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  2. Committee Participation. Committee members are asked to: Study the meeting agenda carefully before coming to the committee meeting and ask for clarification if any items are unclear. Review the supporting material. Stick to the agenda during the meeting. Bring up new business only at the appropriate time.

  3. A special committee, often referred to as an ad hoc committee or task force, is assembled with a specific purpose in mind and a specific time frame. Committees can also be classified by purpose or function into one of four categories: Administrative. Project. Study or problem-solving.

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  4. 15.All committee members shall reserve the right to call a meeting for the committee in which they serve by communicating this to the chair positions. 16.All committees are to be held accountable for their performance by the Committee on Committees. This committee shall act as a liaison and consulting resource to the committees and ministry teams

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  5. The Courtesy Committee is a non-profit organization composed of a group of faculty and staff who maintain the family atmosphere of the university by remembering all full-time faculty/staff when there is a wedding,birth, adoption, illness, and death in our Delta State Family throughout the year.

  6. Senatorial courtesy is a long-standing, unwritten, unofficial, and nonbinding constitutional convention in the U.S. describing the tendency of U.S. senators to support a Senate colleague opposing the appointment to federal office of a nominee from that senator's state.

  7. Committees are created to accomplish tasks. It is the responsibility of committee members to read the agenda, understand it, make motions, and then follow through with the resolutions of their actions. Appointing new committee members. It is common for committee members to serve “terms” and have a term limit.

  8. The Senate Judiciary Committee formalized a version of senatorial courtesy through use of the “blue slip,” a blue sheet of paper on which a senator could register support for or opposition to a judicial nominee to serve in his or her state.

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