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Form of interest arbitration
Pendulum arbitration, otherwise known as final offer arbitration (or "FOA") or baseball arbitration, is a type of interest arbitration in which the arbitrator
Pendulum_arbitration
Method of dispute resolution
requests a trial de novo (as if the arbitration had not been held). Pendulum Arbitration refers to a determination in industrial disputes where an arbitrator
Arbitration
Topics referred to by the same term
Baseball arbitration can refer to: Pendulum arbitration Salary arbitration during free agency (Major League Baseball) in the United States This disambiguation
Baseball_arbitration
Chilean economist and free market reformer
mechanism of "pendulum arbitration" (also known as final offer) in public services, where disagreement led not to strikes but to compulsory arbitration by private
José_Piñera
Toy consisting of three balls on a string
initiated an international arbitration against Active People due to their continuing sales of Astrojax. The Final Award of the arbitration lawsuit included an
Astrojax
2002 French academic dispute
that "whatever the orientation, the plane of oscillation of Foucault's pendulum is necessarily aligned with the initial singularity marking the origin
Bogdanov_affair
maritime industry. In June 1925, the Commonwealth Court of Conciliation and Arbitration had deregistered the Seamen's Union of Australia, in response to what
1925 Australian federal election
1925_Australian_federal_election
Political proverb
It has also been used in non-papal contexts to refer to other perceived pendulum swings. The adage around papal conclaves has been attributed to Italians
Fat_pope,_thin_pope
Election for the 1st Parliament of Australia
advocated old age pensions, electoral reform, a national army, compulsory arbitration of industrial disputes, and a national referendum to decide issues that
1901 Australian federal election
1901_Australian_federal_election
The pendulum clock was invented by Christiaan Huygens, based on the pendulum introduced by Galileo Galilei. Although Galileo studied the pendulum as early
List of Dutch inventions and innovations
List_of_Dutch_inventions_and_innovations
Social movement against sexual abuse and harassment
you're right to say that we all have to be conscious of the risk of the pendulum swinging too far, but in general this is a very positive step." Ijeoma
MeToo_movement
One of the treaties that ended World War I
that "[t]he jury is still out", and that "there have been signs that the pendulum of judgement is swinging back the other way." The Treaty of Versailles
Treaty_of_Versailles
German-born American chemist and historian of science (1925–2024)
Göttingen, had served as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Economic Arbitration during the Weimar Republic. Although his parents had converted to Lutheranism
Otto_Theodor_Benfey
England as the commissioner of the Bureau des Longitudes of Paris to take pendulum observations, and he accompanied Biot to Leith Fort near Edinburgh, to
Richard_Zachariah_Mudge
Building in Manhattan, New York
donated by the governments of Belgium and Brazil, as well as a Foucault pendulum donated by the Netherlands. In addition, the building contained over 3
United Nations General Assembly Building
United_Nations_General_Assembly_Building
Confrerie Pictura (artists' group) formed. 1658 - Huygens invents the pendulum clock. 1659 - Concert of The Hague (1659) 1672 - 20 August: Lynching of
Timeline_of_The_Hague
French general and nobleman (1490–1527)
towards Rome. On 2 February, his assault on Frosinone was rebuffed, and the pendulum swung against de Lannoy. The Papal army, under the command of da Ceri who
Charles_III,_Duke_of_Bourbon
Canada's publicly funded, single-payer health care system
There are ongoing issues about the distribution of physicians, with the pendulum swinging from arguing that there were too many, to arguing that there were
Medicare_(Canada)
Judicial bench of New South Wales
Almanac 1975 (PDF) Henderson, Gerard (19 March 2008). "A career upon life's pendulum". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 23 March 2019. Memoranda, 42 NSWLR
List of judges of the District Court of NSW
List_of_judges_of_the_District_Court_of_NSW
Decade
nicknamed the Fandens fødselsdag or "Devil's Birthday", December 25 – The pendulum clock is invented by Christiaan Huygens, so accurate that it only loses
1650s
Church in Wolverhampton, England
Clerkenwell. The principal wheel was 2 feet (0.61 m) in diameter, the pendulum was 10 feet (3.0 m) long and the weight of the whole was about a 1½ tons
St_Peter's_Collegiate_Church
PENDULUM ARBITRATION
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Boy/Male
Tamil
Achiever, Blue lotus
Boy/Male
Indian
Passion
Surname or Lastname
French
French : habitational name from any of several places named Dury, in Aisne, Pas-de-Calais, and Somme.French and Swiss German : topographic name for someone who lived by a stream, du ry ‘from the stream’. Because ry has fallen out of use, the name has been translated as Rice, the French word for ‘rice’, riz, being a homophone.English : either a habitational name from Dury in Lydford, Devon, or of French origin (see 1), the surname having been taken to England by the Huguenots.
Boy/Male
Hindu
Guru
Boy/Male
Indian, Kannada
Brilliant
Girl/Female
Hindu
Om, Sacred Mantra
Boy/Male
Indian, Sanskrit
Lord of the Chariot
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian, Tamil
Fan
Girl/Female
American, Australian, British, Chinese, Christian, English, German, Greek, Hebrew
Honey; Diminutive of Melinda; Gentle; Dark; Love; Dark Beauty
Girl/Female
Gujarati, Indian
Only One; Unique
PENDULUM ARBITRATION
PENDULUM ARBITRATION
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n.
A pendulum.
n.
A pendulum.
v. i.
To move backward and forward; to vibrate like a pendulum; to swing; to sway.
n.
A pendulum rolling machine for slicking or graining leather; same as Jack, 4 (i).
pl.
of Pendulum
n.
The act of oscillating; a swinging or moving backward and forward, like a pendulum; vibration.
a.
Pendulous.
a.
Depending; pendent loosely; hanging; swinging.
a.
Moving, or characterized by motion, backward and forward like a pendulum; swinging; oscillating; vibratory; as, oscillatory motion.
a.
Hanging; suspended; pendent; pendulous.
n.
A regular vibration, as of a pendulum.
v. t.
To mark or measure by moving to and fro; as, a pendulum vibrating seconds.
n.
The state or quality of being pendulous.
n.
The ball or heavy part of a pendulum; also, the ball or weight at the end of a plumb line.
a.
Inclined or hanging downwards, as a flower on a recurved stalk, or an ovule which hangs from the upper part of the ovary.
n.
A complete course or vibration; time of vibration, as of a pendulum.
a.
Wavering; unstable; doubtful.
adv.
In a pendulous manner.
v. i.
To swing as a pendulum.
n.
A body so suspended from a fixed point as to swing freely to and fro by the alternate action of gravity and momentum. It is used to regulate the movements of clockwork and other machinery.