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"expedience" Definitions
  1. EXPEDIENCY

169 Sentences With "expedience"

How to use expedience in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "expedience" and check conjugation/comparative form for "expedience". Mastering all the usages of "expedience" from sentence examples published by news publications.

But their mutual admiration was not rooted only in expedience.
His career has been defined, more than anything, by political expedience.
Orbán's turn to nativism, in many ways, originated in political expedience.
The Big Lie is that political expedience is honorable and justifiable.
"There are no morals in politics; there is only expedience," he wrote.
Or, perhaps less generously, giving quarter to indefensible prejudices out of political expedience.
Both spoke to a passion and set of principles that transcended political expedience.
Still, he has never shaken the impression that expedience is his first calling.
Mr Trump cannot be accused of expedience—he has attacked security freeloaders for decades.
Trump backed Moore's opponent, Luther Strange, in the Republican primary, apparently for political expedience.
That's true even if that progressivism was, in fact, a matter of political expedience.
My commanders and senior NCOs tell me that expedience is critical for emergency response.
They've been feeding their base all kinds of crazy for years, primarily for political expedience.
The Man Who Invented Christmas is a movie that owes its existence to financial expedience.
The interests of students should not be sacrificed for budgetary expedience or special interest politics.
Mr. Mnuchin's willingness to keep doing so suggests that expedience has won out over experience.
Those plans are more similar to the Affordable Care Act's approach, in part for expedience.
Or cross any considerable distance by rail — distances typically flown over in the name of expedience.
Since November 2016, Sandberg has on more than one occasion chosen political expedience over feminist politics.
While nominations have come slowly under Trump, the Senate isn't exactly known for its expedience, either.
But principle isn't supposed to be something that people turn on and off, depending on political expedience.
When these women are shot from above, it is not an exercise in insight but in expedience.
When these women are shot from above, it is not an exercise in insight but in expedience.
Here's Obama: They've been feeding their base all kinds of crazy for years, primarily for political expedience.
Our reasons for not selling our phones in the U.S. market currently are matters of simple business expedience.
Still, the "Islamic" aspect of his vision comes more from political expedience than any deeply held religious conviction.
Pragmatism, expedience and the maintenance of power are the real monarchs of politics — and not just among Republicans.
His path was greased by grand construction projects, driven less by necessity than by political expedience, and financial bribes.
She didn't create female-centered work out of political concerns or expedience; it was simply the place where she lived.
"We think the Passaic River cleanup was more about expedience than doing what's right for the river," Mr. Tittel said.
For every compromise he made to political expedience on the campaign trail, in office he ultimately did the right thing.
Some establishment Republicans — fearful of outsider threats to their power — may appease them, sacrificing principle for the expedience of compromise.
For to be a hypocrite you have to have principles that you betray for the sake of expedience or political advantage.
It clarifies this ambiguous relationship which in recent days since Brexit has become vague and has been exploited for political expedience.
The expedience of a short story is certainly a feature in the way that feathers are a feature of a bird.
"Once again, the Trump administration is sacrificing public safety for political expedience," New Jersey Attorney General Gurbir Grewal said in a statement.
What mix of ambition, duty, principle and expedience led him to the vice presidency in the White House of Donald J. Trump?
Whatever El Comandante decided it was -- for convenience, expedience or the increasingly baroque and self-serving rationalizations he provided for staying in power.
"It's easier to get things done," said the 230-year-old kindergarten assistant, adding that the decision was not based on expedience alone.
It's unclear what started Bollywood's fascination with rain as an agent of romantic and sexual expedience, but this song certainly supports that cause.
But for those of us who have deeply admired her for years, her willingness to sacrifice principle for political expedience is wrenching to watch.
In the realm of political expedience, even those wanting to legislate religious principles find the Ninth Commandment, thou shalt not bear false witness, negotiable.
For every compromise or concession to party orthodoxy or political expedience on the campaign trail, in office Mr. Bush ultimately did the right thing.
Amazon indicates that it is looking for workers with previous customer service expedience, logical problem-solving skills and experience working in a fast-paced environment.
Every single day there is a new, terrifying, preventable tragedy fomented by a president and an administration that uses hate and entitlement as political expedience.
All an average person needs to know is that mail goes in a mailbox, and, with relative expedience, it shows up where it's addressed to go.
Still, It's hard to imagine either party pulling back the reins -- unless a crisis put them in a position where Americans, and political expedience, demanded it.
Public scrutiny of arms sales is an indispensable insurance policy against irresponsible transactions that, for the sake of momentary expedience, risk ethical, moral and strategic compromises.
Whether the politicians took these positions out of ignorance or expedience, the transgender community doesn't have the luxury of waiting for lawmakers to figure it out.
That's fairly shocking: You have the party in power ignoring, for the sake of political expedience, evidence that a hostile foreign state meddled in our election.
The real antidote, however, may be to call out the elites, domestic and international, who lower the bar for leadership out of politeness, expedience or indifference.
But now, in the hands of Mr. Salvini and Mr. Di Maio, this sentiment is reaching new heights, in terms of both political expedience and pettiness.
Societies that abandon the principle of free expression in response to contemporary pressures or for expedience soon find that other human rights also head down the drain.
That many of her coming projects focus on women is equal parts feminism – "I'm fighting the male narrative in all of our lives," she said – and expedience.
After Turnbull's tweet, dozens of people shared other character types that aren't necessarily lazy, per se — they just allow for shocking narrative expedience and probably wouldn't fly IRL.
Rouhani said his country would "take any action that is necessary for the country's expedience and interests" should the sanctions go into effect, according to The Associated Press.
For those that either stumble into political dysfunction or out of expedience assume recent trends will persist, this moment of fiscal quiescence could prove to be a mirage.
" Specia and his three subordinates will testify before a judge on May 4, when the judge will determine whether they lost the drugs because of "expedience or negligence.
"It will be a sad state of affairs if Secretary Clinton's political expedience forces her to put someone so completely unqualified one heartbeat away from the presidency," she said.
When Charles goes to Wales, for example, it becomes not just about a young man learning Welsh for political expedience, but about a young man finding his own voice.
Even the conservative forces usually adamant about the uselessness of any negotiation with the "Greatest Satan" were this time divided on the expedience of accepting Trump's offer of negotiations.
The entire production was, in short, classic Trump — an overhyped, self-aggrandizing display aimed at focusing the spotlight on himself for reasons of both personal gratification and political expedience.
Underneath it all, however, was the creaking foundation of a Soviet empire whose nuclear program was governed by a combination of "ruthless expedience" and a perpetual fear of humiliation.
Are Republicans seriously ready to cede the party of Lincoln and Reagan to a real-estate mogul-turned-reality TV star whose faux conservatism is the byproduct of political expedience?
For the sake of expedience, a vast majority of those cases — 1,967 to date — have been collected in one federal court, in what is known as a multi-district litigation.
He excelled at playing defense during the Obama years, but now he's finally going to be forced to choose between political expedience and ideologically driven changes that are sweeping and risky.
But for reasons of political expedience, conservatives have been more likely to make excuses for their predators, and indeed have elevated one of the more prominent examples to the White House.
In a time of confusion, the best films can offer clarity, comfort and a salutary reminder of complexities that lie beyond the bluster and expedience of political discourse and conventional journalism.
How Mr. Trump — a former Democrat who once declared, "I'm very pro choice" — became an unbowed voice for the anti-abortion movement is a story of savvy political transformation and bald expedience.
The main plot — Clara's battle with the financial expedience and bottom-line corruption of the real estate company — flickers in and out of view, so that we can spend time in her company.
Established nearly 100 years ago according to political expedience rather than natural logic, the border — some 300 miles long, with about 210 crossings — is not easy to control, police or even always identify.
City Kitchen 6 Photos View Slide Show ' For some, a cold supper's main virtue is expedience — a less-than-exciting but convenient way to get food on the table with no cooking required.
The kindest thing you can say about the web of relationships among the American military, its contractors, and this motley assortment of sectarian death squads is that it was born out of expedience.
Though C.A.A. has not determined its final plans, there is a possibility that Ohtani, as a matter of expedience, will meet with clubs at some point during baseball's winter meetings in Orlando, Fla.
Some analysts argue the Al Saud ruling family will interpret the move as political expedience by lawmakers in a U.S. election season and that the chances of a successful lawsuit are uncertain at best.
And even after 1979 the hard-line rulers of Iran and Saudi Arabia have sometimes overlooked sectarian disagreements in the interest of political expedience, sometimes pursuing short-lived phases of rapprochement with each other.
In emphasizing that the punishments themselves are un-Islamic, opponents can further expose this fake dichotomy between the West and the rest as a fatuous tool of political expedience to prolong the Sultan's reign.
The double paradox for Clinton, is that since she has cultivated such a reputation for conventional and calculated politics, any move deemed to be outside the familiar zone would risk arousing charges of political expedience.
Expedience explains his positions on many issues, including guns, which he once disliked and now advocates, abortion, which he once accepted and now opposes, God, in Whom he previously showed little interest but now praises.
" New Jersey Attorney General Gurbir Grewal accused the administration of "sacrificing public safety for political expedience," alleging that "the President, facing re-election, has suddenly decided to challenge a policy we first announced in 2018.
People are tired of those same promises and expedience where the grassroots of the Republican Party are used, abused and exploited and then toss out of the window as soon as these people are re-elected.
The "gist and essence" of Chamisa's May Day speech was that his party "will not allow the mortgaging of this country for political expedience," it said, attributed to Luke Tamborinyoka, presidential spokesperson and director of communications.
The remarks came a day after the Hong Kong Bar Association kicked off the legal year with a warning that political expedience "must not be given precedence over the rule of law," referring to Beijing's intervention.
Widespread rot requires legions of enablers, many of whom are driven by varying blends of personal ambition, ideological expedience and the self-aggrandizing delusion that, through their invaluable counsel, they can save the state from total destruction.
The mix of expedience and cravenness with which the institutional G.O.P. approached impeachment is no different than the way the institutional G.O.P. behaved during Trump's initial ascent, and it leaves Trump's opposition no worse off than before.
And as a matter of expedience, Trump views stoking his supporters' sense of white grievance as a way to motivate them to go out and vote, and hence as a premeditated strategy to win a second term in office.
When Chancellor Angela Merkel stands up to the German populists who fought against the bailout of Greece and are now making gains by opposing the settlement of refugees, she is keeping the flame of principle alive against the winds of expedience.
As the first World Cup to be staged in Asia, many accused FIFA of putting political expedience over supporter convenience, with questions over the football culture in South Korea and Japan almost as persistent as they are now with regards to Qatar.
Two contenders have since dropped out, leaving a field consisting of President Rouhani, Ebrahim Raisi, who has served in various roles at the Iranian Judiciary, Mostafa Aqa-Mirsalim, an existing member of Iran's Expedience Council and former vice president Mostafa Hashemi-Taba.
We cannot allow expedience to undermine the need to ensure that protective apparel and virus test kits are manufactured according to strict quality standards; are supplied in a timely fashion to health care facilities where needed; and used according to rigorous procedures.
It's an art-house touch, and it's also a narrative and thematic expedience: After spending most of its time depicting the escapees in a generally sympathetic light, the series pauses to remind us, "Hey, they're killers," in time for the sad finale.
"While there were some instances of classified information being inappropriately introduced into an unclassified system in furtherance of expedience, by and large, the individuals interviewed were aware of security policies and did their best to implement them in their operations," the report stated.
"I'm glad that some of them now said 'wow, this is really bad, I guess we need to walk away,' but if you're doing it just for political expedience just because you're looking at poll numbers and you say 'Oh, this might get me in trouble,' that's not enough."
I came away wondering about the fraying, endangered notion of citizenship, and what it really means to be a citizen of a Western democracy, when a combination of fear and political expedience has resulted in the abandonment of thousands of children to this sprawling ISIS prison in the desert.
"The Moralist" suggests that Wilson's betrayal of black Americans was born from simple expedience — that he allowed the segregation of the Civil Service because he desperately needed the votes of Southern congressmen in order to pass his progressive economic agenda, including the introduction of a federal income tax.
Kevin Brown "Red Eagle," chairman of the Mohegan Tribe in Connecticut, said that in the interest of expedience, he and his organization were at least willing to include the Connecticut Lottery Corporation and Sportech, the other two entities included in proposed sports betting legislation in the state, in negotiations.
Yet while both men have been accused of acting out of expedience by the left and among the thinning ranks of anti-Trump Republicans, what is striking is how easy a president often consumed with slights has made it for his former critics to bind up old wounds.
When Donald Trump took the stage in Cleveland on Thursday night and said the words that sealed the deal—"I humbly and gratefully accept your nomination for the presidency of the United States"—I like to imagine that the Republicans in the room who endorsed him out of expedience experienced a familiar sense of dread.
Hope can be found in the extraordinary crowds at the many women's marches across the country on the day after the Inauguration; in the recent marches in support of science and a more compassionate, reasonable immigration policy; in the earnest work of the courts that have blocked the "Muslim ban" and of various senators and House members in both parties who, unlike Mitch McConnell and Paul Ryan, have refused to put cynicism and expedience before integrity; in the exemplary investigative journalism being done by traditional and new media outlets; in the performance of anti-Trump candidates in recent congressional races in Kansas and Georgia.
There are several key aspects underlying the concept of organizational expedience. Firstly, organizational expedience describes a worker’s actions but not their intentions. For example, if a shop assistant is considering giving a loyal customer a deeper discount than is permitted but decides not to do so after seeing her supervisor, then this shop assistant didn’t engage in expedience. Secondly, such definition requires workers to knowingly engage in expedience. If the rules are not known or well understood, or are accidentally broken, this behavior doesn’t qualify as expedience. For example, if a long haul driver drove over the time limit because he doesn’t know about the time limit rule, misunderstood the time limit rule, or forgot to look at the watch and accidentally broke the time limit rule, such behavior does not qualify as expedience.
Clearwire offers Expedience based services in 17 markets in the United States and in certain markets in Belgium. Customers can choose either the Motorola Expedience Residential Subscriber Unit (RSU) or the Motorola Expedience PC Card in both a PC Card and ExpressCard. The RSU incorporates automatic adaptive modulation for increased throughput and network capacity. Users are connected to the Internet at indoor locations throughout the entire system's coverage area.
The Inukshuk network was built using pre-WiMAX technology provided by Expedience solution from Motorola, now Nexpedience Networks.
Organizational expedience is defined as workers’ behaviors that (1) are intended to fulfill organizationally prescribed or sanctioned objectives but that (2) knowingly involve breaking, bending, or stretching organizational rules, directives, or organizationally sanctioned norms.McLean Parks, J., Ma, L., & Gallagher, D. G. 2010. Elasticity in the “rules” of the game: Exploring organizational expedience. Human Relations, 63(5): 701–730.
On April 17, 2015, Clearwire announced Sprint would cease operations of the CLEAR 4G (WiMAX) Network and Clearwire Expedience Network on November 6, 2015.
The bones' provenance was then determined according to local legends about ancient burials, with political expedience also playing a major role, helped along by convenient dreams, visions or priestly auguries.
The treaties are also notable in the unique expedience of global action, with only 14 years lapsing between a basic scientific research discovery (1973) and the international agreement signed (1985 and 1987).
The unit functions as an Ethernet bridge (Layer 2) device, interfacing a standard Ethernet over twisted pair connector. The PC Card incorporates the same automatic adaptive modulation for increased throughput and network capacity with the added portability of a laptop CardBus card. Clearwire formerly offered Expedience-based services in Ireland and Denmark until operations in those countries were purchased by Imagine Communications and ERLO Group, respectively. In January 2011 Clearwire discontinued services based on Motorola Expedience technology in Spain in favor of Instanet branded 4G WiMAX service.
In November 2015,the Uganda Ministry of Health contracted Alliance Technical Services Limited to carry out repairs to the hospital at a budgeted sum of UGX:699,856,460. The repair work is expedience to conclude in August 2016.
Per diem clauses may be used in contracts to specify penalty accruals. Such wording would be found in reference to the expected closing date for a real estate contract, typically compensating a seller for a buyer's lack of expedience..
This is commonly viewed as "ungoverned warlordism". Warlords can also fall into a hybrid category, temporarily joining a warlord coalition in collusion with the regime or defecting for political expedience—transitioning from one paradigm to the other based upon strategic interests.
Hudson, 2006, p. 8. The fresco probably came to replace the tomb (rather than serving as a place marker for it), maybe for reasons of expedience and frugality, although there is little documentary evidence on this regard.Hudson, 2006, p. 9.
Moreover, the phrase necessary or expedient arguably should not be interpreted disjunctively, which would only require the State to show that a restriction imposed by Parliament is either "necessary" or "expedient". Since expedience is easily satisfied, this allows for too lenient a standard of judicial review.
McLean Parks, Ma, and Gallagher (2010) proposed three role stressors as the theoretical antecedents of organizational expedience: #Role conflict. Role conflict is seen as an ‘incompatibility between expectations of a single role’Örtqvist D., Wincent J. (2006). Prominent consequences of role stress: A meta-analytic review. International Journal of Stress Management 13(4): 399–422.
There have generally been two approaches taken by philosophers to define moral emotion. The first "is to specify the formal conditions that make a moral statement (e.g., that is prescriptive, that it is universal, such as expedience)". This first approach is more tied to language and the definitions we give to a moral emotions.
Strictly a New Deal expedience position, it was hardly what Shorb had in mind when she decided on a scientific career. Thus, when the couple's first child, Barbara, was born in 1936, she decided to stay home. Two years later, their son Alan was born. Then, in 1942 their daughter Carole Elizabeth ("Betsy") was born.
Factionalism created one > barrier, but many politicians had supported the Klan simply out of > expedience. When charges of crime and corruption began to taint the > movement, those concerned about their political futures had even less reason > to work on the Klan's behalf.Moore 1991, p. 186 alt= In Alabama, KKK vigilantes launched a wave of physical terror in 1927.
A fire in 1966 destroyed the original lodge. It was rebuilt within 100 days, but the original rustic look was lost in favor of expedience in reopening the lodge. A 1990 remodel restored its original look. In addition to the main lodge building there are a number of original buildings that remain in the lodge complex.
Pitch and roll are controlled by weight shift. The entire rotor is tilted in relation to the suspended airframe to shift the center of gravity, thus no cyclic control is required. These features were generally implemented on the demonstrator for simplicity and expedience and were incidental to the research and demonstration goals. Yaw is controlled by differential torque applied to the two rotors.
Modern conservatives, on the other hand, derive support for free markets from practical grounds. They argue that free markets are the most productive markets. Thus the modern conservative supports free markets not out of necessity, but out of expedience. The support is not moral or ideological, but driven on the Burkean notion of prescription: what works best is what is right.
During the period of Northern and Southern dynasties, the Man were able to remain independent by switching sides out of political expedience. The southern courts appointed Man chiefs as tax collectors for their regions. Many Man chiefs taxed their subjects lightly which resulted in some Han Chinese pretending to be Man people. On one occasion, a Han Chinese called Huan Dan even became a Man chieftain.
Cut shells have the advantage of expedience. They can be handmade on the spot as the need arises while on a hunt for small game if a larger game animal such as a deer or a bear appears. In terms of safety, part of the shell may remain behind in the barrel, causing potential problems if not noticed and cleared before another shot is fired.
The attitude toward the Chinese language was contradictory. In Teishi's court, Chinese had been flaunted and considered a symbol of imperial rule and superiority. Yet, in Shōshi's salon there was a great deal of hostility towards the language—perhaps owing to political expedience during a period when Chinese began to be rejected in favor of Japanese—even though Shōshi herself was a student of the language.
An officer named Chen Hongfan spared him due to being impressed by his valiance. Zhang Xianzhong then joined the rebellion and followed Ma Shouying, who made him a petty officer and named him the "Yellow Tiger". Eventually hardship struck in the winter of 1631 and Zhang was forced to surrender with Luo Rucai, the first of several times he would do so out of expedience.
Paul, like many in the NAWSA, chose expedience over equal rights in planning the parade. She discussed participation with at least one local African American in the District and had reserved space in the parade for the NACWC and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP).Adams and Keene (2008). p. 87. But the Virginia-born Gardener tried to persuade Paul that including blacks would be a bad idea.
Accra Metropolitan Assembly website. on a "where is, as is basis", meaning they were made to accept the properties in the condition the government was prepared to return them. It was hinted that compensation would be paid to those whose properties were sold,"Confiscated properties to be returned", Joy Online, 16 August 2008. yet despite Tata Brewery being sold twice since confiscation"Governments use de- confiscation for political expedience - Siaw", GhanaWeb, 5 July 2012.
Though Blanc's best known character was the carrot-chomping rabbit, munching on the carrots interrupted the dialogue. Various substitutes, such as celery, were tried, but none of them sounded like a carrot. So, for the sake of expedience, Blanc munched and then spit the carrot bits into a spittoon, rather than swallowing them, and continued with the dialogue. One often- repeated story, which dates back to the 1940s,"Warner Club News (1944)".
In response, McDougall places Bei Dao's approach in context: "The so-called obscurity or bizarreness of his writing is…not simply adopted for reasons of expedience but is an emotional necessity" given the milieu in which he began to write. She elaborates that "his verse is not obscure just because of fear of censorship but because the pain caused by all forms of oppression is so intense that conventional epithets are too shallow to express it".
For example, for U.S.-registered open-ended funds, investments are commonly valued each day the New York Stock Exchange is open, using closing prices (meant to represent fair value),AICPA Audit and Accounting Guide - Investment Companies May 1, 2007. typically 4:00 p.m. Eastern Time. For U.S.-registered money market funds, investments are often carried or valued at "amortized cost" as opposed to market value for expedience and other purposes, provided various requirements are continually met.
However, the advent of World War II did not lead to a functional US air control system; the 1942 edition of the American Field Manual 31-35 did not even mention a forward air controller. Forward air control during World War II came into existence as a result of exigency, and was used in several theaters of World War II. Its reincarnation in action was a result of field expedience rather than planned operations.Churchill, p. 5.
By 1987, the legislative process as well as the country's long-term policy formation had come to a standstill due to the doctrinal conflict between radical factions of the Islamic Consultative Assembly and the Guardian Council, which officials described as coercive at the time. Consultations in February the following year led to Ayatollah Khomeini ordering the appointment of a 13-member council that was given legislative authority: it could pass temporary laws (effective for three-year periods). Article 112 of Iran's Constitution states the EDC will be convened by the Supreme Leader to determine expedience cases where the Guardian Council finds an Islamic Consultative Assembly decision against the principles of religious law or the constitution, and where the Consultative Assembly is unable to satisfy the Guardian Council in view of the expedience of the Islamic Republic of Iran. Formally, the Expediency Discernment Council of the System (or Regime) is primarily a constitutional advisory body for the Supreme Leader (at the latter's behest), as described in article 112 of the Islamic Republic's Constitution.
China in circa 1141. By the 11th century, the Jurchens had become vassals of the Khitan rulers of the Liao dynasty. The Jurchens in the Yalu River region had been tributaries of Goryeo since the reign of Wang Geon, who called upon them during the wars of the Later Three Kingdoms period, but the Jurchens switched allegiance between Liao and Goryeo multiple times out of expedience. They offered tribute to both courts out of political necessity and the attraction of material benefits.
Rampura is a village and former petty Koli-ruled princely state in Gujarat, western India. As a state, Rampura was a part of the Western India States Agency. It was classified as a thana (i.e. a very small state) in Katosan, which were entities smaller than even a non-salute state and something of an administrative anomaly, although seen as an expedience in the years immediately following the 1857 Rebellion, the state was attached to Baroda State in June 1940.
In an effort to correct popular mainstream misrepresentations of Stein's wartime activity, a dossier of articles by critics and historians has been gathered for the online journal Jacket2. How much of Stein's wartime activities were motivated by the real exigencies of self-preservation in a dangerous environment can only be speculated upon. However, her loyalty to Pétain may have gone beyond expedience. She had been urged to leave France by American embassy officials, friends and family when that possibility still existed, but declined to do so.
This list of organizations described as Communist fronts by the United States federal government includes the names of groups included in various reports of the Attorney General of the United States or House Un-American Activities Committee listing "subversive" or "Communist" front groups. While some of these were documentable mass organizations of the Communist Party USA, many were included out of convenience or political expedience. Inclusion on any of these lists should not be regarded as definitive proof of covert organizational ties or actual subversive intent.
In 17 markets in the United States and certain markets in Belgium, Clearwire provides a service it refers to as "Pre-4G" using a Point-to- Multipoint system from Motorola called "Expedience", part of the MOTOwi4 family of products. The service is considered true Non-Line-of-Sight (NLOS). The service is not unique to Clearwire. Several companies throughout the world use this same product line from Motorola, including Inukshuk Wireless Partnership of Canada, Beamspeed and Commspeed of Arizona, AccessTEL of Bangladesh, and Unitel of Guatemala.
H.R. Wilson. 1953. Nature, 171, 737Wilkins M.H.F., Seeds W.E., Stokes A.R. and H.R. Wilson. 1953. Nature, 171, 759 Whether this was deliberate on his part or just rather poor sub-editing by OUP is debatable. It is most likely to have been a matter of expedience, as there were more than five co-authors on several of his later papers on the subject published in Nature or, later, in the Journal of Molecular Biology.H.R. Wilson. (with Feughelman M., & Langridge R. et al). 1955. Nature, 175, 834H.R. Wilson. (with Langridge R. et al). 1960.
When his family disowned him for getting into repeated fights with his peers, he joined the army, which sentenced him to death for breaking military law. An officer named Chen Hongfan spared him due to being impressed by his valiance. Zhang Xianzhong then joined the rebellion and followed Ma Shouying, who made him a petty officer and named him the "Yellow Tiger". Eventually hardship struck in the winter of 1631 and Zhang was forced to surrender with Luo Rucai, the first of several times he would do so out of expedience.
Author Russell Miller argues that Scientology "was a development of undeniable expedience, since it ensured that he would be able to stay in business even if the courts eventually awarded control of Dianetics and its valuable copyrights to ... Purcell".Miller, 1987: 202–203 L. Ron Hubbard originally intended for Scientology to be considered a science, as stated in his writings. In May 1952, Scientology was organized to put this intended science into practice, and in the same year, Hubbard published a new set of teachings as Scientology, a religious philosophy.
Arrival and Departure (1943) is the third novel of Arthur Koestler's trilogy concerning the conflict between morality and expedience (as described in the postscript to the novel's 1966 Danube Edition). The first volume, The Gladiators, is about the subversion of the Spartacus revolt, and the second, Darkness at Noon, is the celebrated novel about the Soviet Show trials. Arrival and Departure was Koestler's first full-length work in English, The Gladiators and Darkness at Noon were originally written in German. It is often considered to be the weakest of the three.
Miss is an honorific for addressing a woman who is not married, and is known by her maiden name. It is a shortened form of mistress, and departed from misses/missus which became used to signify marital attachment in the 18th and 19th centuries. It does not imply age, though youth corresponds (as marriage implies adulthood). Those seeking to diminish the importance of marriage status to a woman's social identity began to appropriate the office expedience of Ms. (unpunctuated in the UK) in the early 1970s, when it rose 700%.
Of those schools, 44 were operated by Roman Catholics; 21 were operated by the Church of England / Anglican Church of Canada; 13 were operated by the United Church of Canada, and 2 were operated by Presbyterians. The approach of using established school facilities set up by missionaries was employed by the federal government for economic expedience: the government provided facilities and maintenance, while the churches provided teachers and their own lesson-planning. As a result, the number of schools per denomination was less a reflection of their presence in the general population, but rather their legacy of missionary work.
Similarly, if two companies swap their inventories, this event is not accounted as a sale because the substance is a mere in-kind exchange, despite the possible form of valid enforceable contracts for two sales and deliveries. Likewise, a firm withdrawing inventory for internal use accounts this event in a separate account, classified as such, and not on the sale account. The principle thus maintains the sales account as reflecting only actual sales in substance (that is, items delivered to outside parties for payment), and not events that merely fit the form of sales documentation for convenience or expedience.
However, forward air control during World War II came into existence as a result of exigency, and was used in several theaters of World War II. Its reincarnation in action was a result of field expedience rather than planned operations.Churchill, p. 5. British Mobile Fighter Controllers operating in North Africa during World War II In the Pacific Theater, 4 Squadron of the Royal Australian Air Force began forward air control at the Battle of Buna-Gona, New Guinea in November 1942. The RAAF continued forward air control in the Pacific for the rest of the war.
The Act was repealed on 18 March 1766 as a matter of expedience, but Parliament affirmed its power to legislate for the colonies "in all cases whatsoever" by also passing the Declaratory Act. A series of new taxes and regulations then ensued—likewise opposed by the Americans. The episode played a major role in defining the 27 colonial grievances that were clearly stated within the text of the Indictment of George III section of the United States Declaration of Independence, enabling the organized colonial resistance which led to the American Revolution in 1775.Middlekauff pp. 111–120.
Singapore: Times Books International, 1990. Kuo lived with his father in High Street, and first attended Catholic High School's primary section. Due to various circumstances, however, Kuo transferred between both Chinese and English-medium schools many times. At one point, when he attended the Chinese High School in 1956, his father transferred him to Kallang West Government Chinese Middle School (now Dunman High School) before moving him to Hong Kong due to the student unrest generated by politically activist Chinese high school and middle school students, largely out of concern for the political expedience of the unrest.
Logo used in the United States by Clearwire to market 4G wireless Internet services under the CLEAR brand In the United States, Clearwire offered 4G fixed and mobile Internet access under the CLEAR brand in 88 cities. Clearwire claimed an average download speed of 3 to 6 Mbit/s with bursts over 10 Mbit/s.CLEAR performance claim was based on average download speeds attained during tests conducted by CLEAR on the CLEAR commercial network. In January 2011, Clearwire started offering 4G WiMax service in Spain under the Instanet brand, discontinuing services based on Motorola Expedience technology.
As for the description of the tarasque's physical appearance given in the Legenda aurea, it is given a somewhat dissimilar treatment in the corresponding passage in the c. 1200 pseudo-Marcella: This description is said to "correspond rather closely" to 17th and 18th century iconography in paintings and woodcuts and to the modern-day effigy. Even the turtle-like carapaces ( "shields") is attested in this c. 1200 piece of writing, even though some commentators ventured it to be a 15th century addition, created out of expedience to conceal the men carrying the beast's effigy paraded through town for the Pentecostal festivities.
Another form of alternative dispute resolution prioritizes expedience and dispenses with adjudication all together, in recognition of the litigants' desire to simply dispose of the matter as quickly as possible. By removing any hint of adjudication, services (e.g., One Day Decisions) "fast track" a version similar to blind bidding which is restricted privately to the two parties and an algorithm determines a fair value to be accepted by each party. Unlike other services, once accepted by both parties, the settlement amount is applied to the issuance of a Certificate of Final Resolution which both parties accept as irrevocable proof of resolution and final settlement.
About the same time in the capital of Richmond, Captain James R. West, Sheriff of Halifax County, arrived with his Halifax Rifles seeking orders from the confederate leaders.Richmond Dispatch, Nov 9, 1861 They would muster in on the 11th however expedience would not provide them a place until the early part of the following month and as such they sat idle. Much to the relief of Colonel Pryor, he was finally able to procure a commissary officer in the form of Timothy Reeves. Reeves, a lawyer from Prince George County was appointed the rank of captain and took the position over on the 16th of the month.
Mathematics For Wastewater Operators The MCRT is the total mass (lbs) of mixed liquor suspended solids in the aerator and clarifier divided by the mass flow rate (lbs/day) of mixed liquor suspended solids leaving as WAS and final effluent. The F/M is the ratio of food fed to the microorganisms each day to the mass of microorganisms held under aeration. Specifically, it is the amount of BOD fed to the aerator (lbs/day) divided by the amount (lbs) of Mixed Liquor Volatile Suspended Solids (MLVSS) under aeration. Note: Some references use MLSS (Mixed Liquor Suspended Solids) for expedience, but MLVSS is considered more accurate for the measure of microorganisms.
Three weeks after the aborted coup and the successful restoration of Jawara by Senegalese troops, Presidents Diouf and Jawara, at a joint press conference, announced plans for the establishment of the Senegambian Confederation. In December 1981, five months after the foiled coup, the treaties of confederation were signed in Dakar.The Confederal Document of Senegambia The speed with which the treaties were signed and the lack of input from the bulk of The Gambian population suggested to many that the arrangement was an exercise in political expedience. President Jawara was under great pressure because of the repercussions of the aborted coup and the Senegalese government.
Alternatively, he could have been looking to personal advantage from accepting conversion since Father Wright's protector, the Earl of Essex, was among those who might hope to rise to influence after the succession of a new monarch.Donaldson (2011: 143) Jonson's conversion came at a weighty time in affairs of state; the royal succession, from the childless Elizabeth, had not been settled and Essex's Catholic allies were hopeful that a sympathetic ruler might attain the throne. Conviction, and certainly not expedience alone, sustained Jonson's faith during the troublesome twelve years he remained a Catholic. His stance received attention beyond the low-level intolerance to which most followers of that faith were exposed.
In the view of Bakunin, the new world would emerge via the revolt of the poor and oppressed masses, workers and peasant farmers alike, suffering under the heel of an exploitative semi-feudal economic and political structure. Bakunin was contemptuous of the educated industrial workers favored by Marx, believing they were "infected with a bourgeois outlook," and instead favored an alliance of radical intellectuals, the peasant masses, as well as the most impoverished and unwashed workers of the cities. Bakunin rejected the coordinated trade union and political action favored by the international socialists, instead professing the expedience and necessity of the armed uprising.Braunthal, History of the International: Volume 1, pg. 176.
The main goal is to stop any sources of bleeding before moving onto any definitive find and repair any injuries that are found. Due to the time sensitive nature, this procedure also emphasizes expedience in terms of gaining access and controlling the bleeding, thus favoring a long midline incision. Intra-abdominal injuries are also frequently successfully treated nonoperatively as there is little benefit shown if there is no known active bleeding or potential for infection. The use of CT scanning allows care providers to use less surgery because they can identify injuries that can be managed conservatively and rule out other injuries that would need surgery.
Shortly before Smith's campaign finance report was released on August 11, he announced he had raised over $185,000 during the first fundraising quarter of the campaign, including more from outside donors than all other Attorney General candidates combined (Karl Racine raised nearly $257,000, but he donated or loaned $225,000 of that total to his own campaign). According to the finance report, Smith's campaign paid a company owned by Jauhar Abraham for petition signature collection. In an interview at the hearing for S.132, the New Columbia Admission Act, Smith told an interviewer at The Atlantic that “as Americans, under no conditions should issues of political convenience or expedience dictate fundamental rights. The fact that [D.
The quality of loyalty to a cause or a person is a recurring theme throughout the work, as characters declare their loyalty to a cause or person only for that loyalty to be tested, sometimes to breaking point. The novel begins with a triple betrayal: Giles Siward betrays the cause of Empress Maud, the plans of his lord FitzAlan and the two squires entrusted with the treasury, to King Stephen's sheriff, Courcelle. Courcelle then betrays the cause of King Stephen and Giles Siward out of greed. The contrast between justice and expedience is another theme explored at the beginning and end of the novel, with King Stephen's expedient justice in war time treading a difficult line between both.
In his first edition of Political Justice Godwin included arguments favouring the possibility of "earthly immortality" (what would now be called physical immortality), but later editions of the book omitted this topic. Although the belief in such a possibility is consistent with his philosophy regarding perfectibility and human progress, he probably dropped the subject because of political expedience when he realised that it might discredit his other views. Godwin explored the themes of life extension and immortality in his gothic novel St. Leon, which became popular (and notorious) at the time of its publication in 1799, but is now mostly forgotten. St. Leon may have provided inspiration for his daughter's novel Frankenstein.
The fortifications were built on order of Ali ibn Yusuf, and were made of rammed earth, not masonry, indicating that they were constructed with expedience at a time when the Almoravid dynasty was threatened by the Almohad Caliphate. It was conquered by the Almohads in 1132, and Almohad caliph Abd al-Mu'min had the wooden gates removed, to be installed at Tinmel. The fortress was built on a plateau with an altitude of , some sixty years after the construction of a fortress in Marrakesh, whose remains are on the perimeter of the first Koutoubia Mosque; their discovery in 1948 led Charles Allain and Jacques Meunié to study Tasghîmût. A defensive wall long was completed by 1125.
Just compensation is required to be paid by the Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution (and counterpart state constitutions) when private property is taken (or in some states, taken or damaged). Usually, the government (condemnor) files an eminent domain action to take private property for "public use.", but when it fails to do so and pay for the taking, the owner may seek compensation in an action called "inverse condemnation." For reasons of expedience, courts have been generally using fair market value as the measure of just compensation, reasoning that this is the amount that a willing seller would accept in a voluntary sales transaction, and therefore it should also be payable in an involuntary one.
First, he says that "above all the [Communist] League, must work for the creation of an independent organization of the workers' party, both secret and open, and alongside the official democrats, and the League must aim to make every one of its communes a center and nucleus of workers' associations in which the position and interests of the proletariat can be discussed free from bourgeois influence". That is, "it is essential above all for them to be independently organized and centralized in clubs". Marx does say that "an association of momentary expedience" is permissible if and only if "an enemy has to be fought directly", although this is not an excuse for a long term alliance since emergency alliances will arise satisfactorily when needed.
Embittered, Erhu considers desertion, but Qingyun convinces him that what happened at Suzhou, to soldiers (albeit surrendered and unarmed), was in the interests of expedience in order to reach Nanjing and liberate millions of civilians/non-combatants, whose lives are in danger if a rival commander takes Nanjing first. Nanjing is easily taken, and Qingyun, in return for his grand success, is awarded the position of Nanjing's governor. Qingyun continues to press for his social agenda, requesting (and receiving) from the Dowager Empress 3 years' tax relief for his province (which was until recently in rebel hands) to recover from war. As Qingyun waits for his inauguration, he tries to make friends with other members of the aristocracy and government bureaucracy.
Merchant ships whether they were foreign or from neighbouring towns such as Waterford when sailed into Ó hEidirsceoil waters were sometimes considered fair game. Sir Fineen is remembered locally as somewhat of a rogue since as a political expedience he opened the local lands to English "planters" and in doing so saved his homelands from falling to local invasion by the local O'Mahony, O'Leary and MacCarthy clans, with the help of the English whose fleet he harboured. Sir Fineen himself was driven in his dotage to live on a small island in Lough Ine as a recluse and oral history claims that he grew rabbit's floppy ears. He is said to have died in England or Spain on a mission to Queen Elizabeth I whose death preceded his own.
In neighboring Guernsey, Foxe records the remarkable death of the Protestant Perotine Massey, one of the Guernsey Martyrs, who gave birth while being burnt at the stake. Her newborn child was returned to the flames by the Catholic Bailiff. There also was a sudden influx from France of Huguenots — the name given to French Calvinists — as Louis XIV revoked the Edict of Nantes in 1685, effectively depriving them of the freedom to practice their religion by brutal methods : (in accordance of catholic hierarchy): prosecutions : prisons, galley slaves, no property rights, "dragonnades" etc, etc , Jersey Heritage Trust The style of worship was resolutely Calvinist. Queen Elizabeth I left Jersey and Guernsey more or less in charge of their own affairs, because of political expedience: Protestant islanders would be in opposition to Catholic France.
" It was at this point that the reveal of the statue of the Goddess of Democracy reinvigorated the movement in the Square. The statue was built by students of the Central Academy of Fine Arts beginning on May 27 at their University. It was built in hopes of bolstering the movement which "seemed to be losing some of its momentum; the students suspected that the government was waiting for them to tire and leave the Square". Working with a sense of urgency and expedience, to create the model the larger statue would be based on the students reworked an academic exercise built to demonstrate the effect of the distribution of weight on a piece: "a half-meter high clay sculpture of a man grasping a pole with two raised hands and leaning his weight on it.
On May 14, 2008 the Daily Times of Pakistan reported that "Salim Mahmud Adam" and "Adel Hasan Hamad" had announced plans to sue the United States government over their detention. The article reports that he told the Daily Times that his 2004 Combatant Status Review Tribunal had cleared him of the allegation that he was an "enemy combatant". Hassan filed suit against the government and several individuals in federal district court in Seattle in April, 2010. His case was bolstered by an affidavit from Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson, a former aide to Secretary of State Colin Powell, who stated that top U.S. officials, including George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, and Donald Rumsfeld, had known that the majority of the detainees initially sent to Guantánamo were innocent, but that the detainees had been kept there for reasons of political expedience.
No necessity or expedience requirement applies to the second type of grounds, which appear in Articles 14(2)(a) (restrictions "designed to protect the privileges of Parliament or to provide against contempt of court, defamation or incitement to any offence") and 14(3) (laws relating to labour or education). At present, it appears that Parliament may restrict Article 14(1) rights on these grounds simply by enacting legislation, and that the courts are not entitled to assess if the restrictions are appropriate. The privileges of Parliament are set out in the , and the Singapore courts have held that the common law offence of scandalizing the court (a form of contempt of court) does not violate Article 14(1)(a). The courts have also determined that the traditional common law rules of the tort of defamation strike a proper balance between free speech and the protection of reputation, and have declined to apply a public figure doctrine or responsible journalism as additional defences to the tort.
The IMSSDARM first appeared as a distinct organization in Germany shortly after World War I (1914-1918). Its first members were former Seventh-day Adventists who had been disfellowshipped during World War I for their “unchristian conduct” in openly opposing leaders of the church for supporting the war and committing its young men to the battlefield, weapons in hand. The original Adventist Movement had come out of the greatest religious awakening and revival since apostolic times (1814-1844), but it was not until the American Civil War (1861-1865) that expedience demanded it organize as a distinct denomination. Note the official statement: > “The denomination of Christians calling themselves Seventh-day Adventist, > taking the Bible as their rule of faith and practice are unanimous in their > views that its teachings are contrary to the spirit and practice of war, > hence they have ever been conscientiously opposed to bearing arms.” –Letter > to Austin Blair, Governor of Michigan, August 3, 1864, (Signed) John > Byington, J.N. Loughborough, Geo.
In 2010, Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson, a former aide to Secretary of State Colin Powell, stated in an affidavit that top U.S. officials, including President George W. Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney, and Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, had known that the majority of the detainees initially sent to Guantánamo were innocent, but that the detainees had been kept there for reasons of political expedience. Wilkerson's statement was submitted in connection with a lawsuit filed in federal district court by former detainee Adel Hassan Hamad against the United States government and several individual officials. This supported numerous claims made by former detainees like Moazzam Begg, a British citizen who had been held for three years in detention camps in Afghanistan and Guantanamo as an enemy combatant, under the claim that he was an al-Qaeda member who recruited for, and provided money for, al-Qaeda training camps and himself trained there to fight US or allied troops.
He remained in these posts despite Richard II's confiscation of Bolingbroke's estates after the death of John of Gaunt in 1399. In June of that year Waterton was among the first of Bolingbroke's retainers to join him at Ravenspur, where he arrived with two hundred foresters, although according to a speech by the Earl of Northumberland in Shakespeare's Richard II (Act II, scene i), Waterton was among those who sailed with Bolingbroke from the continent:Richard II Retrieved 9 October 2013. > Then thus: I have from Port le Blanc, a bay In Brittany, received > intelligence That Harry Duke of Hereford, Rainold Lord Cobham, That late > broke from the Duke of Exeter, His brother, Archbishop late of Canterbury, > Sir Thomas Erpingham, Sir John Ramston, Sir John Norbery, Sir Robert > Waterton and Francis Quoint, All these well furnish'd by the Duke of > Bretagne With eight tall ships, three thousand men of war, Are making hither > with all due expedience And shortly mean to touch our northern shore. Bolingbroke was crowned as Henry IV on 13 October 1399, and on 20 November Waterton was appointed his Master of Horse. In 1401–2 he was sent on embassies to Germany and Denmark.

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