicity as a test of truth, and converted what is at best only one characteristic of thinking into its essence.

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  • It is full of appeals to common sense, and of principles of common sense, which Reid also called intuitive first principles, and self-evident truths.

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  • Appeals and other matters of detail were referred to them more often than under the Merovingians.

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  • At the council of Sardica (343) an attempt had been made to regulate the procedure in these appeals, by recognizing as the right of the pope the reversing of judgments, and the appointment of fresh judges.

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  • In practice, appeals to the pope, when they involved the annulling of a judgment, were judged by the pope in person.

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  • But the intervention of the Holy See in the ecclesiastical affairs of the West, which resulted from these appeals, was only of a limited, sporadic and occasional nature.

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  • The practice of the nomination of bishops by the Curia and of papal recommendation to prebends and benefices of every kind grew daily more general, and the number of appeals to Rome and exemptions granted to abbeys and even to simple churches increased continually.

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  • At that council wise and urgent measures were taken against the abuses that discredited the priesthood, but the principle of appeals and exemptions and the question of the increasing abuse of the power wielded by the Roman legates remained untouched.

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  • In common with all enlightened opinion, he complained bitterly of the excessive multiplication of exemptions, of the exaggerated extension of appeals to Rome, of the luxury of the Roman court, of the venality of the cardinals, and of the injury done to the traditional hierarchy by the very extent of the papal power, which was calculated to turn the strongest head.

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  • He was United States districtattorney for the eastern district of New York in 1866-1873, and an associate judge of the New York court of appeals in 1881-1882.

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  • Now insects that possess noxious attributes, and the same is true of other animals, usually have a conspicuous warning coloration which appeals to the eyes of enemies and helps them to remember more easily the cause of an unpleasant experience, helps in fact to establish a psychical association between a particular style of coloration and a nasty taste or a painful wound.

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  • But the likeness probably goes deeper than superficial resemblance that appeals to the eye, for spiders which distinguish flies from bees by touch and not by sight, treat drone-flies after touching them, not in the fearless way they evince towards bluebottles (Calliphora), but in the cautious manner they display towards bees and wasps, warily refraining from coming to close quarters until their prey is securely enswathed in silk.

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  • To the general public it appeals most strongly as a material for constructing cooking utensils.

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  • A number of them find in Unitarianism a form of Christianity that appeals to them.

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  • It appeals to common sense, saying in effect, " If it be a fact that a Divine Person came into the world to bless mankind, all men ought to know it, and have a right to know it.

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  • He did, indeed, in February 1631 call a meeting of Protestant princes at Leipzig, but in spite of the appeals of the preacher Matthias Hoe von Hohenegg (1580-1645) he contented himself with a formal protest.

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  • Lola Montez, created Countess Landsfeld, was supreme in the state; and the new minister, Prince Ludwig von Oettingen-Wallerstein (1791-1870), in spite of his efforts to enlist Liberal sympathy by appeals to pan-German patriotism, was powerless to form a stable government.

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  • An opera called La Muette, which abounds in appeals to liberty, was played, and the audience were so excited that they rushed out into the street crying, " Imitons les Parisiens !"

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  • What were then called reports were rather appeals to the passions; in Saint-Just's hands they furnished the occasion for a display of fanatical daring, of gloomy eloquence, and of undoubted genius; and - with the shadow of Robespierre behind him - they served their turn.

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  • In response to these appeals Anthony came forth and set himself to organize the life of the multitude of ascetics that had grown up around him.

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  • An appeal may be made to the civil courts from the decision of these committees, but so popular are they that such appeals are never made.

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  • In the Amisgerichi a private litigant may conduct his own case; but where the object of the litigation exceeds 300 marks (g15), and in appeals from the Amisgerichi to the Land gericht, the plaintiff (and also the defendant) must be represented by an advocate Rechtsanwalt.

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  • To complete the work a supreme court of appeal was established in Leipzig, which was competent to hear appeals not only from imperial law, but also from that of the individual states.

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  • In1781-1783he was a member of the Continental Congress, which in 1782 made him a judge of the court of appeals for admiralty cases; in 1784 he was one of the commissioners from Massachusetts to settle the boundary line between Massachusetts and New York; in1789-1801he was a judge of the U.S. District Court of Massachusetts; and from 1801 until his death in Roxbury on the 6th of May 1802 he was a justice of the U.S. Circuit Court for the First Circuit (Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts and Rhode Island).

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  • Adams's Review of Mr Ames's Works (1809), New England Patriot, being a Candid Comparison of the Principles and Conduct of the Washington and Jefferson Administrations (1810), Appeals to the People on the Causes and Consequences of War with Great Britain (1811) and Mr Madison's War (1812).

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  • Cobden's argumentative speeches were regarded more sympathetically than Bright's more rhetorical appeals, and in a debate on Villiers's annual motion against the Corn Laws Bright was heard with so much impatience that he was obliged to sit down.

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  • Garrison had been deeply moved by Lundy's appeals, and after going to Vermont he showed the deepest interest in the slavery question.

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  • Then, to raise funds for the cause, he returned to America; his fervid appeals enabled him to collect about $60,000, which he spent on provisions and clothing, and he established a relief depot near Aegina, where he started works for the refugees, the existing quay, or American Mole, being built in this way.

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  • Every man who could not purchase exemption, with the exception of those living in Cairo, Alexandria and Suez, on becoming 19 years old was liable nominally to 12 years service; but many men were kept for 30 or 40 years, in spite of constant appeals.

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  • The people complain bitterly to Moses, who appeals to Yahweh and is assured by him of the future deliverance of Israel "by a strong hand."

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  • He had little difficulty in securing the Acts of Annates, Appeals and Supremacy which completed the separation from Rome, or the dissolution of the monasteries which, by transferring enormous wealth from the church to the crown, really, in Cecil's opinion, ensured the reformation.

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  • In 1903 the legislature authorized the municipal ownership of public service corporations, and in 1906 the city of Chicago took steps to acquire ownership of its street railways - a movement which seemed to have spent its force in 1907, when the municipal ownership candidates were defeated in the city's elections - and in 1902 the right of that city to regulate the price of gas was recognized by the United States Circuit Court of Appeals.

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  • It presented the Gospel in a suitable form for the edification of the Church; and it confirmed its truth by constant appeals to the Old Testament scriptures, thus manifesting its intimate relation with the past as the outcome of a long preparation and as the fulfilment of a Divine purpose.

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  • The Baptist's work is now ended; and, though Jesus still appeals to the testimony of John, the new conflict with the Jewish authorities shows that He is moving now on His own independent and characteristic lines.

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  • At its conclusion Luther wrote two appeals - one from the pope illinformed to the pope well-informed, and the other to a General Council.

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  • Thereupon the diet resolved that the edict of Worms was to be enforced against Luther and his partizans; that the ecclesiastical jurisdictions were to be preserved; and that all the church property taken possession of by the Lutheran princes was to be restored; and that in all cases of dispute the last court of appeal was to be the Imperial Court of Appeals.

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  • He was president of the court of chancery in 1777-1788, and from 1779 until his death was president of the Virginia court of appeals.

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  • In answer to his appeals for quarter and promises to pay ransom, he was told by Richard, the bastard son of King John, that he was a traitor who would not be allowed to deceive more men.

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  • The bishops of Liguria and Aemilia, headed by the archbishop of Milan, and those of Istria and Venice, headed by Paulinus of Aquileia, also withheld their fellowship; but Narses resisted the appeals of Pelagius, who would have invoked the secular arm.

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  • Lubeck has a court of first instance (Amtsgericht) and a high court of justice (Landgericht); from the latter appeals lie to the Hanseatic court of appeal (Oberlandesgericht) at Hamburg, and from this again to the supreme court of the empire (Reichsgericht) in Leipzig.

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  • The right of private warfare was abolished; the bishops were obliged to give up most of their temporal jurisdiction, the scope of their courts was limited, and appeals to Rome were curtailed.

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  • The older incantations, associated with Ea, were re-edited so as to give to Marduk the supreme power over demons, witches and sorcerers; the hymns and lamentations composed for the cult of Bel, Shamash and of Adad were transformed into paeans and appeals to Marduk, while the ancient myths arising in the various religious and political centres underwent a similar process of adaptation to changed conditions, and as a consequence their original meaning was obscured by the endeavour to assign all mighty deeds and acts, originally symbolical of the change of seasons or of occurrences in nature, to the patron deity of Babylon - the supreme head of the entire Babylonian pantheon.

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  • The connexion between the two is illustrated by the application of the term shiptu, " incantation," to the direct appeals to the gods, as well as by the introduction, on the one hand, of genuine prayers into the incantations and by the addition, on the other hand, of incantations to prayers and hymns, pure and simple.

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  • It starts from a fact and it often explicitly appeals to facts.

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  • Five classes of law courts were established, and provision was made for appeals in both civil and criminal cases.

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  • It is the middle range of the µEaa of Philebus 17a that appeals to Bacon, not only this but their mediating quality that appeals to Aristotle.

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  • He appeals to the direct testimony of consciousness in the sense in which the appeal involves a fallacy.

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  • His influence was exercised, however, not only in dogmatic questions but in matters of discipline, by means of appeals, petitions and consultations, not to mention spontaneous intervention.

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  • Such a religion appeals for its self-verification not to its agreement with cosmological conceptions, either ancient or modern, or with theories of philosophy, however true these may be, but to the moral sense of man.

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  • As a politician he was one of the leaders of modern Liberalism, and though always loyal when appeals were made to patriotism, such as government demands for the army, he remained obdurate on constitutional questions; and he resolutely opposed the reactionary policy of the Prussian Conservatives.

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  • The administration of justice is vested principally in a supreme court of appeals, circuit courts, city courts and courts of a justice of the peace.

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  • The supreme court of appeals consists of five judges, but any three of them may hold a court.

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  • Whenever the docket of this court is crowded, or there is a case upon it in which it is improper for a majority of the judges to sit, the General Assembly may provide for a special court of appeals, to be composed of not more than five nor less than three judges of the circuit courts and city courts, in cities having a population of 10,000 or more.

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  • This board prescribes the duties of the superintendent of public instruction and decides appeals from his decisions; keeps the state divided into school divisions, comprising not less than one county or city each; appoints quadrennially, with the concurrence of the Senate, one superintendent for each school division and prescribes his powers and duties; selects textbooks; provides for examination of teachers; and appoints school inspectors.

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  • There is much in the imperial and papal histories that is merely spectacular and romantic; much that appeals to the imagination and lends itself to myth; and since the sources are abundant - the papal archives inexhaustible and the German chronicles easily accessible - an undue emphasis has been placed upon them.

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  • Arguments have been founded upon the descriptions of the blind singers in the Odyssey, with their songs inspired directly by the Muse; upon the appeals of the poet to the Muses, especially in such a place as the opening of the Catalogue; upon the Catalogue itself, which is a kind of historical document put into verse to help the memory; upon the shipowner in the Odyssey, who has " a good memory for his cargo," &c. It may be answered, however, that much of this is traditional, handed down from the time when all poetry was unwritten.

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  • Quarrel of Achilles with Agamemnon and the Greek army - Agamemnon, having been compelled to give up his prize Chryseis, takes Briseis from Achilles - Thereupon Achilles appeals to his mother Thetis, who obtains from Zeus a promise that he will give victory to the Trojans until the Greeks pay due honour to her son - Meanwhile Achilles takes no part in the war.

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  • The position which he refused from the hands of Lord Rockingham he accepted from Pitt in August 1766, and a few weeks later his urgent appeals to the great minister for increased power were favourably answered, and he was admitted to the inner circle of the cabinet.

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  • In every part of the country many of the ministers were miserably poor; there were many stipends, even of important parishes, not exceeding £40 a year; and it was not till after many debates in the assembly and appeals to the government that an act was obtained in 1810 which made up the poorer livings to £150 a year by a grant from the public exchequer.

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  • The growth of Puritanism in Wales was neither strong nor speedy, although the year 1588, which witnessed the appearance of Bishop Morgan's Bible, also gave birth to two fierce appeals to the parliament, urging a drastic Puritanical policy in Wales, from the pen of the celebrated John Penry, a native of Brecknockshire (1559-1593).

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  • On hearing the news the king banished the monks of Canterbury and lodged a protest with the pope, in which he threatened to prevent any English appeals from being brought to Rome.

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  • All trials, therefore, are heard by one or more judges, and appeals may be taken from a lower to a higher court.

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  • By other provisions appeals to Rome without the licence of the king were forbidden.

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  • A great dislike is shown generally to a written contract binding the parties to a fixed date; and, as a rule, on breaking it the Persian always appeals for and expects delay and indefinite days of grace.

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  • But, above all, the Greek cities with their endless feuds and violent internal factions, were incessant in their appeals for intervention.

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  • This was mainly carried out by the adoption of a rule that all antiphons and responses should be in the exact words of Scripture, which, of course, cut out the whole class of appeals to created beings.

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  • From July 4 to 14 he engaged with Luther on the absolute supremacy of the papacy, purgatory, penance, &c., showing a brilliant display of patristic and conciliar learning against the reformer's appeals to Scripture.

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  • Appeals from the decisions of the provincial and local divisions of the court and from those of the High Court of southern Rhodesia, must be made to the appellate division of the Supreme Court.

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  • This restriction of the power of appeal to the privy council is much greater than are the restrictions upon appeals from the Commonwealth of Australia, where appeals to the privy council lie by right from the several state Supreme Courts.

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  • The writ is freely resorted to in Canada, and in 1905, 1906, two appeals came to the privy council from the dominion, one with reference to an extradition case, the other with respect to the right to expel aliens.

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  • It is not in comparison with the picturesque beauty of European Alpine scenery that the Himalaya appeals to the imagination, for amongst the hills of the outer Himalaya - the hills which are known to the majority of European residents and visitors - there is often a striking absence of those varied incidents and sharp contrasts which are essential to picturesqueness in mountain landscape.

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  • All the enemies of the great Alexandrian he regards merely as empty and vain obscurantists; for the orthodoxy of his hero he appeals to Athanasius.

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  • Finally, when the Parlement of Paris had become a permanent court of justice, having the supreme authority in cases brought before it, and especially in appeals against the sentences of the baillis and seneschals, it retained this name, which was also given to the other supreme courts of the same nature which were created after its model in the provinces.

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  • At this period, too, appeals, strictly so called, did not exist.

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  • The judicial competence of the Parlement developed and became more clearly defined; the system of appeals came into existence, and appeals against the judgments of the baillis and seneschals were brought before it; cases concerning the royal towns, the bonnes villes, were also decided by it.

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  • In order to judge these new appeals the Parlement had above all to study written documents, the inquests which had been made and written down under the jurisdiction of the, court of first instance.

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  • The Chambre des regales had not supreme jurisdiction, but appeals from its decisions could be made to the Parlement proper.

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  • But the chief presidency (Oberprasidium), the Consistory, the provincial schoolboard, and the board of health of the province of Brandenburg remain tribunals of last instance to which appeals lie from Berlin.

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  • Circuit court judges have original jurisdiction in most matters civil and criminal, hear appeals from the lower courts, and must hold at least four sessions annually in each county of the circuit.

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  • Several appeals, however, made to Catesby to allow warning to be given to certain individuals were firmly rejected.

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  • With the advice and consent of the state Senate he selects the secretary of state, attorney-general, superintendent of public instruction, chancellor, chief justice, judges of the supreme, circuit, inferior and district courts, and the so-called " lay " judges of the court of errors and appeals, in addition to the minor administrative officers who are usually appointive in all American states.

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  • At its head is a court of errors and appeals composed of the chancellor, the justices of the supreme court and six additional " lay " judges.

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  • The court of common pleas, which may be held either by the " president " judge or by a justice of the supreme court, may hear appeals from the " small cause court," and has original jurisdiction in all civil matters except those in which the title to real estate is in question.

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  • Writs of error in cases punishable with death are returnable only to the court of errors and appeals.

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  • No appeals are permitted in criminal cases.

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  • The prerogative court, which is presided over by the chancellor as ordinary and surrogate-general, or by a vice-ordinary and vice-surrogate-general, may hear appeals from the orphans' court, and has the authority to grant probate of wills and letters of administration and guardianship, and to hear and determine disputes arising therein.

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  • Appeals from the court of chancery as well as writs of error from the supreme court are heard by the court of errors and appeals.

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  • New Jersey has a court of pardons composed of the governor, chancellor and the six " lay " j udges of the court of errors and appeals, and the concurrence of a majority of its members, of whom the governor shall be one, is necessary to grant a pardon, commute a sentence or remit a fine.

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  • The governor was chosen by the joint vote of the council and assembly; he was president of the council, with a casting vote; he was chancellor, captain-general and commander-in-chief of the militia; he had three members of the legislature to act as a privy-council; and he, with the council (of which seven formed a quorum), constituted " the Court of Appeals in the last resort in all causes of law, as heretofore," which, in addition, had " the power of granting pardons to criminals, after condemnation, in all cases of treason, felony or other offences."

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  • After 1897 he devoted himself to his law practice, being prominently associated with appeals in several notorious criminal trials.

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  • He has all the powers of a court of quarter sessions in a county, including the power to hear appeals from the borough justices; but to this there are a few exceptions, notably the power to grant licences for the sale of intoxicating liquor.

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  • The probability is that in such cases governments and courts applying international law would probably be guided not by technical facts - such, to take the case of British possessions, as the fact that an order in council permitted appeals to the Judicial Committee - but would look to the facts of the case.

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  • His style is clear, absolutely unadorned, and somewhat lacking in force; he appeals constantly to the intellect rather than to the emotions, and is seldom picturesque, though in describing a few famous scenes, such as the execution of Charles I., he writes with pathos and dignity.

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  • The romantic side of music appeals to Mackenzie far more strongly than any other, and the cases in which he has conformed to the classical conventions are of the rarest.

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  • In October 1880 the fall of the Tricoupi ministry restored him to power, when he resumed his warlike policy, but repeated appeals to the courts of Europe yielded little practical result, and Koumoundouros was obliged to reduce his territorial demands and to accept the limited cessions in Thessaly and Epirus, which were carried out in July 1881.

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  • From the decisions of these courts appeals may be made to the appellate division of the Supreme Court.

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  • The supreme court consists of five (before 1909 the number was three) justices elected for a term of six years, and its jurisdiction extends only to appeals from the decisions of the circuit courts.

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  • The judges of the circuit courts were formerly supreme court justices on circuit; they also are chosen for six years, and they have cognizance over all cases, including appeals from inferior courts, not specifically reserved by law for some other tribunal.

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  • It also provided for the annual meeting of a purely episcopal synod, which was to receive appeals from either clergy or laity.

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  • Even then the efforts of the Republican mayor were at first thwarted by the council, which passed an ordinance over his veto, taking from him the power of appointment and vesting it in themselves; the Maryland court of appeals, however, soon decided that the council had exceeded its powers, and an important outcome of the reform movement was the new charter of 1898.

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  • In 1917 he was appointed chairman of the Draft Appeals Board of New York City by Governor Whitman, and the following year was special assistant to the U.S. Attorney-General, in charge of the investigation of alleged waste and delay in the construction of aircraft.

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  • In 1851 the first grand lodge was established at New York; in 1856, the number of district lodges having increased, the supreme authority was vested in a central body consisting of one member from each lodge; and by the present constitution, adopted in 1868, this authority is vested in a president elected for five years, an executive committee and court of appeals (elected as before).

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  • The double kingship led to quarrels between the two brothers in which fresh appeals were continually made to Rome.

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  • In this capacity it tried the suits of tenants-in-chief, and all appeals from the local courts.

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  • During thc first few years of his reign Henry had already been in collision with the ecclesiastical authorities over several such cases; he had chafed at seeing two clerks accused of murder and blackmailing claimed by and acouitted in the church courts; and most of all at the frequency of unlicensed appeals to Romea flagrant breach of one of the three rules laid down by William the Conqueror.

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  • Another concession which Henry was forced to make was that the appeals to Rome of litigants in ecclesiastical suits should be freely permitted, provided that they made an oath that they were not contemplating any wrong to the English crown or the English church, a sufficiently easy condition.

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  • Such appeals became, and remained, innumerable and vexatious.

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  • The king, who had tried to turn them back by taking the cross and declaring himself a crusader, and by making loud appeals for the arbitration of the pope, was forced to retire to Windsor.

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  • Before Baliol bad been many months on the throne there was grave friction on the question of legal appeals.

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  • Henry was in the same position; by strict economy, by the use of foreign subsidies, by the automatic growth of his revenues during a time of peace and returning prosperity, by confiscation and forfeitures, he built himself up a financial position which rendered it unnecessary for him to make frequent appeals to parliament.

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  • The story of Claude Gueux, published five years later (1834), another fervent protest against the infliction of capital punishment, was followed by many other eloquent and passionate appeals to the same effect, written or spoken on various occasions which excited the pity or the indignation of the orator or the poet.

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  • The introduction to his first volume of Actes et paroles, ranging in date from 1841 to 1851, is dated in June 1875; it is one of his most earnest and most eloquent appeals to the conscience and intelligence of the student.

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  • Though practically invisible,' it appeals in its properties to other of our senses, so that the evidences of its presence are manifold.

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  • Prompted by the reinstatement by the bishop of Rome of a deposed African priest, the synod enacted that "whoever appeals to a court on the other side of the sea (meaning Rome) may not again be received into communion by any one in Africa" (canon 17).

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  • The question of appeals to Rome occasioned two synods, one in 419, the other in 424.

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  • Even in our own time, popular Protestant evangelicalism joins with the newer emphasis upon conversion the two great early Protestant appeals - to Atonement and to infallible Scripture.

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  • Other Churches make them too, though they overlay and disguise them with appeals to tradition and to the authority of the Church itself or the Fathers.

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  • He was the Whig candidate for lieutenant-governor of New York in 1846, and was defeated by Addison Gardner (Democrat); but when in 1847 Gardner was appointed a judge of the state court of appeals, Fish was elected (November 1847) to complete the term (to January 1849).

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  • Within a month after he reached London he had declined an offer of the embassy to Brandenburg, and accepted the modest office of commissioner of appeals.

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  • Even in the first book he appeals to the common reason, which he calls " common sense."

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  • But in the north the appeals of such Girondins as escaped from Paris were of no avail.

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  • The appeals from the decisions of the Arches court were formerly made to the king in chancery, but they are now by statute addressed to the king in council, and they are heard before the judicial committee of the privy council.

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  • In short, More's Platonism appears to be really as hedonistic as Hobbism; only the feeling to which it appeals as ultimate motive is of a kind that only a mind of exceptional moral refinement can habitually feel with the decisive intensity required.

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  • But in his exposition of the fundamental contradiction involved in morality elaborated with much care and illustrative argument he appeals for the most part to facts familiar to the unphilosophical moral consciousness.

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  • From the sheriff courts appeals lie to the superior court at Reykjavik, consisting of three judges.

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  • Appeals may be taken in all criminal cases and most civil cases to the supreme court at Copenhagen.

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  • For the administration of justice there have been established a supreme court composed of six justices elected for a term of six years; a criminal court of appeals composed of three justices appointed by the governor with the advice and consent of the Senate; twenty-one district courts each with one or more justices elected for a term of four years; a county court in each county with one justice elected for a term of two years; a court of a justice of the peace, elected for a term of two years, in each of six districts of each county, and police courts in the cities.

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  • The criminal court of appeals has jurisdiction in all criminal cases appealed from the district and county courts.

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  • He began his new rule by a vigorous attempt to assert his rights, warned the citizens of London not to withhold tithes, and decided appeals from the judgments of his suffragans during a thorough visitation of his province.

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  • The sick man, therefore, appeals to Shamash as the god who can be depended upon to help those who are suffering unjustly.

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  • Two companies brought suit for moneys owed for liquor sold to the state dispensary; the commission resisted the suit on the ground that as a court and as a representative of the state it could not be sued; the circuit court and the circuit court of appeals overruled this plea and put the funds into the hands of a receiver; but in April 1909 this famous cause was closed by the decision of the Federal Supreme Court, upholding the commission and restoring to it the fund.

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  • As the king and his minister had to listen to and adjudicate upon the appeals from the contending parties their patience was at last worn out, and both governor and intendant were recalled to France in the year 1682.

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  • From this inferior jurisdiction the appeals go to the 15 audiencias territoriales, or courts of appeal.

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  • There is in Madrid a Supreme Court, which is modelled upon the French Cour de Cassation, to rule on points of law when appeals are made from the decisions of inferior courts, or when conflicts arise between civil and military jurisdiction.

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  • As a member of the Duma he attained a certain notoriety by impassioned speeches and appeals for root-and-branch reform, but he was never conspicuous for steady work or constructive statesmanship. When the first Revolutionary Government was formed people were astonished to hear that Kerensky had been nominated Minister of Justice.

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  • From this time the estates were only once convoked by Charles, who contented himself thenceforward by appeals to the assembly of notables or to the provincial bodies.

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  • In vain did Rib-Addi send touching appeals for aid to the distant Pharaoh, who was far too much engaged in his religious innovations to attend to such messages.

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  • Theodore refused to attend or recognize the new council, and was banished first to Bithynia and thence to Smyrna, whence he continued to address his appeals to the pope, to the eastern patriarchs and to his dispersed monks.

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  • His appeals to the home government, however, resulted in the sending of General Edward Braddock to Virginia with two regiments of regular troops; and at Braddock's call Dinwiddie and the governors of Massachusetts, New York, Pennsylvania and Maryland met at Alexandria, Virginia, in April 1755, and planned the initial operations of the war.

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  • In 1643 the jurisdiction of the New Haven colony was extended by the admission of the townships of Milford, Guilford and Stamford to equal rights with New Haven, the recognition of their local governments, and the formation of two courts for the whole jurisdiction, a court of magistrates to try important cases and hear appeals from " plantation " courts, and a general court with legislative powers, the highest court of appeals, which was similar in composition to the general court of the Connecticut Colony.

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  • The administration of justice is vested in a supreme court, a court of civil appeals, chancery courts, circuit courts, county courts, j ustice of the peace courts, and, in certain cities and towns, a recorder's court.

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  • The court of civil appeals, which in 1907 was substituted for the court of chancery appeals, is also composed of five judges not more than two of whom shall reside in the same grand division.

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  • This court has jurisdiction of appeals from equity courts in which the amount in controversy does not exceed $1000, except in cases involving the constitutionality of a Tennessee statute, contested election or state revenue, and ejectment suits; it has jurisdiction also of civil cases tried in the circuit and common law courts in which writs of error or appeals in the nature of writs of error are applied for.

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  • In his beloved Italy his etchings are suffused with a classicism that nonetheless appeals to a contemporary aesthetic.

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  • Appeals Court judge Michael Chertoff was to be Ridge's successor, subject to senate confirmation.

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  • Appeal panels are not bound by precedent or by any notional percentage of appeals which they must uphold in parents' favor.

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  • President Bush has named assistant attorney general and former appeals court judge Michael Chertoff as Ridge's successor, subject to Senate confirmation.

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  • Publication of the papal bull is deferred until October; on reading it, Henry appeals to the projected general council.

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  • Planning Inspectorate Deals with the processing of planning and enforcement appeals, holding inquiries into local development plans and other planning related casework.

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  • Members of the public should be extremely cautious about donating to misleading appeals.

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  • The Rule Books also contain appeals from other courts, mainly county court cases relating to workmen's compensation after 1897.

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  • Roughly contemporaneous with such changes was the introduction of new rules on first tier decision making and appeals.

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  • They should have reissued the notices of determination to the liquidator (paragraph 7.4) and sought a valid determination of the open appeals.

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  • As the state became increasingly embattled, so its appeals to national identity inevitably reflected the imperial and centralizing mission of the state.

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  • The Court of Appeal has delivered a further, possibly fatal, blow to such appeals in the decision in Pegasus Birds Limited.

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  • You cannot get any money for things like solicitors ' fees from us or the Appeals Service.

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  • Even appeals to the command center in the Palestine Hotel remained fruitless.

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  • The Appeals Service will decide your appeal at a tribunal hearing.

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  • It plucks the right heartstrings, has an uplifting message, and appeals to just about every known demographic.

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  • Martin's approach doubtless appeals to many who are struggling to preach the gospel to a biblically illiterate culture.

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  • The Appeals Court ruled that the governmentâs pricing policies were, in fact, legally invalid.

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  • Paisley appeals to loyalists to stop civil rights marchers in Armagh on 30 November.

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  • Unfortunately, her appeals to the ' ancient matriarchy ' are ahistorical, and her analysis of the Ring itself simple.

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  • Appeals blared from the mosque minarets implored people to stop destroying the city, the Arab language TV al-Jazeera reported.

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  • A respondent's notice is not obligatory in small claims appeals.

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  • The Appeals Jury present at the event for Jumping will also officiate for the World Cup Driving.

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  • September 2 10 years with Scottish Widows leaves saver £ 200 down Devastated saver appeals to financial ombudsman.

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  • Examines the history of sexually oriented appeals in American culture from 1850 to the internet age.

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  • Outcome of appeals This includes the outcome of appeals This includes the outcome of the appeals by the magistrates court.

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  • Tribunal procedure will be governed by the same rules (such as they are) as apply to other benefit appeals.

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  • The government has asked the appeals court to overturn that ruling, saying interruption of his interrogation would undermine the war on terrorism.

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  • Most of Pila's hotels are ski-in/ski-out, and some of them can be quite rustic, which appeals to many visitors.

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  • The EU appeals to all stares not party to the NPT to place all their nuclear activities under IAEA safeguards.

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  • To be able to win the war against Strong Drink, England appeals to her people to make the necessary self-sacrifice.

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  • Angela Roden, Christie's Director of Appeals, thanked the runners for their " wonderful donations and amazing stamina " .

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  • They see an issue that appeals to first-time voters who don't seem to care about anything else very much.

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  • His eloquence was of that nature, in its impassioned appeals to the strongest emotions, that it required for its full effect the highest themes and the most dramatic situations.

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  • The hopes of ultimate success were frustrated by the intervention of Russia; all appeals to the western powers were vain, and on the 11th of August Kossuth abdicated in favour of GOrgei, on the ground that in the last extremity the general alone could save the nation.

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  • In case of a vacancy in the court of appeals or in the circuit court the governor appoints until the next general election, or if the unexpired term is less than two years, until the end of the term.

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  • He entered upon the duties of his office on the 19th of July 1809, and at first he gained popularity by acceding to the urgent appeals of the people and throwing open the trade of the country to all nations.

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  • Criminal appeals usually go straight to the criminal section, while civil appeals are generally taken before the Chambre des Requtes, where they undergo a preliminary examination.

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  • From the Conquest or even earlier they had, besides various lesser rights - (1) exemption from tax and tallage; (2) soc and sac, or full cognizance of all criminal and civil cases within their liberties; (3) tol and team, or the right of receiving toll and the right of compelling the person in whose hands stolen property was found to name the person from whom he received it; (4) blodwit and fledwit, or the right to punish shedders of blood and those who were seized in an attempt to escape from justice; (5) pillory and tumbrel; (6) infangentheof and r L outfangentheof, or power to imprison and execute felons; (7) mundbryce (the breaking into or violation of a man's mund or property in order to erect banks or dikes as a defence against the sea); (8) waives and strays, or the right to appropriate lost property or cattle not claimed within a year and a day; (9) the right to seize all flotsam, jetsam, or ligan, or, in other words, whatever of value was cast ashore by the sea; (10) the privilege of being a gild with power to impose taxes for the common weal; and (11) the right of assembling in portmote or parliament at Shepway or Shepway Cross, a few miles west of Hythe (but afterwards at Dover), the parliament being empowered to make by-laws for the Cinque Ports, to regulate the Yarmouth fishery, to hear appeals from the local courts, and to give decision in all cases of treason, sedition, illegal coining or concealment of treasure trove.

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  • The court can hear appeals from the Cinque Ports salvage commissioners, such appeals being final (Cinque Ports Act 1821).

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  • Its central enactment was to bring into existence (1) " Special Boards," consisting of an equal number of representatives of employers and workmen respectively in any trade, under the presidency of an independent chairman, and (2) a Court of Industrial Appeals.

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  • Even Jeremy Bentham, restive under appeals to vague and intangible standards, breaks out in despairing indignation against the word " ought " as " the talisman of arrogance, indolence point of the particular theist who speaks to the ques tion.

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  • It will be noticed that as yet no provision is made for appeals by bishops from provincial synods sitting in first instance.

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  • He represents the old ethical Mosaism, which had not disappeared from the national consciousness, but still remained as the moral pre-supposition on which the prophets of the following century based their appeals and denunciations.

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  • Its objects embrace (a) admonition to those who fail in the payment of their just debts, or otherwise walk contrary to the standard of Quaker ethics, and the exclusion of obstinate or gross offenders from the body, and, as incident to this, the hearing of appeals from individuals or meetings considering themselves aggrieved; (b) the care and maintenance of the poor and provision for the Christian education of their children, for which purpose the Society has established boarding schools in different parts of the country; (c) the amicable settlement of " all differences about outward things," either by the parties in controversy or by the submission of the dispute to arbitration, and the restraint of all proceedings at law between members except by leave; (d) the " recording " of ministers (see above); (e) the cognizance of all steps preceding marriage according to Quaker forms; (f) the registration of births, deaths and marriages and the admission of members; (g) the issuing of certificates or letters of approval granted to ministers travelling away from their homes, or to members removing from one meeting to another; and (h) the management of the property belonging to the Society.

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  • It has been customary to attribute the creation of the German navy to the Kaiser William II., and it is true that in large part the initiative for successive increases, and the demagogic appeals by which they were supported, originated with the Emperor.

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  • Franklin had repeatedly petitioned Congress for his recall, but his letters were unanswered or his appeals refused until the 7th of March 1785, when Congress resolved that he be allowed to return to America; on the 10th of March Thomas Jefferson, who had joined him in August of the year before, was appointed to his place.

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  • At this time the British, wearied of South African troubles, were disinclined to respond to native appeals for help. Consequently the Boers proceeded without let or hindrance with their conquest and annexation of territory.

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  • Thus Christianity, as religion, is on the one hand the adoration of God, that is, of the highest and noblest, and this highest and noblest as conceived not under forms of power or knowledge but in the form of ethical self-devotion as embodied in Jesus Christ, and on the other hand it meets the requirements of all religion in its dependence, not indeed upon some absolute idea or omnipotent power, but in the belief that that which appeals to the soul as worthy of supreme worship is also that in which the soul may trust, and which shall deliver it from sin and fear and death.

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  • He was deaf also to all the appeals against the other forms of his boundless extravagance which Colbert, with all his deference towards his sovereign, bravely ventured to make.'

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  • This was only a preliminary skirmish; the main battle opened in the following year, when the king, quite aware that he must for the future look on Thomas as his enemy, brought forward the famous Constitutions of Clarendon, of which the main purport was to assert the jurisdiction of the state over clerical offenders by a rather complicated procedure, while other clauses provided that appeals to Rome must not be made without the kings leave, that suits about land or the presentation to benefices, in which clerics were concerned, should be tried before the royal courts, and that bishops should not quit the realmunless they had obtained permission to do so from the king (see CLARENDON, CONSTITUTIONS OF).

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  • The barbarous tortures and executions which rendered Khiva notorious in the East are no longer heard of; and the continual appeals of the khojas for "holy" war against their rivals find no response.

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  • The staff officer joined in the colonel's appeals, but Bagration did not reply; he only gave an order to cease firing and re-form, so as to give room for the two approaching battalions.

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  • Where an applicant appeals against a refusal of permission the council 's decision is defended.

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  • Alpha appeals (by respondent 's notice filed on 9 October 2002) against paragraph 5 of that order.

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  • There is a total absence of self pity, rhetorical flourishes, emotional appeals.

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  • Most of Pila 's hotels are ski-in/ski-out, and some of them can be quite rustic, which appeals to many visitors.

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  • Angela Roden, Christie 's Director of Appeals, thanked the runners for their " wonderful donations and amazing stamina ".

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  • The Director of Quality and Standards shall decide whether there is sufficient justification in the case for presentation to an Appeals Panel.

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  • Appeals in manifestly unfounded cases should have suspensive effect.

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  • The Office of Alumni and Development ran its regular telethon appeals between October and March 2005/06.

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  • There is usually a time limit on appeals, so be careful not to miss the deadlines.

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  • Thus the toothpaste manufacturer might actually be able to develop a product, a proposition and a branding that only appeals to young clubbers.

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  • The Dons appealed for a foul, but the referee was unmoved by the half-hearted appeals.

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  • They see an issue that appeals to first-time voters who do n't seem to care about anything else very much.

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  • Appeals for review of results Appeals are considered where there are well-founded reasons for believing a result to be unfair.

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  • He appeals for funds from well-meaning people to help him continue his stance against corruption in the media.

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  • The book was a classic word-of-mouth cult success which, Sue says, appeals to her 'subliminal sense'.

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  • Hearings and appeals may also be discussed.

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  • Pick the style and material that appeals to you and that matches the current décor of the room where the lamp will sit.

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  • This appeals to people who want a pet as a companion or source of entertainment.

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  • If none of the above appeals, then perhaps help is at hand in the form of some of the great Internet sites that offer ideas for cats names.

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  • This natural recipe has a smooth texture that appeals to many cats.

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  • The Pricker Boy appeals to readers who enjoy fantasy mixed with reality.

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  • Ripley's Believe It or Not! is one title that appeals to kids' natural fascination with the grotesque, outlandish, and unbelievable, although it's little more than a collection of vignettes on various human achievements.

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  • If you're in a hurry but the idea of a custom bookshelf appeals to you, there are kits available that will let you indulge in a little creative construction without all the hassle of cutting and choosing the hardware yourself.

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  • Minimalism in furniture and overall room design will give an uncluttered look that appeals to feng shui principles.

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  • It will help make it look clean, fresh and bright and will ensure that it appeals to a large number of potential buyers.

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  • If you're not sure what style of area rug appeals to you, the best thing to do is browse through the many different styles available online.

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  • The web site appeals to the young demographic that Wang hopes to reach with her newest fragrance.

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  • Though similar in many ways, this scent offers a richer, more seductive finish that appeals to a broader age group.

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  • If the look of Buzzelli's brush-wielded women appeals to you, you'll find you might be able to create something similar with the help of the palette itself.

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  • Inspired by tattoos, Hardy's work boasts a vintage, rock 'n' roll aesthetic that appeals primarily to young age groups, but doesn't necessarily restrict itself to that.

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  • Maybe the softer side of goth appeals to you, and you want your makeup to reflect that.

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  • A funky and colorful makeup look appeals to many girls on prom night because it is a chance to step outside the box and have some fun with your makeup.

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  • When the Cricut was first released, one of the biggest appeals of the machine was that you did not need a computer to operate it.

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  • While Arapahoe Basin appeals to intermediate and advanced skiers and snowboarders, Breckenridge, Keystone and Copper Mountain all have terrain suitable for novices to experts.

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  • CoolWorks appeals to teens who desire unique jobs or who are looking for summer positions.

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  • Urban Outfitters appeals more to the college set, with clothes for men and women.

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  • Lulu has cute clothes and a fun website sight that appeals to the eye.

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  • However, just one year later, a federal appeals court ruled that prayers led by students should be allowed at graduation ceremonies, and justices refused to review the case.

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  • Butterflies have a great deal of symbolism that appeals to many couples.

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  • There are also ways of creating a soothing space that aesthetically appeals to women and helps them feel at home.

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  • As you can see, there are many things to consider when purchasing luxury bath towels, but the main point to keep in mind is to select what appeals the most to you.

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  • For some of us, seeing our favorite actors, actresses, and musicians fall in love simply appeals to our romantic side.

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  • With a mixture of women's issues and celebrity interviews, coupled with Banks' likeability, her show appeals to a large audience.

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  • As a "girl next door" who enjoys comedic acting, she draws the preteen and teen crowds, but also appeals to older fans.

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  • Again, formal items are not really present in the repertoire and this online vendor appeals only to infant and toddler girls.

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  • The show features live action, animation, and music that appeals to a wide viewer demographic from toddlers to teens to adults.

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  • Accessories - The emo style offers wearers the opportunity to accessorize with just about anything that appeals to their sense of style but that also forgoes traditional fashion.

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  • Each university will have its own unique appeals process.

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  • This position often appeals to retired professors and journalists who have knowledge of specific cruise destinations.

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  • A cruise to nowhere from one of the aforementioned cities appeals to travelers who want to enjoy a short sailing and tour popular vacation destinations.

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  • It is a wonderful place that features a variety of ports and options and appeals to a variety of age groups.

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  • If the idea of pet insurance appeals to you and you'd like to learn more, visit VPI Pet Insurance's website.

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  • If the idea of fluorescent lights within your home appeals to you, then you may want to consult with a lighting specialist to see if the switch is feasible for your lighting needs.

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  • If aluminum, vinyl or a composite material appeals to you, you might want to explore the option of buying a prefab shed or building one from a kit.

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  • If the idea of carpeting in the bathroom appeals to you, make sure to keep the following tips in mind when planning for carpet tiles.

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  • The result of this savvy marketing plan is jewelry that appeals to collectors across every age group, and no single collection is a better example of this fact than Judith Jack dog charm bracelets.

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  • The I Am Blessed necklace pendant is a popular type of spiritual jewelry because it appeals to people of all ages and religious affiliations.

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  • In fact, this may be one of the rare religious necklaces that appeals to secular shoppers too.

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  • Spreading good karma with their sunny disposition, organic t shirts, and earth conscious approach, Life is Good apparel appeals to all types of people.

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  • Organic beauty products are also produced with sustainability in mind, which appeals to consumers who are attempting to go green.

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  • With the variety of styles available, it is best to take your time checking out the women's plus size cycling shorts available to find what appeals to you in features and design.

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  • For example, you might find a pair of patterned pajamas that appeals to you at one wholesaler, and a variety of separates that you love at another.

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  • With your interest thus aroused, you can then browse the various sections to see what appeals.

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  • This really is a timeless style that appeals to all types of girls.

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  • Kids are more likely to wear something that appeals to them and their interests.

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  • These A Wire Thick glasses provide a modern and popular look which appeals to many people looking for a cool pair of shades to enhance their appearance.

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  • Designer eyewear makes the brand more accessible to consumers and appeals to more than just those interested in the clothing.

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  • Not surprisingly, this popular online video game review show largely appeals to people who grew up playing video games in the 1980s and 1990s.

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  • One of the appeals of puzzle games is their value as a social tool.

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  • The suit would later be dismissed by the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals.

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  • Easily one of the biggest appeals to the original Lumines was the music mix, and Lumines II is no exception.

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  • But as an objective reviewer, I think it only appeals to a small crowd of gamers.

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  • Check out this list and see what appeals to you.

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  • One of the main appeals of Real Arcade is when you download one of their titles, you get a complete casual gaming solution.

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  • It isn't just that it appeals to a younger audience, as themes get mature on several occasions, but most of the game is spent in a light-hearted adventure kind of a spirit.

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  • The PSP appeals more to an older, more mature audience, and as such, many of its games are more complex, more adult-oriented, and more violent.

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  • This is because the Wii appeals not only to traditional gamers, but also "non-gamers" like grandparents and soccer moms.

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  • Perhaps one of the greatest appeals of the game is that you can make use of the "Mii" characters you create in the Wii's Mii maker.

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  • What appeals to one person might not appeal to the next.

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  • The Prevost Owners Group appeals greatly to those who own these luxurious coaches.

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  • With decades of experience manufacturing and marketing top rated Class A motor homes, Monaco knows what appeals to those who seek opportunities to fully enjoy the RV lifestyle.

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  • Decisions may be appealed first to a judge of the court, then to the Federal Circuit Court of Appeals, and finally to the Supreme Court.

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  • Having choices is important since an action that appeals to one child may be of no interest to another, and the child's interest is likely to change throughout the play period.

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  • In 1996, a federal appeals court ruled that school officials can be held liable under the Equal Protection Clause of the U.S. Constitution for not protecting gay and bisexual students from harassment and discrimination.

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  • Look for the type of ballroom dance that appeals to you, and that will be the one that has the easiest steps for you to learn, simply because you love the dance.

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  • Scientists have even conducted tests that show that the Golden Ratio appeals to both the human brain and the human eye.

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  • If a particular career field appeals to you, knowing the median rate of pay is an excellent starting point for figuring out what type of salary you can expect to earn.

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  • Whether your talents lie in science, math, marketing, business management, or another area, with the proper education and training you have the opportunity to pursue a high paying job in a profession that appeals to you.

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  • If the idea of working as a part-time census taker appeals to you, consider applying for one of the U.S. Census job openings.

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  • If you find out that the company is very bureaucratic in nature - and that type of working environment appeals to you -- emphasize the fact that you work well with structure and are committed to complying with policies and procedures.

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  • The field of nursing offers a wide variety of opportunities, and each facet appeals to different interests.

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  • Few careers have as many specialities as this area of medicine, and you can find a speciality that appeals to your interests, and one that helps you reach your goals.

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  • If an operations manager job description appeals to you, this may be a great career choice for you.

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  • For this reason, it is important to act fast when you find an interest rate that appeals to you.

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  • If you cannot find a maternity coat that is in your budget or in a style that appeals to you, do not give up hope.

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  • Make a list of the methods that appeal to you most and, most importantly, write down why each one appeals to you.

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  • Sifting through this site can take some work since they have a lot of pictures, but you may find one that appeals to you.

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  • After a certain age, a boy may not like having to wear a coverup, so the trick is to find him one that appeals to his individual taste and is comfortable, so that he will be that much more ready to embrace, or at least tolerate, it.

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  • Liz Claiborne clothing has been around for years and it appeals to women no matter what age and size.

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  • If you don't see an item that appeals to you on this list, check out the selection on Amazon.com.

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  • The backdrop appeals to kids because it's setting Candyland with gumdrops and lollipops and happy little candy people.

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  • The Commissioner decided not to make the name change after vocal appeals from townspeople, Monopoly players worldwide and a written plea from the Parker Brothers President at the time.

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  • Since the Incredible Hulk appeals to children and adults alike, this can be a great family board game.

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  • Buying a designer created home fragrance set has the added benefit of being relatively risk free, as most designers will be catering for a broad market and therefore will be designed to offer a scent that appeals to most people.

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  • Oriental musk appeals to both men and women, with it's slightly woodsy scent.

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  • Like these items, popcorn appeals to people who enjoy snacking, and it is also has the additional appeal of being a somewhat novel fundraising idea.

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  • This religion based organization obtains much of its financial backing from appeals it makes to churches.

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  • Funny songs, however, offer a different perspective on the happiness of the season by exaggerating the characteristics of the holiday in a way that appeals to the mischievous elf in all of us.

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  • This is also the perfect time to find one that is tongue-in-cheek or even features dark humor, if that is what appeals to you and the recipient.

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  • Think about what most appeals to you and what's most practical to accomplish.

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  • Whatever sort of event you are attending, you will never run the risk of overdressing, so you should just pick the most outrageous outfit that appeals to you.

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  • When utilizing a singles vacation to search for a potential partner, ensure matchmaking success by selecting a trip that appeals directly to the type of person you are.

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  • Often a transsexual will be very feminine acting, which appeals to many men.

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  • If the atmosphere appeals to you, it can be a great Seattle dating place.

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  • There are other websites available, so it is a good idea to have a look around until you find a free online dating service for Lawton residents that appeals to you.

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  • Take a stroll down any humor card aisle in a local store and see what appeals to you.

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  • One of the first things a couple needs to do when choosing an engagement ring is to decide which shape appeals most to the bride-to-be's personality and sense of style.

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  • The Everlon jewelry collection appeals to couples looking for symbolic engagement, wedding and anniversary rings.

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  • The range also appeals to married couples with some designs in the collection making stunning anniversary gifts.

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  • The love story between the brooding vampire Edward Cullen and the one human girl who means more to him than his own immortal life has a following that appeals to youth and adults alike in 39 countries.

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  • The symbolic ring has a rich history that appeals to couples who want to honor the tradition and heritage of their faith.

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  • The platinum emerald cut aquamarine diamond ring appeals to women who want a unique engagement ring with symbolism.

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  • Their natural beauty appeals to couples who want something different than a diamond ring.

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  • There are Web sites devoted to almost any topic you can imagine, so you shouldn't have any trouble finding a site that appeals to you.

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  • The idea of getting paid to watch sports appeals to fans from a variety of backgrounds, resulting in a large number of applicants for every available position.

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  • Online education appeals to freelance writers because of the flexibility.

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  • The current product line appeals to a flashier youthful customer, with an economical price point, clustering around $100 or less.

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  • The classic line appeals most to people who are not carrying around their laptops and tons of gadgets.

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  • Whether you're a man or a woman, you're bound to find something that appeals to you in the wide range of Hawaiian-inspired designs available on the market today.

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  • The collaboration between the beloved Vera Bradley and Ricardo Beverly Hills appeals to the stylish female traveler.

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  • Select a style that appeals to you for a handbag that offers durability and elegance.

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  • One of the biggest appeals of Bella Taylor is the wide assortment of patterns available.

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  • The result is a lineup that appeals to a much wider base of consumers than ever before.

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  • Depending on the deck, your learning style, and what's immediately available to you, you may find that one method of learning appeals to you more than another.

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  • Her style is usually classic and sensible, something that appeals to a Virgo man.

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  • Parents have the freedom to pick and choose the aspects of each method that appeals to their needs.

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  • Stores like Eddie Bauer, Lands End, Express, Anchor Blue, Old Navy, American Eagle Outfitters, The Gap, and many others have clothing that appeals to teens.

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  • The look clearly appeals to girls age 12 and under, and the dolls are now available in many countries around the world.

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  • It helps to begin your search early to ensure that you find a spot in the daycare that appeals to you most.

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  • With more than 60 meal choices, you're sure to find something that appeals to your tastes.

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  • This is the type of soap opera that appeals to viewers of all ages.

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  • You must flip through images to find the one that appeals to you.

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  • If the Greek accounting appeals to you more, you might choose Pan as your muse and picture him looking up at the constellation from his forest home.

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  • Perhaps its more than the rose's beauty that appeals to tattoo enthusiasts.

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  • If the idea of stick-on tattoos appeals to you, imagine if you were able to design make them for yourself.

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  • If the idea of creating a tattoo appeals to you, but you aren't sure where to begin, take a look at the things that surround you for inspiration.

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  • If you are a tattoo artist compiling a collection of flash, there is nothing preventing you from pulling art that appeals to you from each of these sites.

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  • The indoor heated pool appeals to children of all ages, and the central location guarantees the top attractions are all a short walk or drive away.

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  • The traditional styling of these clocks appeals to adults too, and a few words engraved onto the back of the clock make for a very personal and thoughtful gift.

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  • This is an interesting feature and one that appeals to people from all backgrounds.

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  • As you consider starting a yoga practice, don't forget to consult with your doctor (especially if Hot yoga or Bikram yoga appeals to you) before starting.

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  • Power yoga appeals to many yogis as a unique way to energize one's yoga practice.

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  • If you're selling life insurance, placing ads on a popular webcomic Web site that appeals to college kids is probably not going to be as effective as a more sedate, establishment Web site.

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  • Unlike other brands of soft drinks, Product X appeals to taste and health consciousness.

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  • Use the template books in the office to choose the card layout, paper stock and ink color that appeals to you.

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  • All countries have promised to cut emissions, meaning more fuel-efficient, hybrid, electric, and compact cars will be produced with quality features and equipment that appeals to consumers.

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  • Once you've decided what style of jewelry appeals to you, you'll need to decide what type of project you want to complete.

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  • Many of these foods are not necessarily low in calories but are low in fat or even fat free, which appeals to the dieting masses.

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  • Plain, full-fat yogurt has a delightfully smooth texture and an acidic zing that appeals to many children.

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  • Considering that the Pilates method of exercise was created by a man named Joseph Pilates, it may seem odd that the technique appeals primarily to women.

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  • Ask about the appeals procedure and be sure to keep copies of all your correspondence sent to and received from the company to increase your chances of being successful in getting your alternative medicine treatments covered.

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