Precourt, AA, Provincial Delegate for the American Region, will be the principal concelebrant and homilist. |
|
Administrative officials should learn to delegate jobs to avoid being trapped into minute management details. |
|
Successful jugglers choose to delegate more responsibilities at this point. |
|
A delegate holds her hand over her heart during the recitation of the Pledge of Allegiance at the 2004 Republican National Convention. |
|
The answer came when one delegate rose to address the notion of political action by the labour movement. |
|
He would delegate to his trusted lieutenants and then leave them alone to do their jobs. |
|
In the wings of the conference floors one delegate applauded so loudly that his hands must have bled. |
|
And when I delegate responsibility, I delegate the authority to go along with it. |
|
We can delegate the authority to train and bring up our children to someone else but never the responsibility. |
|
Bring them to meetings and begin to delegate responsibility and authority to act, while you observe and coach. |
|
It is our right to determine who enters the country and we democratically delegate the authority to uphold this right to the Federal government. |
|
Nor was the purpose of the original grants of immunity to delegate power, but rather to transfer certain responsibilities to an intermediary. |
|
Even if you won every remaining unpledged delegate, you would still fall 200 delegates short. |
|
Vailing his cap, like them, to the Queen's representatives, he covered himself when he looked at the Pope's delegate. |
|
Another delegate speculated that the Governor's extensive scriptwriting experience in Hollywood inspired the phrase. |
|
You feel burdened by too much work or responsibility, its best to share and delegate work and not carry the entire load yourself. |
|
They have a non-voting delegate in the House, but making deals for votes is often how the House does business. |
|
The longest-serving casual at the recycling plant had been a delegate and safety committee secretary. |
|
If I were a super delegate, I would want to take some account of what feeling is in those two crucial states. |
|
And also, though I am house-proud and finicky, I also know when and how to delegate. |
|
|
It was envisaged that each Academy or City Technology College would send at least one delegate to this important event. |
|
With this scenario, the fragmented delegate count produces several possible permutations. |
|
Though the commander-in-chief should delegate as much as possible, wartime relationships matter. |
|
It seemed that little Shirley Temple had grown up to be a delegate to the United Nations. |
|
This is more important than it may seem because it only allows a two-week window where delegate contests have to be proportional. |
|
Most German delegate companies operated in industries such as car spare parts, installation and machine making, metalworking, energy supply and environmental protection. |
|
As a laundryman in Paris in 1920, he co-founded the French Communist Party, and in 1923 went as its delegate to the Communist International in Moscow. |
|
The physicians can work fewer hours, both in the office and on call, and as they are able to delegate many tasks they can provide better services. |
|
After serving as apostolic delegate to Greece and Turkey from 1935 and as papal nuncio in liberated France from 1944, in 1953 he became a cardinal and Patriarch of Venice. |
|
When I am running someone out the door to the dentist or have been up all night cleaning up after the stomach flu, I delegate this checking to the older kids. |
|
The microphone was then quickly passed to a delegate from Venezuela. |
|
Shaw put himself right alongside the line and took a minute to shake hands and greet each delegate. |
|
When emergencies come up, think about whether you can handle it yourself before you delegate it to a programmer who is deeply submersed in a project. |
|
The ECB is a unique supranational organization with powers far beyond what we could have imagined sovereign states would delegate to such an institution. |
|
Congress granted Alaska a voteless delegate to Congress in 1906 and six years later, with the second Organic Act, gave Alaska a limited form of territorial government. |
|
In other business, the delegate assembly voted to encourage MLA members to unionize when possible and to support the unionizing efforts of other campus workers. |
|
Small groups delegate both recorders and reporters, and the latter are designated to provide feedback to the larger group, all under the watchful eye of the facilitator. |
|
The Stalwarts hoped to swarm the convention and force a challenge to the delegate roll. |
|
The Prime Minister may delegate to other ministers the right to countersign these decisions of the President. |
|
For an act of consecration the delegate must have himself the necessary sacred orders. |
|
|
For acts of jurisdiction he must be an ecclesiastic, though the pope could also delegate a layman. |
|
The delegate must be twenty years old, but eighteen years suffices for one appointed by the pope. |
|
The delegate is to follow exactly his instructions, but is empowered to do all that is necessary to execute them. |
|
These procedures enabled Henry II to delegate authority without endowing his subordinates with too much power. |
|
State governments commonly delegate some authority to local units and channel policy decisions down to them for implementation. |
|
In the League of Nations, the Soviet delegate Maxim Litvinov was the only one who proposed economic sanctions against Germany. |
|
The report 'Meet Bahrain's Best Friend in Congress' explored why an American Samoan delegate would support the kingdom. |
|
The national delegate of the Seccion Femenina was Pilar Primo de Rivera, sister of the founder of the Falange. |
|
Earl Fladager, Conference Treasurer, sacrificed his longed-for plate of perogies, in order to drive a delegate to catch his plane. |
|
Votes were counted on Monday, 31 March, with our union delegate Faylene Kennedy being one of the scrutineers. |
|
Silas Deane is a Connecticut merchant and congressional delegate. |
|
An active district health board delegate in the Greater Wellington Region recently identified a long-term underpayment of wages. |
|
The District of Columbia has one nonvoting delegate in the House, and no representation in the Senate. |
|
The Assembly may also delegate authority to enact legislation through Welsh Statutory Instruments. |
|
This contradicts the rule in common law that a person given a statutory power cannot delegate that power. |
|
Additionally, the convention's secretary, William Jackson, signed the document to authenticate the validity of the delegate signatures. |
|
The result is a new multicast delegate that invokes both of the original implementing methods. |
|
In January 1893, as a Fabian delegate, Shaw attended the Bradford conference which led to the foundation of the Independent Labour Party. |
|
A governor had to make himself accessible to the people he governed, but he could delegate various duties. |
|
Three weeks later, Hardie was chosen by the miners as their delegate to a National Conference of Miners to be held in Glasgow. |
|
|
A county council could delegate its road maintenance to the district council if it was confident that the district was competent. |
|
Not until 1863 did an American delegate attend an international conference. |
|
The province sent a delegate to Spain to complain about the marginalization of the area to the Crown. |
|
Ten delegates accepted the proposal with only one voice against, the French delegate, Gabriel Hanotaux. |
|
Legislatures will sometime delegate their legislative power to administrative or executive agencies. |
|
Eventually, the King would delegate resolution of these petitions to the King's Council. |
|
Given the choice, nearly anyone in the cabinetmaking and furniture industries would rather do for themselves than delegate tasks or deal with red tape. |
|
But as a delegate I am very aware of the countability I have to represent members' views, rather than just my own and I need to discuss this widely with others. |
|
Given all the advantages that accrue to early voting states, over the last two decades the delegate selection calendar has become increasingly front-loaded. |
|
Imams and muezzins must not delegate the call to prayer to non-Saudis, and get permission from the ministry if they want Saudis to do this in emergencies. |
|
Acts of the United Kingdom Parliament also regularly delegate powers to Ministers of the Crown or other bodies to produce legislation in the form of statutory instruments. |
|
National News Agency delegate reported today that a strange body resembling a huge gas cannister was discovered before the Byblos Port this evening. |
|
I have been a GAR member, delegate convener delegate for Starship, Auckland membership committee member and was a member of the former election selection committee. |
|
The Supreme Court, being the rigid institution it is, has proven extremely reticent to ever overturn such decisions and delegate them to the wastebin of history. |
|
The next day, the Prussian delegate to the Frankfurt assembly presented a plan calling for a national constitution, a directly elected national Diet, and universal suffrage. |
|
In this respect, the bass section allows the drum corps to delegate their timekeeping responsibilities and allows more freedom in the drum scores. |
|
Since delegation constitutes a new court, appeal can be taken from the delegate to the delegator, and in the case of subdelegation to the original delegator. |
|
This meant that rather than the empire being controlled fully by the ruling monarch, he would delegate power to specially appointed subjects in different areas. |
|
Philip II's successor, Philip III, was a man of limited ability, uninterested in politics and preferring to delegate management of the empire to others. |
|
He was a UK delegate to the Council of Europe Consultative Assembly in Strasbourg from 1952 to 1955, majoring on simplifying European visa and border controls. |
|
|
The requirement was removed in 2005, leaving the decision to individual universities, which may delegate the authority to faculties or individual professors. |
|
Prior to serving at the university, Johnson had participated in the First Continental Congress and been chosen as a delegate to the Constitutional Convention. |
|