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26. 11Troop Airsoft Team - Regulations
- www.chinchillapimp.com
- REGULATIONS.
- Regulations.
- There are, however, five inflexible Regulations that that are essential to keeping the unit functioning. These regulations prevent changes to the unit’s fundamental nature without the entire unit’s approval:.
- Voting .
- Although the unit’s Officer Commanding will make the day to day decisions that keep the unit running, the voting system helps to ensure that everyone is satisfied. ...
- A unanimous vote is used to resolve any issue relating to changing the unit’s Mission, Values, Regulations, accepting new full members or removing existing full members. ...
- In the case of a tie, the winner is the side with the highest-ranking voting member. ...
- There is no voting allowed during an actual skirmish, with the sole exception of a majority vote for changing the Officer Commanding.
27. Chung Wah News - November 1996 Voting in Local Council Elections in 1997
- www.nw.com.au
- Voting in Local Council Elections in 1997.
- New regulations for local government elections, effective from 11 October 1996, do not affect Australian citizens, who are residents, who will continue to have the right to vote in local government elections without having to reapply. The new regulations allow non Australian citizens and other groups who are already on the local government electoral roll to continue to vote, but they must reapply. ...
28. Taipei Times - archives
- www.taipeitimes.com
- * Taipei City elucidates its voting booth regulations .
- Taipei City elucidates its voting booth regulations.
- Taipei City Government's plan to make voters line up twice to vote in the presidential election and the referendum is designed to reduce controversy and disorder on election day and completely conforms to the Cabinet's regulations, city government officials said yesterday.
- "Many people mistakenly believe that the city government intentionally designed voting regulations which differ from those of the Central Election Commission," said city government spokesman Wu Yu-sheng (§d¨|ª@) after the weekly municipal meeting. "But so far, the city government never said that it would rule out the election regulations that the Central Election Commission passed. ...
- Wu said that Mayor Ma Ying-jeou (°¨^¤E) ordered officials of the Bureau of Civil Affairs to design voting regulations that were convenient for voters but also conformed to the Cabinet's version.
- "The plan that the city government proposed was referred to in the brochure on election regulations printed by the Cabinet," Wu said. "Our plan completely conforms to the regulations of the Central Election Commission. ...
- Wu said that the city decided not to set up a screen between the two voting booths because it violates the central government's regulations.
- However, the city government believes that the separation of the two voting booths is necessary.
- The city's Bureau of Civil Affairs will formally discuss tomorrow whether to separate the voting booths for the presidential election and the referendum in voting stations. ...
29. Bill to Overhaul System of Voting Is Seen in Danger
- www.freerepublic.com
- Bill to Overhaul System of Voting Is Seen in Danger.
- 6 House and Senate negotiators said today that efforts to pass a bill that would clean up the nation's voting procedures were falling apart as partisan disagreements grew with the approach of the fall elections. ...
- Among other things, the bills would provide money to help states buy new voting machines. ...
- The House and Senate bills set minimum federal standards for election and voting procedures, which now vary widely by state and county. ...
- Under the Senate bill, voters must have some way to verify their selections, to change their ballots and to correct errors, and voting places must be accessible to people with disabilities. The House bill would establish similar requirements for new voting systems. ...
- KEYWORDS: BOBNEY; CHARLESSCHUMER; CHRISTOPHERBOND; CHRISTOPHERDODD; MITCHMCCONNELL; VOTINGFRAUD; VOTINGMACHINES 1 posted on 09/06/2002 7:40:28 PM PDT by GeneD Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies To: GeneD Alternative headline Election fraud granted a reprieve by Democrats who know that's the only way they can win elections 2 posted on 09/06/2002 7:42:44 PM PDT by mgc1122 Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies To: mgc1122 Washington Logic: Tax everybody in the 50 states then send some of the money back after skimming off the better part of it and let the states buy UL-certified voting machines! Fantastic. ...
- To get a library card you need to show ID; there should be at least as strict a requirement for voting. ...
- With all due respect, I would assert no issue can be a winner if the voting is rigged. ... They will do it everywhere else unless serious improvements in registration and voting are made.
- To get a library card you need to show ID; there should be at least as strict a requirement for voting. ...
- The RATS want all the control in Washington DC so they can consistently commit voting fraud. ... 9/11 should have united them all for this basic responsibility of up-to-date voting regulations. ...
30. Overseas Voting Regulations
- www.britbot.de
- Postal Voting.
- The new legislation will allow postal voting. ...
Other
pages with similar relevance:
31. INDIAN REFERENDUM REGULATIONS
- www.schoolnet.ca
- INDIAN REFERENDUM REGULATIONS.
- REGULATIONS GOVERNING THE HOLDING OF .
- These Regulations may be cited as the Indian Referendum Regulations. ...
- In these Regulations,.
- (2) Subject to subsection (3), the voting on a referendum held pursuant to these Regulations shall be by secret ballot.
- (3) Where a referendum is ordered to determine whether the majority of the electors of a band are in favour of a surrender, the Minister maym, at the requwst of the council of the band or whenever he considers it advisable, order that the voting on the referendum be by a show of hands or in some other menner as the council of the band may approve.
- Voting by Secret Ballot.
- (1) Where a voting on a referendum is to be by secret ballot, the electoral officer shall post a notice in the form prescribed at least 30 days prior to the date of the voting, in such places as he deems necessary.
- (b) post a copy of the list of electors in such places as he deems necessary at least 15 days prior to the date of the voting;.
- (1) Subject to subsection (2), the polls shall be kept open from 9 o'clock in the forenoon until 6 o'clock in the afternoon of the day set for the voting on the referendum.
- (1) The electoral officer or the deputy electoral officer after satisfying himself that a person presenting himself for the purpose of voting is entitled to vote at the polling place, shall provide such person with a ballot paper on the vack of which the officer has affixed his initials, so placed, that when the ballot paper is folded the initials can be seen without unfolding the ballot paper.
- (1) The eletoral officer or the deputy electeral officer shall explain the mode of voting to an elector when requested to do so by such elector.
- The electoral officer or the deputy electoral officer shall maintain peace and good order during the voting and for thispurpose he may enlist the assistance of constables, peace officers or other persons present.
- When the results of the voting at all the polls are known to the electoral officer, he shall.
- The electoral officer shall deposit the ballot papers used in the voting in a sealed envelope and retain it for 60 days after which time he may, unless directed otherwise by the Assistant Deputy Minister, destroy them in the presence of two witnesses.
- Voting Other than by Secret Ballot.
32. Tylenol - Push Through the Pain | Rules
- www.cbs.com
- Sweepstakes Rules & Regulations.
- Subject to all applicable federal, state and local laws and regulations. ...
- The use of automated or third party software or another Web site not approved by sponsor in order to register for this game or participate in any “Voting Period” as described in these rules is prohibited. ...
- 3) Voting Periods and How to Vote. There are fifteen (15) “Voting Periods” for the Game, (1) one per original broadcast beginning with the premiere episode of Survivor All-Stars and ending with the final episode. A Voting Period begins at 11:59 PM ET the night an original episode of Survivor All-Stars is broadcast and ends at 11:59 PM ET three (3) days later. (Example: Voting Period begins on a Thursday at 11:59 PM ET and ends the following Sunday at 11:59 PM ET. ) All Voting Periods will follow the same three (3) days in duration schedule. There will be no Voting Period following the broadcast of any repeat or recap episode during the Promotion Period. During a Voting Period a registered player can vote by logging on to www. ... com/survivor/tylenol, entering his/her registered e-mail address and username and voting for any (1) one active Survivor contestant who the registered player feels best captured the spirit of Tylenol and “pushed through the pain” on that week’s original episode. ... Participants are required to follow all voting instructions. Limit one (1) vote, per Voting Period, per registered participant e-mail address and corresponding username. Voting does not guarantee entry.
- Voting Method: Entry into a Weekly Prize drawing via the Voting method is conditional based on the following: first, a registered player is required to vote during any of the eligible Voting Periods offering a Weekly Prize, maximum one (1) vote per Voting Period; secondly, participants for the Weekly Prize drawing will consist of players who voted for the one (1) Survivor who received the greatest number of votes for that week’s Voting Period. ... ) In the event two or more active Survivors have identical voting results for a single Voting Period, those tied Survivors will be placed into a random drawing and one (1) Survivor will be randomly selected as that week’s “Push Through the Pain” vote winner. Bonus Entries: There are two methods by which a registered participant may earn additional “Bonus” entries during each applicable Voting Period (defined in rule #3) for both the Weekly and Grand Prize drawings. Those methods are: 1) Create Alliances: If, during a Voting Period, a player voted for the one (1) Survivor who received the greatest number of votes for that Voting Period AND provided an e-mail address (valid and different from that of the registered person who submitted the entry) for one (1) friend who meets the Game’s eligibility requirements, one (1) entry in the Weekly Prize and Grand Prize drawing will be recorded for the registered player. ... Limit one proxy e-mail request per registered participant, per applicable Voting Period. ... ” For each Voting Period a participant may enter any one (1) of the 12-digit numbers found beneath the UPC symbol from the outer package of any of the Tylenol products on the Featured Products list. ... Limit one proxy number request per registered participant, per applicable Voting Period. ... Additional “Bonus” Grand Prize drawing entry maximums are as follows: Create Alliances - 1 per Voting Period, maximum 15 entries; Immunity Challenge - 5 Voting Period, maximum 75 entries.
33. M.G.L - Chapter 156, Section 41
- www.state.ma.us
- Chapter 156B: Section 41 Stockholders' voting rights; proxy regulations.
- Stockholders entitled to vote shall have one vote for each share of stock owned by them and a proportionate vote for a fractional share; provided that in corporations having two or more classes or series of stock, the voting powers of the different classes or series may be fixed in the manner provided by section thirteen or section twenty-six. ...
34. FDIC: FDIC Law, Regulations, Related Acts - Rules and Regulations
- www.fdic.gov
- FDIC Law, Regulations, Related Acts .
- 2000 - FDIC RULES AND REGULATIONS .
- (a) Acquisition includes a purchase, assignment, transfer, pledge or other disposition of voting shares, or an increase in percentage ownership resulting from a redemption of voting shares of an insured state nonmember bank or a parent company. ...
- (c) Control means the power, directly or indirectly, to direct the management or policies of an insured bank or a parent company or to vote 25 percent or more of any class of voting shares of an insured bank or a parent company. ...
- (e) Person means an individual, corporation, partnership, trust, association, joint venture, pool, syndicate, sole proprietorship, unincorporated organization, and any other form of entity; and a voting trust, voting agreement, and any group of persons acting in concert. ...
- The FDIC presumes that an acquisition of voting shares of an insured state nonmember bank or a parent company constitutes the acquisition of the power to direct the management or policies of an insured bank or a parent company requiring prior notice to the FDIC, if, immediately after the transaction, the acquiring person (or persons acting in concert) will own, control, or hold with power to vote 10 percent or more of any class of voting shares of the institution, and if: .
- (ii) No other person will own, control or hold the power to vote a greater percentage of that class of voting shares immediately after the transaction. If two or more persons, not acting in concert, each propose to acquire simultaneously equal percentages of 10 percent or more of a class of voting shares of an insured state nonmember bank or a parent company, each such person shall file prior notice with the FDIC. ...
- The FDIC presumes an acquisition of a loan in default that is secured by voting shares of an insured state nonmember bank or a parent company to be an acquisition of the underlying shares for purposes of this section. ...
- Acquisitions other than those set forth in paragraph (b)(2) of this section resulting in a person's control of less than 25 percent of a class of voting shares of an insured state nonmember bank or a parent company are not deemed by the FDIC to constitute control for purposes of the Change in Bank Control Act. ...
- Prior notice to the FDIC is not required for any acquisition of voting shares under the presumption of control set forth in this section, if the FDIC finds that the acquisition will not result in control. ...
- (1) The acquisition of additional voting shares of an insured state nonmember bank or a parent company by a person who: .
- (i) Held the power to vote 25 percent or more of any class of voting shares of the institution continuously since the later of March 9, 1979, or the date that the institution commenced business as an insured state nonmember bank or a parent company; or .
- 82(b)(2), to have controlled the institution continuously since March 9, 1979, if the aggregate amount of voting shares held does not exceed 25 percent or more of any class of voting shares of the institution or, in other cases, where the FDIC determines that the person has controlled the institution continuously since March 9, 1979; .
- (2) The acquisition of additional shares of a class of voting shares of an insured state nonmember bank or a parent company by any person (or persons acting in concert) who has lawfully acquired and maintained control of the institution (for purposes of § 303. 82) after complying with the procedures of the Change in Bank Control Act to acquire voting shares of the institution under this subpart; .
35. Internal regulations of Estiem
- www.estiem.org
- Internal Regulations of ESTIEM.
- The following "Internal Regulations" shall be regulations as defined in article 18 of the Statutes of ESTIEM.
- - Election of the voting committee .
- - Voting .
- When applying for observer status or membership, the applicant shall provide the Council with information covering the criteria mentioned in the Internal Regulations of ESTIEM (Observer status: paragraph 3. ...
- 5 Voting Upon the New ESTIEM Board .
- 6 Voting upon the Periodical Contribution.
- The voting on the amount of the periodical contribution of following year will take place at least four (4) weeks before the end of the association year. ...
- 8 Voting by Proxy .
- In case a member will not be present during the voting session, the vote can be transferred to another member. The proxy therefore shall have to be submitted to the board in writing before the voting session begins. This written proxy will instruct how the voting shall be done. ... Before each voting session takes place it therefore will be necessary to enlist the votes for the said voting session. ...
- - Responsible for updating the Internal Regulations .
- An application is to be considered as complete if it covers all requirements given in the Statutes and/or Internal Regulations of ESTIEM. ...
36. Congress of Aboriginal Peoples - Corbère Report-6
- www.abo-peoples.org
- CAP Corbiére Commission Report - Content of Regulations .
- Need For Regulations .
- Content Of Regulations .
- Content of New Regulations .
- During the course of its consultations CAP received some excellent recommendations regarding the kinds of issues that must be addressed in any new election or referendum regulations. ...
- Of utmost importance is the recommendation that all voting in elections or referenda be done by secret ballot. Participants in the consultations indicated that in many cases voting occurs by ìshow of handsî at a public meeting. They said that this type of voting is no longer acceptable as it allows for intimidation and corruption. ...
- Participants indicated that they need a lot more notice of elections and referenda than the current regulations require. ...
- It was recommended that provision be made for proxy voting and for voting at locations off-reserve. ... Systems could also be established to enable voting by telephone or mail. ...
- One particularly interesting recommendation is for the regulations to include the capacity for band members to initiate a referendum through a petition. ...
- That all voting be done in secrecy; .
- That proxy voting be permitted; .
- That provision be made for voting at off-reserve locations, i. ... , off-reserve polling stations, mail-in ballots, electronic voting, etc. ...
37. Ch1, Sec 3.c Rules & Regulations
- www.utexas.edu
- The Council shall include sixty-two (62) or more voting members of the General Faculty with vote elected as follows: 1. ...
- Twenty (20) voting members of the General Faculty elected at large in odd-numbered years to serve two-year terms commencing on the first class day of the fall semester following their election, distributed as follows: a. ...
- Forty (40) or more voting members of the General Faculty elected in even-numbered years by the colleges and schools to serve two-year terms commencing on the first class day of the fall semester following their election. ...
- Administrative members ex officio without vote are not eligible for election as voting members. ...
- 301) shall include the procedure for electing the voting members of the General Faculty. ...
- A vacancy shall be declared by the Secretary of the Council if an elected voting member of the General Faculty misses three consecutive meetings. ...
38. The Friendly Societies (Proxy Voting) Regulations 1993
- www.hmso.gov.uk
- The Friendly Societies (Proxy Voting) Regulations 1993 - continued .
- Proxy Voting Form.
39. Responsibilities of the Board; voting. - 1922.4
- www.osha.gov
- Regulations (Standards - 29 CFR) .
- Responsibilities of the Board; voting. ...
- Regulations (Standards - 29 CFR) - Table of Contents .
- Responsibilities of the Board; voting.
- 4(c)Voting. ...
- Regulations (Standards - 29 CFR) - Table of Contents.
40. S.I. No. 68/1985: LOCAL ELECTIONS (POSTAL VOTING) (AMENDMENT) REGULATIONS, 1985.
- www.irishstatutebook.ie
- 68/1985: LOCAL ELECTIONS (POSTAL VOTING) (AMENDMENT) REGULATIONS, 1985.
- 68/1985: LOCAL ELECTIONS (POSTAL VOTING) (AMENDMENT) REGULATIONS, 1985. ...
- 68/1985: LOCAL ELECTIONS (POSTAL VOTING) (AMENDMENT) REGULATIONS, 1985. ...
- LOCAL ELECTIONS (POSTAL VOTING) (AMENDMENT) REGULATIONS, 1985.
- LOCAL ELECTIONS (POSTAL VOTING) (AMENDMENT) REGULATIONS, 1985.
- 19 of 1963), hereby makes the following Regulations, a draft of which has been approved by a resolution passed by each House of the Oireachtas:.
- These Regulations may be cited as the Local Elections (Postal Voting) (Amendment) Regulations, 1985.
- The Local Elections Regulations, 1965 and 1974 and these Regulations shall be construed as one and may be cited together as the Local Elections Regulations, 1965 to 1985.
- In these Regulations—.
- "the Regulations of 1974" means the Local Elections (Postal Voting) Regulations, 1974 (S. ...
- The following is hereby substituted for article 4 (2) of the Regulations of 1974—.
- "(2) For the purpose of these Regulations, a qualified person shall be a person whose name is on the register for the time being in force for a local electoral area (not being a person whose name is on the postal voters list for that area) and who satisfies the appropriate returning officer that he will be unable, or is likely to be unable, to go in person on the polling day to vote at the election at the polling station to which he is allotted by reason of—.
- ( a ) Articles 5 (b) and (c) and articles 8 (2) and (3) of the Regulations of 1974 are hereby amended by the insertion after the word "certified" of the words "or supported by a statutory declaration, as appropriate,".
- ( b ) The Form set out in the Schedule to these Regulations is hereby substituted for the Form set out in the Schedule to the Regulations of 1974.
- ( c ) The words "thirtieth day of April in every election year" are hereby substituted for the words "seventh day after the latest day for the publication of the Notice of Election" in article 5 (c) and for the words "adjournment of an election for the purpose of taking a poll" in article 9 (1) of the Regulations of 1974.
- ( d ) The words "fifteenth day of April in every election year" are hereby substituted for the words "twenty-eighth day before the polling day" in articles 6 and 7 of the Regulations of 1974.
41. JJCR Election Regulations
- www.dur.ac.uk
- JJCR Election Regulations.
- Voting Procedure.
- Action On Breaches of Election Regulations.
- If a position on the Executive Committee becomes vacant before the term specified in these Regulations, and a successor has not been elected, a by-election shall be held by secret ballot within 14 days of the vacancy occurring. ...
- If any other Officer or Committee post becomes vacant before the term specified in these Regulations, and a successor has not been elected, a by-election shall be held at the next ordinary JJCR meeting, Regulation 6. ...
- If any other Officer or Committee post becomes vacant before the term specified in these regulations, and the Executive Committee is of the opinion that this post has a necessary task to perform before a by-election can be held, the President, in agreement with a two-thirds majority of the Executive Committee, and with the consent of the selected person, may appoint any JJCR member to occupy the vacant post and fulfil the tasks required until a by-election can be held or until the successor takes up office. ...
- The JHJCR President-elect shall be, ex-officio, a non-voting member of the JJCR Executive.
- If such agreement is not possible, then they must abstain from voting on that issue. ...
- Elections of representatives to external organisations shall be subject to JJCR regulations and the rules of the external organisation. ...
- Electronic information dissemination techniques (including but not limited to bulk e-mail and newsgroup postings) other than those specifically permitted elsewhere in these regulations;.
- The Returning Officers shall rule on the acceptability of any item of election publicity whose acceptability or otherwise is not made explicitly clear by Election Regulations.
- The Returning Officer shall arrange for the removal of all election publicity which does not comply with Election Regulations. ...
- Such campaigns shall abide by all the regulations applicable to campaigns for any other candidate, except those concerning distribution and expenditure limits.
- Such campaigns shall abide by all the regulations applicable to campaigns for candidates in elections, except those concerning distribution and expenditure limits.
- The Chair shall rule out of order any question which he/she deems to be unfair to any candidate or group of candidates, or which is likely to lead to an answer which is defamatory or offensive, or which cannot be answered without breaching Election Regulations.
- If neither a) nor b) applies, hustings shall only be held if any ordinary member of the JJCR so requests before the commencement of voting.
42. Amended Indian Act causes election confusion - Capital News Online
- www.carleton.ca
- OTTAWA New Indian Act voting regulations have left many natives confused and afraid of election chaos. ...
- The amended regulations, which become effective Nov. ...
- In May 1999, in a decision called Corbiere, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled a section of the Indian Act unconstitutional because it restricted voting in Indian Act elections and referendums to band members who were "ordinarily resident on the reserve. ...
- The programs cover the new voting regulations and how to run an election with mail-in ballots and polling stations. ...
- In 1991, a group from the Batchewana First Nation (some living on the reserve, some not), led by former chief John Corbiere, successfully challenged the Indian Act restriction for voting for off-reserve members. ...
- September 2000: Amended Indian Band Election Regulations and the Indian Referendum Regulations are pre-published in the Canada Gazette. ...
- 20, 2000: Final regulations in force. Regulations affect elections and referendums taking place after Nov. ...
- New regulations apply.
43. State Action - Issues : Model State Voting Reform Act
- www.stateaction.org
- Voting Reform - Overview .
- Model Voting Reform Act .
- Primer on Voting Systems .
- Read articles about Voting Reform from our Winter 2002, Summer 2001, or April 2001 newsletters .
- Model Voting Reform Resolution .
- Voting Reform Act.
- Voting Reform Act.
- Summary: The Voting Reform Act establishes a Voter's Bill of Rights, requiring local election officials to publicly post, distribute, and comply with that Bill of Rights; mandates that all jurisdictions in the state use modern, accurate vote counting technology; requires education and training for poll workers and the voting public; and creates an Election Review Commission to study election procedures and recommend future reforms.
- This Act shall be called the " STATE Voting Reform Act. ...
- The 2000 election exposed serious flaws in our nation's voting systems. ... 5 million Americans cast ballots that went uncounted because of faulty or obsolete systems, and as many as 4 million more registered voters who wanted to vote were turned away or discouraged from voting.
- In 2000, insert state data , XX voters had their ballots for President invalidated because voting machines erroneously recorded overvotes or undervotes. ...
- And it is common for individuals to be wrongly turned away from voting because of mistakes by election officials, discrimination, voter intimidation, or voter suppression.
- In order to protect the right to vote for all its citizens, the state must: establish a Voter's Bill of Rights, requiring all local election officials to publicly post, distribute and comply with that Bill of Rights; mandate that all jurisdictions in the state use modern, accurate vote counting technology; require education and training for poll workers and the voting public; and create an Election Review Commission to study election procedures and recommend future reforms.
- VOTING REFORM .
- Inspect a sample ballot before voting.
44. House panel okays lifting of voting right cap in banks - The Economic Times
- economictimes.indiatimes.com
- House panel okays lifting of voting right cap in banks.
- NEW DELHI: The Standing Committee of Parliament on Finance headed by N Janardhana Reddy today gave its approval to the Banking Regulations (Amendment) bill thus lifting the 10% ceiling on voting rights for shareholders in foreign and private banks, allowing voting rights to be in proportion to shareholding. ...
- At present, whatever the level of shareholding, voting rights are limited to 10%, under section 12(2) of the Banking Regulation Act. ...
- The voting rights of shareholders of public sector banks will not be affected by this bill. ...
- Foreign banks have been lobbying for increased voting rights for a long time. ...
- But the priority sector lending targets that is currently at 32% inclusive of the export credit will be changed as per RBI regulations for other private banks. ...
- The Committee has asked for a strong regulatory mechanism to check misuse of the provisions on voting rights by unscrupulous Indian and foreign investors. ...
45. Requirements and Regulations for M.S and M.A. Candidates
- galton.uchicago.edu
- Requirements and Regulations for M. ...
- Course Regulations .
- Master's Paper Regulations .
- Course Regulations: .
- Master's Paper Regulations: .
- A waiver requires a simple majority approval of the entire voting faculty body. ...
- The DGA can deny the petition if the DGA finds that there are not enough grounds to submit it to the voting faculty. ...
- The whole voting faculty body has the right to amend any of the rules anytime by a simple majority vote. ...
- Any new rule goes into effect immediately once it is approved by the voting faculty. ...
46. Corporate Governance Code of Regulations
- www.reyrey.com
- Code of Regulations.
- CONSOLIDATED CODE OF REGULATIONS.
- Any shareholder, either before or after any meeting, may waive any notice required to be given by law or under these Regulations; and whenever all of the shareholders entitled to vote shall meet in person or by proxy and consent to holding a meeting, it shall be valid for all purposes without call or notice, and at such meeting any action may be taken.
- Except when a greater proportion is required by law, by the Amended Articles of Incorporation or by these Regulations, the presence, in person or by proxy, of shareholders holding a majority of the outstanding shares of stock of the corporation entitled to vote shall constitute a quorum at all meetings of the shareholders. ...
- Voting. Each shareholder entitled to vote in accordance with the terms of the Amended Articles of Incorporation in accordance with the provisions of these Regulations shall be entitled to one vote, in person or by proxy, for each share of stock entitled to vote held of record by such shareholder. ... All elections for directors shall be decided by plurality vote; all other questions shall be decided by the vote of the holders of a majority of such voting shares as are represented in person or by proxy, except as otherwise required by the Amended Articles of Incorporation or the laws of the State of Ohio.
- In case of an even number of persons so appointed shall attend the meeting or otherwise exercise the authority granted, and it appears that they are divided upon the question of voting such shares, or exercising the authority granted, each shall be entitled to vote or exercise such authority in respect to the maximum equal number of whole shares determined by dividing the number of shares by the number of persons so appointed, and excluding any resultant fractional shares; .
- The number of directors of the Corporation shall be not fewer than nine (9) nor more than twelve (12), with the exact whole number of directors and the number of directors in each class determined either (i) by the affirmative vote of the holders of record of at least 75% of the voting power of outstanding shares of the Corporation at a meeting of shareholders called for that purpose and for the purpose of electing directors or (ii) from time to time by the affirmative vote of a majority of the directors. ...
- Any director may be removed from office at any time, but only for cause, by the affirmative vote of the shareholders of record holding a majority of the outstanding voting securities of the corporation entitled to vote in the election of directors at a meeting of the shareholders called for that purpose; provided that no director shall be removed in case the votes of a sufficient number of shares are cast against his removal which, if cumulatively voted at an election of all the directors, would be sufficient to elect at least one director. ...
- Such shareholder's notice to the Secretary shall set forth (a) as to each person whom the shareholder proposes to nominate for election or re-election as a Director, (i) the name, age, business address and residence address of the person, (ii) the principal occupation or employment of the person, (iii) the classes and number of any shares of capital stock of the Company which are beneficially owned by the person and (iv) any other information relating to the person that is required to be disclosed in solicitations for proxies for election of Directors pursuant to Regulations 14A and 14C under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended; and (b) as to the shareholder giving the notice (i) the name and record address of shareholder and (ii) the classes and number of shares of capital stock of the Company which are beneficially owned by the shareholder. ...
- Whenever, under the provisions of the General Corporation Law of Ohio, as the same may be amended from time to time, the Amended Articles of Incorporation or these Regulations, notice is required to be given to any director or shareholder, it shall not be construed to mean personal notice unless specifically allowed, but such notice may be given in writing, by mail, addressed to such director or shareholder, at his address as it appears on the records of the corporation, with postage thereon prepaid, and such notice shall be deemed to be given at the time when the same shall be deposited in the United States mail. ...
- Whenever any notice is required to be given under the provisions of the General Corporation Law of Ohio, as the same may be amended from time to time, the Amended Articles of Incorporation or these Regulations, a waiver thereof in writing, signed by the person or persons entitled to said notice, whether before or after the time stated therein, shall be deemed equivalent thereto.
- In the absence of any officer of the corporation, or for any other reason the Board of Directors may deem sufficient, the Board of Directors, and officers in a manner consistent with these Regulations, may delegate, for the time being, the powers or duties, or any of them, of such officer to any other officer, or to any director.
- The indemnification provided by this Subsection B shall not be deemed exclusive of any other rights to which those seeking indemnification may be entitled under the Articles or the Regulations of the corporation, or any agreement, vote of shareholder or disinterested directors or otherwise, both as to action in his official capacity and as to action in another capacity while holding such office, and shall continue as to a person who has ceased to be a director, trustee, officer, employee, or agent and shall inure to the benefit of the heirs, executors, and administrators of such a person. ...
- The Consolidated Code of Regulations may be amended or repealed at any meeting of shareholders called for that purpose by the affirmative votes of the holders of record of shares entitling them to exercise two-thirds of the voting power on such proposal.
47. Comment on FEC VSS Draft Volume 1 by R. Mercuri
- www.notablesoftware.com
- 2720 6 pt 6 pt 0 3 The FEC Proposed Voting Systems Standard Update A Detailed Comment by Dr. ...
- In 1990, the Federal Election Commission approved a set of performance and test standards for voting systems. ...
- In the meanwhile, voting systems continue to evolve, outpacing the abilities of local and state governments to adequately assess the equipment they are considering for purchase. ...
- I have thoroughly examined the voting system standards proposal and present here my comments to the FEC in response to their Federal Register Notice dated July 10, 2001. ... In this way, it will be possible to better understand the failures of the proposed standards to address the concerns of municipalities hoping to provide the public with voting systems that maintain the accuracy and integrity that our elections demand. ...
- Any product must be assessed as to the components it includes, some of which may be in conflict with satisfactory voting system performance. ...
- In the absence of Congressionally enacted laws or a Constitutional amendment creating minimal requirements for Federal elections, the equipment that is used for voting (which typically will be the same as that provided for local or state-wide races) can differ from state to state, and further may even differ between and within counties in each state. Examples of such variant regulations include the casting of straight-party ballots, the admission of blank (no-vote) ballots, the use of full-face ballots and other ballot layout formats, and the tabulation of proportional rather than highest vote results. ...
- Voting system vendors are thus faced with the daunting task of providing variously configured systems in order to conform to these conflicting requirements. ... For voting, the proper maintenance of multiple, incompatible product lines necessarily would require the implementation of sophisticated tracking systems, difficult to achieve in the computer industry, especially for vendors with limited resources and manufacturing experience. ...
- Since it does not appear likely that a generic set of voting regulations will be adopted throughout the country, issues related to system incompatibilities will likely persist for the foreseeable future. ...
- Essentially, they address what a voting system should reliably do, not how the system should meet this requirement. ...
- 5) on voting system accessibility, there appears to be a general conclusion that all procured systems must be ADA compliant. ... It is conceivable that a broad range of potentially costly accessibility features may be thus imposed on new voting products adopted for use. ...
- The Internet poses one of the largest risks to the accuracy, integrity and security of voting systems to date. ... There is also no way to determine whether backdoors exist in standard products such as the operating systems and compilers that are used to develop and run voting systems. ... Attacks aside, there are many other unresolvable issues related to the use of the Internet for voting systems. ...
48. Federal Government Resources on the Web/Laws and Regulations
- www.lib.umich.edu
- Laws and Regulations.
- Passports | Patents | Presidential Pardons | Procurement | Regulations | Sexual Harassment | Small Business.
- Chapters on foundations (American Revolution, constitution, self-rule, federalism), the branches of government, legislative and budget processes, public opinion, voting .
- Encyclopedic description of constitution, three branches of government, voting, and political parties .
- Federal Laws and Regulations (GSA) .
- Federal laws, regulations, and executive orders arranged by easy subject approach.
- Locate under Bills, Laws, and Regulations.
- Regulations.
- Federal Regulations: Information Resources Availabile via the Internet .
- Alphabetic list of government agencies and their regulations on the Internet.
- Federal laws and regulations arranged by broad subject (e. ...
- Code of Federal Regulations .
- Code of Federal Regulations via Congressional Universe (UMich Only) .
- Code of Federal Regulations (Cornell) .
- Code of Federal Regulations (GPO Access) .
- New regulations, proposed regulations, and notices of grants and agency hearings since 1995 .
49. ENG SOCIETY - Rules & Regulations
- eng.askhalo.com
- Rules & Regulations.
- Rules & Regulations >>.
- An associate member shall not be entitled to exercise any voting rights, and shall not be a candidate for, nor hold any elected office in the Association.
- A full member shall have voting rights and may hold any elected or appointed office in the Association.
- Student members shall not be entitled to exercise any voting rights, and shall not hold any elected office in the Association, except that Student Members may be appointed as volunteers or part-time staff by the Chief Executive Officer of the Association.
- An group member shall not be entitled to exercise any voting rights, and shall not be a candidate for, nor hold any elected office in the Association.
- The Association Board of Directors, or the voting membership of the Association, may adopt and publish ethical standards which apply to all categories or classes of membership. ...
- there is a written and motivated request signed by not less than one third (1/3rd) of the voting membership, in which case the Board of Directors shall cause the meeting to be convened and held within one month from the date of request.
- Subject to the provisions of the Registration of Associations Act, one third (1/3rd) of the eligible voting membership shall constitute a quorum for any general meeting. ...
- Voting at general meetings shall be by ballot.
- Voting by proxy at general meetings shall be allowed subject to Section 28(3) of the Registration of Associations Act and subject to paragraphs 11 and 12 below.
- establish and adopt such policies, rules and regulations for the conduct of its business, responsibility and authority as will be deemed advisable, insofar as any exercise or delegation of authority is consistent, and does not conflict, with the Rules of the Association (in their present form or as amended) and applicable law; and.
- Oversee the management, control and supervision of the business, as well as other lawful activities and affairs deemed necessary to further the objectives of the Association, including an annual report to the Association's voting membership.
- The Association Board of Directors shall be composed of at least seven (7) members of age, and with voting rights.
- Six (6) of these voting Directors shall be elected and serve as Officers of the Board of Directors consistent with the requirements of Article 9, below.
- Any four voting members present shall form a quorum for a meeting of the Board of Directors.
50. Voting with your Children: A Positive Analysis of Child Labour Laws
- ideas.repec.org
- Papers | Articles | Software | Books | Chapters | Authors | Institutions | JEL Classification | NEP reports | Search | Viewers | New papers by email | Author registration | Top hits | Tutorial | Help! Voting with your Children: A Positive Analysis of Child Labour Laws.
- A calibration of the model shows that it can replicate features of the history of the UK in the 19th Century, when regulations were introduced after a period of rising wage inequality, and coincided with rapidly declining fertility and rising educational levels.
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