Word: docket
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...applicants if they are called for. By the end of the first week in November, each HCEP should compile a list of Intensive Studies it feels could benefit the undergraduates in the House and should file the list, with explanatory information on the Intensive Study leaders, with the docket committee of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences. The docket committee would distribute all the HCEP lists to Faculty members for consideration at the regular November meeting of the Faculty or a specially convened meeting during November. As HCEP chairman, each Senior Tutor should present and defend his list before...
...Intensive Studies approved at this Faculty meeting would be included in a general catalogue of Intensive Studies printed and distributed in early December. Any proposal not included on the docket for the November Faculty meeting could not be considered for the following January. However, proposals that are rejected at that meeting could be reworked and resubmitted in time for the regular December Faculty meeting, after being reviewed by the HCEP. All proposals reconsidered by the Faculty in December and approved could then be included in an addendum to the catalogue...
...though, most are likely to remain outlaws for some time. In Rome, the court that will hear divorce pleas is already struggling with a backlog of 2,400 family cases-enough to keep it busy through mid-1972. The expected addition of 30,000 divorce cases to the docket means that many Italians will not get a chance to savor divorce Italian style until...
...Faculty spent the first hour and a quarter of their two-hour meeting discussing new procedures proposed by the docket committee for the conduct of Faculty meetings. The 29 proposed new rules-covering eight pages of single-space type-are supposed to simplify the Faculty's oft-labyrinthine procedure...
...summonses for court appearances or by putting some consenting defendants on immediate probation without a trial or even a plea. At long last, a few cities are also discovering familiar business-management techniques. Philadelphia, for example, uses a computer for record keeping and to spot inefficiencies on the trial docket; the city is also moving lesser offenses out of regular courts. Charges that carry penalties of two years or less are handled by special judges who settle the case without a jury. Any defendant dissatisfied with the result may have a full court trial, but so far less than...