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Popularity Report

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Rank

Groups (24)

  • adpcrc

    ADPCRC

    3 members,20 bookmarks

    no description

  • Botcode

    Extreme Pricing

    1 members,0 bookmarks

    breakdown of pricing for baseball

  • cffcoach

    CFF Coaches

    46 members,830 bookmarks

    This group is a common place for Classrooms for the Future to pool links for use with/by their teachers.

  • edit5370

    EDIT5370

    1 members,7 bookmarks

    websites of interest to EDIT 5370 students

  • eduwikius

    Eduwiki.us

    76 members,306 bookmarks

    no description

  • environmental-group-1

    Environmental Group 1

    7 members,83 bookmarks

    This group has as its mission the creation of an environmental resource for McDaniel College

  • internetmcps

    Internet Searching for MCPS

    6 members,25 bookmarks

    This is for a workshop for staff of MCPS on how to increase efficiency when searching the web for support materials.

  • ITSCOTeam

    ITSCOTeam

    8 members,1050 bookmarks

    no description

  • MyGroup

    MyGroup

    1 members,0 bookmarks

    Search Content and People

  • oliverding

    Oliver Ding's Scrapbook

    14 members,195 bookmarks

    I'd like to create this group for collecting what I have interest. You guys also could send related items to me. Maybe you know what I want.
    Many thanks!

  • pmh-cst-and-ist

    PMH CST and IST

    147 members,1456 bookmarks

    This group is a place to share resources and problem solve.

  • reading

    LiuzhouMPA

    20 members,88 bookmarks

    This is for the reading classes of the Liuzhou-KSU MPA Programme.

  • reading-resources

    Literacy Resources

    1 members,21 bookmarks

    A collection of resources related to reading, writing, and literacy.

  • realslick

    REALSLICK

    2 members,64 bookmarks

    no description

  • salandty

    Cambodia Drainage Problems

    2 members,32 bookmarks

    This is our group for the Critical Thinking Class, Term 3 at ACE. Teacher: Daniel Davis Group: 1. Kosal Sovan Visal 2. Srun SokVuthy

  • sitecop

    SITE CoP

    4 members,8 bookmarks

    This group is designed as a collaborative research and learning tool for insurance educators that will allow our group to pool findings through group forums and bookmarks. Forums - post/respond to questions on a variety of topics. Bookmarks - create your favorite website bookmarks & share them with the group

  • teamchina

    team china

    3 members,13 bookmarks

    no description

  • tfw-f08-mod1

    Technologies and the Future of Writing Fall 2008 Mod 1

    16 members,147 bookmarks

    Bookmarking group for the Fall 2008 Technologies and the Future of Writing (Module 1) of the course Intro to Writing Arts at Rowan University.

  • tfw-s08

    Technologies and the Future of Writing Spring 2008

    68 members,443 bookmarks

    Bookmarking group for the Spring 2008 Technologies and the Future of Writing Module of the course Intro to Writing Arts at Rowan University.

  • thompsonlibrary

    UM-Flint Thompson Library

    4 members,365 bookmarks

    An experiment in allowing users to help build the website of the Thompson Library at UM-Flint.

  • wayneintel

    wayneintel

    9 members,5 bookmarks

    no description

  • web-20-resources

    Web 2.0 Resources

    2 members,53 bookmarks

    A collection of various web 2.0 resources.

  • Web2

    Web2.0

    467 members,906 bookmarks

    discuss everything about Web2.0

  • Windowsxb

    Windows XB

    2 members,109 bookmarks

    no description

Bookmark History

Saved by 1000 people (-92 private), first by anonymouse user on 2006-03-02


Public Comment

on 2006-02-05 by northernlad79

This is Google. This is a Diigo annotation on Google.

on 2006-07-20 by google

Wow, even before public launch of diigo there are already quite a few annotations!

on 2006-07-26 by pjhfusco

Creative use of white space

on 2006-08-03 by stubeloo

Ah, the power of social networking :-)

on 2006-08-03 by villagechild

power to the people! ive told atleast a hundred people so far. come on everybody lets make this technology happen. i love it.

on 2006-09-02 by caseyy

Diigoogle!

on 2008-04-22 by joshsimmons

Annotate the web! I'm certainly going to share this technology. I absolutely love what a wonderful tool Diigo is evolving into, I knew there was a reason I stuck with this...

on 2008-04-22 by gsiemens

and i thought I woudl also add a comment

on 2008-05-09 by to0tfaarangi15

genius

on 2008-06-13 by dandachy73

رامي

on 2008-07-04 by erich13

Really cool. Putting Stickies on web pages for others to see.

on 2008-07-26 by chinayuans

Diigoogle, very wonderful and powerful functionality.

on 2008-07-30 by tohrusan

Really cool!!

on 2008-08-29 by dhcrusoe

How much google could a wood chuck chuck if a wood chuck could chuck google?

Public Sticky notes

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Cross-examination: the practice in judicial review proceedings
It is well settled as a desirable practice that cross-examination is not permitted as of right in judicial review proceedings. In New Zealand Fishing Industry Association Inc v Minister of Agriculture and Fisheries [1988] 1 NZLR 544 Cooke P said at 554, dealing separately with the two points he was making, “cross-examination is not permitted as of right in judicial review proceedings, and in my opinion the Court should not allow a Minister to be cross-examined in such proceedings unless this is clearrly necessary to enable the case to be disposed of fairly”. Casey J concurred (at 568) and there is nothing in the other judgments to suggest a different view. Then in Minister of Energy v Petrocorp Exploration Ltd [1989] 1 NZLR 348 at 353, Cooke P, delivering the judgment of a Court of five, noted that in the Court below Greig J had expressed disagreement with at least the first part of those dicta: “but they represented an understanding of existing practice. In our opinion they also represent a desirable practice and we accept the Solicitor-General's submission that the practice should be maintained”. The Court accepted there was room for doubt about what is “the true legal basis for the practice which we regard as desirable”. It continued:
A broad view is that it is to be found in the concept that judicial review under the Judicature Amendment Act 1972 is to some extent a code of its own — and in particular that s 10 of that Act, in authorising a Judge to fix a time for any affidavits and to give such consequential directions as may be necessary, enables the Judge to require, as McGechan J did here, that any party wishing to cross-examine must apply for leave. That view would accord with the purpose reflected in the present s 10, which was enacted in 1977 on the recommendation of the Public and Administrative Law Reform Committee. They thought that practitioners should be able to consult a single source, the Judicature Act itself, for the procedure for obtaining the remedy of judicial review (Ninth Report, 1976, p 19).A view narrower but ssufficient for practical purposes is that the matter is governed by R 508 of the High Court Rules, imported on this view by R 628. Under R 508 a party desiring to cross-examine a deponent may serve notice on the other party. Unless the deponent is produced, his affidavit shall not be used as evidence except with the special leave of the Court. A general practice that special leave will be granted in the case of Ministers, unless cross-examination is clearly necessary to enable the case to be disposed of fairly, may be justified by this rule. So too as to other deponents in special categories, such as heads of tribunals: see Goodman Fielder Ltd v Commerce Commission [1987] 2 NZLR 10, 20.We do not consider it necessary to make a definite decision as to whether either of those bases is the exclusive justification for the practice. Suffice it to say that the practice is not without foundation.We do consider, however, that in order to fulfil the purposes of judicial review as a relatively simple, untechnical and prompt procedure, it is desirable that s 10 of the 1972 Act be amended to make it explicit that a Judge may give all necessary or appropriate preliminary directions about procedure, including directions as to the mode in which any evidence is to be given (whether by affidavit or viva voce) and (if by affidavit) requiring leave to cross-examine, such leave to be granted only if suffficient grounds are shown.
It scarcely needs noting that in suggesting an amendment to make the position “explicit” the Court must have considered it already “implicit”. In Attorney-General v Air New Zealand Ltd (1991) 4 PRNZ 1 where cross-examination of Ministers was again the issue, the Court repeated that Ministers are not to be cross-examined unless it is clearly necessary to enable the case to be disposed of fairly; described it as a rule of practice; and noted that the Court retained power to permit cross-examination. And the practice in New Zealand in refusing Highlighted by richardnz

In essence the argument presented for the appellants by Mr Craddock raises two points. The first is purely one of statutory interpretation. It is contended that the structure of s 3(4) was such that whether or not any of the conditions precedent to the making of an Order in Council were satisfied was fully open to review by the Courts. One way in which the argument was put was that those conditions were matters of jurisdictional fact. According to the argument it would be for the Courts to rule in the event of any question being raised whether, for instance, application of the Act was desirable for the protection of shareholders or otherwise in the public interest and adequate protection could not be provided under the Companies Act or in any other lawful way.It is true that grammatically the subsection could be construed as the argument seeks. There is no lack of cases in the books, however, in which statutory language of this kind has been held to confer by implication statutory discretion - and this though the rights of individuals are at stake. A clear example is Taylor v Brighton Borough Council [1947] KB 736, 742, where a town planning Act provided that every scheme "shall contain such provisions as are necessary or expedient for prohibiting or regulating the development of land". Lord Greene MR said at p 742:
"The words 'such provisions as are necessary or expedient' must, in my judgment, mean 'necessary or expedient in the opinion of the authority who has the ultimate control of the scheme'; that is to say, the Minister, or, in the last resort, Parliament. The test set up by the words 'necessary or expedient' in my opinion is not for the court to decide. Provided a provision which is proposed to be inserted in a scheme is one that can lawfully be inserted in that scheme, the question of whether it is necessary or expedient to insert it is not a matter for the court."
The 1958 section stipulated, as does s 38 of the 1989 Act, for a recommendation of the Securities Commission. So, although the interference with the rights of companies (or those controlling them) is severe, there is that special degree of responsible protection. It is not merely an executive decision. As Wylie J said, citing cases in which it has been emphasised in this Court that, where reasonably practicable, statutes should be interpreted so that they work, it is highly unlikely that Parliament would have contemplated lengthy litigation, including even a series of appeals, before it could be authoritatively determined whether the criteria for an Order in Council had been satisfied. In my opinion there can be no doubt that s 3(4) implicitly conferred on the Governor-General, on the advice of the Minister given on the recommendation of the Securities Commission, power to determine whether the conditions were fulfilled.Of course the Governor-General, the Minister and the Commission had to direct themselves to the right tests and comply with the ordinary obligations of an authority in whom a statutory discretion is vested. A provision such as s 3(4) does not empower the administrative authorities to determine conclusively any question of law, such as the true interpretation of the subsection itself: see O'Reilly v Mackman [1983] 2 AC 237, 278-283, per Lord Diplock, and Bulk Gas Users Group v Attorney-General [1983] NZLR 129, where this kind of question and other authorities on it are discussed at pp 133-135. But I can see no trace of any misinterpretation of the Act here by the Securities Commission, the Minister or the Governor-General's advisers.The expression "jurisdictional fact" is probably not of much help in modern administrative law, at least when what is in issue is an order made by an administrative authority under statutory powers. Usually the issue reduces simply to the extent of the discretion conferred, in the light of the presumption that power to determine questions of law conclusively is not conferred on administrative authorities.

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12 Timeless Rules of Investing

1. An attempt at making a quick buck often leads to losing much of that buck.

• The people who suffer the worst losses are those who over-reach.
• If the investment sounds too good to be true, it is.
• The best hot tip I’ve found is “there is no such thing as a hot tip.”

2. Don’t let a small loss become large.

• Don't keep losing money just to “prove you are right.”
• Never throw good money after bad (don't buy more of a loser).
• When all you're left with is hope, get out.

3. Cut your losers; let your winners ride.

• Avoid limited-upside, unlimited-downside investments.
• Don't fall in love with your investment; it won't fall in love with you.

4. A rising tide raises all ships, and vice versa. So assess the tide, not the ships.

• Fighting the prevailing “trend” is generally a recipe for disaster.
• Stocks will fall more than you think and rise higher than you can imagine.
• In the short run, values don’t matter.

5. When a stock hits a new high, it's not time to sell . . . something is going right.

• When a stock hits a new low, it’s not time to buy . . . something is going wrong.

6. Buy and hold doesn't ALWAYS work.

• If stocks don't seem cheap, stand aside.

7. Bear markets begin in good times. Bull markets begin in bad times.

8. If you don't understand the investment, don't buy it.

• Don’t be wooed. Either make an effort to understand it or say “no thanks.”
• You can’t know everything, so don’t stray far from what you know.

9. Buy value, and sell hysteria.

• Paying less than the underlying asset’s value is a proven successful strategy.
• Buying overvalued stocks has proven to underperform the market.
• Neglected sectors often offer good values.
• The “popular” sectors are often overvalued.

10. Investing in what's popular never ends up making you any money.

• Avoid popular stocks, fad industries and new ventures.
• Buy an investment when it has few friends.

11. When it's time to act, don't hesitate.

• Once you’re in, be patient and don't be rattled by fluctuations.
• Stick with your plan . . . but when you make a mistake, don’t hesitate.
• Learn more from your bad moves than your good ones.

12. Expert investors care about risk; novice investors shop for returns.

• If you focus on the risks, the returns will eventually come for you.
• If you focus on the returns, the risks will eventually come for you.

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