Word: criteria
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...Diehl, good refereeing consists of a triad of intangibles he labels consistency, acceptance, and control. Hannon phrases his motto as "knowledge of the rules, good judgment, and fairness." Whatever the criteria, every official aims to have "the perfect angle" when he makes a call, which Diehl describes as having the play in full view from its inception to the time of the infraction. "There is no perfect position, you've got to work for it," he adds. For Hannon "the key to the whole thing is hustling and getting down the court...
...Criteria for Harvard's acceptance of sponsored research, published in December, 1970, state that the University may not "accept research which carries security classification, requires security clearance of University personnel, or otherwise precludes general publication of results...
...Massachusetts state labor board would award union status to different stores in a department store chain and to different floors in factories, simply on the basis of the extent to which they were already organized. Now, however, the NLRB is bound by only two ambiguous and often conflicting general criteria: it must attempt to increase the bargaining power of workers (thus favoring large bargaining units), while it also seeks to guarantee the worker's right to free organization (which would tend to favor small units). And the Board has shown consistently that in cases where the two objectives conflict...
...criteria applied by Fuchs in his regional ruling stand in sharp contrast to the criteria applied by the Washington board in the Columbia case. Geographical separateness, palmed off by Fuchs as irrelevant, was one factor which he acknowledged might have weighed in the union's favor. Extra-university funding sources and separate day-to-day direction of operation were viewed as key factors in the Washington board's decision. The Harvard Medical area and those Columbia research facilities granted unit status seem to share these factors in common, despite vehement denials from Harvard, and even a statement by Powers that...
...making sentences indeterminate for felonies, the bill would allow judges to hand down sentences from anywhere between one year and life for some crimes. But more power to judges, who often make decisions based on criteria other than crime, such as race, poverty, or even appearance, is a step backward in criminal...