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Act and 1993
Shortly after taking office, Clinton signed the Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993 on February 5, which required large employers to allow employees to take unpaid leave for pregnancy or a serious medical condition.
Clinton signed the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993 in August of that year, which passed Congress without a Republican vote.
The area lost its administrative county status in 1994, with Section 9 Part 1 ( a ) of the Local Government ( Dublin ) Act, 1993 stating that " the county shall cease to exist.
The area formerly known as " County Dublin " is now defined in legislation solely as the " Dublin Region " under the Local Government Act, 1991 ( Regional Authorities ) ( Establishment ) Order, 1993, and this is the terminology officially used by the four Dublin administrative councils in press releases concerning the former county area.
Congress included text in the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1994 ( passed in 1993 ) requiring the military to abide by regulations essentially identical to the 1982 absolute ban policy.
In Gonzales v. O Centro Espirita Beneficente Uniao do Vegetal, the Supreme Court heard arguments on November 1, 2005 and unanimously ruled in February 2006 that the U. S. federal government must allow the UDV to import and consume the tea for religious ceremonies under the 1993 Religious Freedom Restoration Act.
* Article 40 ( a )( iv ) of the Print and Publications Act No. 10 of 1993 states that it is prohibited to publish articles that are likely to jeopardize national unity, incite others to commit crimes, stir up hostility, and foment hatred, division and discord between members of society.
New Zealand prohibits hate speech under the Human Rights Act 1993.
On April 24, 1993, the Constitutional ( 73rd Amendment ) Act, 1992 came into force to provide constitutional status to the Panchayati Raj institutions.
The Broadcasting Act 1993 ( An Act of Tynwald ) allows for the establishment of local television services.
In the UK, the relevant laws are the Criminal Justice Act 1993 Part V Schedule 1 and the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000, which defines an offence of Market Abuse.
The Local Councils Act, 1993 ( Act XV of 1993 ) was published on June 30, 1993, subdividing Malta into 54 local councils in Malta and 14 in Gozo.
In response to the judgment, the Parliament of Australia, controlled by the Labor Party led by Prime Minister Paul Keating, enacted the Native Title Act 1993 ( NTA ).
* Native Title Act 1993 ( Cth )
* James M. O ' Fallon, The Case of Benjamin More: A Lost Episode in the Struggle over Repeal of the 1801 Judiciary Act, 11 43 ( 1993 ).
Constitutional rights are protected under common law and are strengthened by the Bill of Rights Act 1990 and Human Rights Act 1993, although these are not entrenched and can be overturned by Parliament with a simple majority.
* 1993 – U. S. President Bill Clinton signs the Brady Handgun Violence Prevention Act ( the Brady Bill ) into law.

Act and consolidating
In 1879 passed into law a measure consolidating in one act both the Mutiny Act and the Articles of War, and amending their provisions in certain important respects.
The Offences against the Person Act 1861 codified and reformed the law, and was part of a wider process of consolidating criminal law.
A consolidation bill is a bill introduced into the Parliament of the United Kingdom with the intention of consolidating several Acts of Parliament or Statutory Instruments into a single Act.
In 1986 a new Constitution Act was passed, restating the few remaining provisions of the 1852 Act, consolidating the legislation establishing Parliament and officially replacing the name " General Assembly " with " Parliament ".
The first body which could be called a department of government was the Ministry of Health, created in 1919 through the Ministry of Health Act, consolidating under a single authority the medical and public health functions of central government.
The 1882 Act and the consolidating Local Government Act 1933 provided the statutory basis for municipal boroughs up to their abolition.
It operates under the Architects Act 1997 as amended, a consolidating Act.
** Representation of the People Act 1949, an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom consolidating previous electoral law
See, e. g., New South Wales ( the consolidating Landlord and Tenant Act 1899 ); Newfoundland ( Act 4 of 1899 ); Ontario ( Act I of 1902, § 22, giving a tenant five days for tender of rent and expenses after distress ); Jamaica ( Law 17 of 1900, certification of landlords bailiffs ); Queensland ( Act 15 of 1904 ).
Instead, the government indicated that it would allow amendment to the Act in consolidating counter-terrorism legislation scheduled for 2007.
On January 19th 2012, British Prime Minister David Cameron announced the Conservative led Government's intention to introduce a consolidating Act for societies to be passed by 2015.
The influence of the " Free Banking School " declined significantly after Congleton's death in 1842, and the Bank Charter Act of 1844 eliminated the right of new banks in England and Wales to issue notes, thus consolidating the Bank of England's monopoly, which Congleton had opposed.
Eventually, the Parliament of India passed the Life Insurance of India Act on 1956-06-19, and the Life Insurance Corporation of India was created on 1956-09-01, by consolidating the life insurance business of 245 private life insurers and other entities offering life insurance services.
In 1924, the City of Brisbane Act was passed by the Queensland Parliament, consolidating the City of Brisbane and the City of South Brisbane ; the Towns of Hamilton, Ithaca, Sandgate, Toowong, Windsor, and Wynnum ; and the Shires of Balmoral, Belmont, Coorparoo, Enoggera, Kedron, Moggill, Sherwood, Stephens, Taringa, Tingalpa, Toombul, and Yeerongpilly to form the current City of Greater Brisbane, now known simply as City of Brisbane, in 1925.
In 1929, six years after absorbing GTR, Parliament approved the " Canadian National Montreal Terminals Act, 1929 " which began the process of consolidating and rationalizing terminal trackage in the Montreal area and almost 15 years later on July 14, 1943 CNR opened Central Station on the former CNoR lands.

Act and Merchant
The Merchant Shipping Act of 1948 and the Merchant Shipping ( Safety Convention ) Act of 1949 were passed to improve conditions for seamen.
This transportation / trade restriction includes Puerto Rico per the Jones Act of 1920 ( Merchant Marine Act of 1920 ).
Strictly construed, the Jones Act refers only to Section 27 of the Merchant Marine Act of 1920, (; 19 CFR 4. 80 and 4. 80 ( b )), which has come to bear the name of its original sponsor, Sen. Wesley L. Jones.
Even thirty years after his death " Sultan Solyman " was quoted by the English playwright William Shakespeare as a military prodigy in The Merchant of Venice ( Act 2, Scene 1 ).
De Lesseps therefore tried to increase revenues by interpreting the kind of net ton referred to in the second concession ( tonneau de capacité ) as meaning a ship's real freight capacity and not only the theoretical net tonnage of the Moorsom System introduced in Britain by the Merchant Shipping Act in 1854.
The Merchant Marine Act of 1920 had allowed the Shipping Board to sell ships made by the U. S. Government to private American companies.
In 1970, the white-bordered Union Flag ceased to be the signal for a pilot, but references to it as national colours were not removed from the current Merchant Shipping Act and it was legally interpreted as a flag that could be flown on a merchant ship, as a jack if desired.
He cited to this effect William Shakespeare's play The Merchant of Venice published in 1600 ( Act IV, sc.
See the Riot ( Damages ) Act 1886 and section 235 of the Merchant Shipping Act 1995 ..
Section 515 of the Merchant Shipping Act 1894 formerly made provision for compensation for riot damage.
In Shakespeare's Merchant of Venice, Portia disguises herself as Balthazar in Act IV, scene i.
It was one of the original nine English public schools as defined by the Public Schools Act 1868, which included Eton College, Harrow School and Merchant Taylors '.
In 1868 the school was one of the nine schools of England ( along with Charterhouse, Eton, Harrow, Merchant Taylors ', Rugby, St Paul's, Westminster and Winchester ) regulated by the Public Schools Act.
* Merchant Shipping Act 1995
In 1854, the Merchant Shipping Act included a specific provision that the Red Ensign was the appropriate flag for a British merchantman.
The ensign was superseded by the national flag with effect from 1 January 1960, in terms of the Merchant Shipping Act 1951.
Many people, however, shared his view that the bill had been stifled by the pressure of the shipowners, and popular feeling forced the government to pass a bill which in the following year, was amended into the Merchant Shipping Act.

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