Peers have also been proven to have an effect on students who commit violent acts on school grounds. |
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Peers often hold back and may refer to the gifted person in derogatory terms. |
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Peers should be open to compromise, but they should also stick to their guns on the important issues. |
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Peers will be given two days to debate the measure, which has to be passed before the parliamentary session finishes next month. |
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The area is intended for VIPs and guests of MPs and Peers who are supposed to vouch personally for those who receive their tickets. |
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The stealer of the show was definitely Peers when he played his guitar like an upside-down guitar with a violin bow. |
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That may be why such large numbers voted in another place for the 100 per cent appointed and 100 per cent elected Peers. |
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Peers yesterday urged Ministers to step in if the National Railway Museum lost out to a foreign investor in the bidding war for the train. |
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He might overpower his opposites in the House of Peers, by nobilitating his natural children, or creating noblemen whom he pleased. |
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Gavin Peers had Rovers' best chance when he rattled the crossbar from a corner. |
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Peers called on the government to give responsibility for delivering the legacy outside the capital to a designated minister. |
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Peers had attempted to extend disability rights to sufferers of depression, but backed down from a confrontation and allowed the bill to gain assent. |
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It will be edited by a member of the House of Peers, and it is to be entitled The Lords. |
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The following year he was appointed Chairman of the House of Peers and became a member of the Privy Council of the Emperor. |
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Peers voted in favour of smoothing the way for water companies to put fluoride in their supplies when the Bill was debated in the Lords during the summer. |
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It was 1958 before women could become Life Peers, and 1963 before hereditary peeresses could sit in the House of Lords. |
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Peers and outreach workers trained to administer naloxone can be a source of this life-saving intervention. |
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Holders of older peerages also began to receive greater honour than Peers of the same rank just created. |
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Parliamentary officials turned two committee rooms into makeshift dormitories for male and female Peers. |
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We know how Darius got the Persian Empire from the rest of his fellow Peers, from the first neighing of his generous Steed. |
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Therefore, storytellers in England adapted legends of Charlemagne and his 12 Peers to the Arthurian tales. |
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The retail guru tried to drag crimper John Peers into the 21st Century which was a tough job. |
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This practice is within the rules of the HOL and this is done regularly by a number Peers. |
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Peers also concluded that pay restraint in the NHS over an extended period is a factor in low staff moral and in staff leaving. |
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Peers of the Realm were formerly entitled to a trial in the House of Lords, just as commoners were entitled to trial by jury. |
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The right to use a title as a legal signature is only permitted to bishops, Peers of the Realm and peers by courtesy. |
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This new parliament was, in effect, the continuation of the Parliament of England with the addition of 45 MPs and 16 Peers to represent Scotland. |
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The number of Life Peers then gradually increased, though not at a constant rate. |
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At Asquith's request, King George V then threatened to create a sufficient number of new Liberal Peers to ensure the bill's passage. |
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In 1872, Queensberry was chosen by the Peers of Scotland to sit in the House of Lords as a representative peer. |
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Peers can introduce bills except Money Bills, and all legislation must be passed by both Houses of Parliament. |
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Peers who hold high judicial office are no longer allowed to vote or speak in the Lords until they retire as Justices. |
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Peers were each to represent a specific region of the United Kingdom, as constituted for the election of Members of the European Parliament. |
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After the Restoration, oaths of supremacy and allegiance were imposed upon all MPs and Peers in Parliament. |
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Peers can resent reduced call and having to shoulder the burden of patient commitment on the days the part-timer is absent. |
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They include Michael Skinner, a young Reading tailor who dressed the Peers of the Realm, including Winston Churchill, for the service. |
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Peers are called to the House of Lords with a writ of summons. |
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Peers who did not wish to attend meetings regularly or were prevented by ill health, age or further reasons, were now able to request Leave of Absence. |
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Another example of aristocratic bicameralism was the Japanese House of Peers, abolished after World War II and replaced with the present House of Councillors. |
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The House of Lords of the United Kingdom, referred to ceremonially as the House of Peers, is the upper house of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. |
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As a parliamentary system, the executive sits in the legislature, and from the nineteenth century ministries were invariably led by Members of Parliament or Peers. |
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All peers who were created after 1707 as Peers of Great Britain and after 1801 as Peers of the United Kingdom held the same right to sit in the House of Lords. |
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