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clause and requiring
This license is a 2-clause BSD license with an additional copyleft clause similar to the GNU GPL version 2's Section 3, requiring source code of an application using Berkeley DB to be made available for a nominal fee.
The original BSD license also includes a clause requiring all advertising of the software to display a notice crediting its authors.
The clause requiring book deposits, however, was not seen as a success.
Following the Civil War, the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments changed this arrangement by ( respectively ) abolishing slavery, and superseding the three-fifths clause by requiring that a state's population for apportionment purposes was to be determined by " counting the whole number of Persons " in the state, " excluding Indians not taxed.
Application of Complete Auto Transit to State taxation remains a highly technical and specialized venture, requiring the application of commerce clause principles to an understanding of specialized tax law.
The Treaty of Saint-Germain contained a clause requiring Austria to accept this train: formerly, Austria allowed international services to pass through Austrian territory ( which included Trieste at the time ) only if they ran via Vienna.
In a display of solidarity, United Artist heads Arthur B. Krim and Robert S. Benjamin amended their contract and deleted the clause requiring Preminger to deliver a film that would be granted a Production Code seal of approval.
In power, they completed the abolition of feudalism that had been formally decided 4 August 1789, but had been held in check by a clause requiring compensation for the abrogation of the feudal privileges.
According to the United States Constitution ( Article I, Section 7, clause 1 ), all bills relating to revenue, generally tax bills, must originate in the House of Representatives, consistent with the Westminster system requiring all money bills to originate in the lower house which is why the appropriations bills that are enacted begin with " H. R.
He won such an agreement in 1926, but it was soon scuttled by the federal addition of a clause requiring Alberta to continue supporting separate Roman Catholic schools.
The Edmonton, Dunvegan and British Columbia Railway was taken over by the Canadian Pacific Railway, with a clause in the agreement requiring the provincial government to spend $ 1 million to improve the route, and the Alberta and Great Waterways was taken over by Stewart's government directly ( J. D. McArthur, the line's previous owner, retained an option to repurchase it, but it was never exercised ).
However, many federal laws ( e. g. those equalizing pay, employment, education, employment opportunities, credit, ending pregnancy discrimination, and requiring NASA, the Military Academies, and other organizations to admit women ), state laws ( i. e. those ending spousal abuse and marital rape ), Supreme Court rulings ( i. e. ruling the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment applied to women ), and state ERAs established women's equal status under the law, and social custom and consciousness began to change, accepting women's equality.
Subsequently the Serbs officially protested, pointing out that although they had sent their troops to Adrianople to win for Bulgaria territory the acquisition of which had never been foreseen by their mutual treaty, the Bulgarians had never fulfilled the clause of the treaty requiring Bulgaria to send 100, 000 men to help the Serbians in their Vardar front.
" What exactly qualifies as comparable circumstances of captivity and treatment was never defined in Title 10, although the 38 USC § 101 ( 32 ) Veterans Affairs POW Status statute that served as the source of the ' comparability clause ' for the 1989 amendment to Title 10 contains similar language requiring " circumstances which the Secretary finds to have been comparable to the circumstances under which persons have generally been forcibly detained or interned by enemy governments during periods of war.
As Chase was a much larger bank, it was first intended that Chase acquire the " Bank of Manhattan ", as it was nicknamed, but it transpired that Burr's original charter for the Manhattan Company had not only included the clause allowing it to start a bank with surplus funds, but another requiring unanimous consent of shareholders for the bank to be taken-over.
The early monthly numbers were not as successful as Dickens ' previous work and only sold about twenty thousand copies each ( compared to forty to fifty thousand for the monthly numbers of the Pickwick Papers and Nicholas Nickleby and sixty to seventy thousand for the weekly issues of Barnaby Rudge and The Old Curiosity Shop ) causing a break between Dickens and his publishers Chapman and Hall when they invoked a penalty clause in his contract requiring him to pay back money they had lent him to cover their costs.
" in reference to the clause of the one-page franchise agreement requiring rent in advance.
Information hiding is achieved by requiring both export keywords on those rules and classes that are to be seen outside a package and that the source package names be included in the with clause of the consumer package.
The bill included a " reverse-onus " clause requiring the accused to demonstrate why they should not be held in custody.
Named in honor of Félix Varela, a Catholic priest who had participated in Cuba's independence struggle with Spain, the Project took advantage of a clause in the Cuban Constitution requiring a national referendum to be held if 11, 000 signatures are gathered.
This clause immediately follows one requiring all federal and state officers to take an oath or affirmation of support to the Constitution, indicating that the requirement of such a statement does not imply any requirement by those so sworn to accept a particular religion or a particular doctrine.

clause and study
A clause in the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 (" McCain-Feingold ") required the nonpartisan General Accounting Office to conduct a study of clean elections programs in Arizona and Maine.
The other aspect of substantive isolation is causal isolation: Those factors frozen under a ceteris paribus clause should not significantly be affected by the processes under study.
* Topic – focus articulation, a field of study concerned with marking old and new information in a clause
Initially, it appeared that the amendment would pass, but it was defeated on the Senate floor on May 15, 1934 by a vote of 42-23, mostly because the clause added to the communications bill that called for the FCC to study the viability of the Wagner-Hatfield proposal and report to Congress the following year.

clause and another
As a transitional clause, the Latvian law allows dual citizenship for those who were forced to leave Latvia during the Soviet or Nazi occupation and adopted another citizenship while away from Latvia.
To forestall French incursion into what they had come to consider as their own sphere, the British government renewed efforts to finalise a boundary agreement with France and on 1 January 1890 instructed Governor Hay in Sierra Leone to get from chiefs in the boundary area friendship treaties containing a clause forbidding them to treat with another European power without British consent.
Gibbons v. Ogden ( 1824 ) was another influential case involving the supremacy clause.
* anadiplosis: Repetition of a word at the end of a clause at the beginning of another
" The issue stemmed from the question of whether a restaurant that sold burritos could move into a shopping centre where another restaurant had a no-compete clause in its lease prohibiting other " sandwich " shops.
Surprised to find that a contractual clause forbade them from recording with another label, the band bought out their contract, touring in a beat up van they called, " The Blue Goose " working for more than a year to raise the funds to buy out their contract.
Application of the dormant commerce clause to state taxation is another manifestation of the Court's holdings that the Commerce Clause prevents a State from retreating into economic isolation or jeopardizing the welfare of the Nation as a whole, as it would do if it were free to place burdens on the flow of commerce across its borders that commerce wholly within those borders would not bear.
During this turmoil, the Akali Dal began another agitation in February 1984 protesting against clause ( 2 )( b ) of Article 25 of the Indian constitution, which ambiguously states " the reference to Hindus shall be construed as including a reference to persons professing the Sikh, Jaina or Buddhist religion ", though it also implicitly recognizes Sikhism as a separate religion with the words " the wearing and carrying of kirpans shall be deemed to be included in the profession of the Sikh religion.
The trial court found that the special program operated as a racial quota, because minority applicants in that program were rated only against one another, and 16 places in the class were reserved for the clause.
On 9 May 2007, Newcastle chairman Freddy Shepherd reacted angrily to reports that Owen could move on to another club at the end of the 2006 – 07 season, due to a release clause in his contract.
" However, when the subject is missing or the participle attaches itself to another object in a sentence, the clause is seemingly " hanging " on nothing or on an entirely inappropriate noun.
* The Confederate Constitution adds another clause that states slavery shall be recognized in all new states that join the Confederate States of America.
Where a state entity moves to accommodate the right to individual religious expression under the latter clause, opponents of that " expression " may cite such accommodation as state " promotion " of one religious activity over another.
The first clause in the treaty provides for " neutrality in the event of an armed conflict between either of the parties with a third power ", while in another clause each party agrees " not to permit in its territory the activities of elements having for their object hostile action against the other party to the treaty ".
BC MP Randy White indicated his willingness near the end of the campaign to use the notwithstanding clause of the Canadian Constitution to override the Charter of Rights on the issue of same-sex marriage, and Cheryl Gallant, another Ontario MP, compared abortion to terrorism.
The West Cornwall Railway Act included a clause that it would be converted to broad gauge once it had been connected to another broad gauge line, but the company could not raise the funds to do so.
The clause forbade a player from negotiations with another team without the permission of the team holding that player's rights even after the contract's term was completed.
A more detailed definition of the adjunct emphasizes its attribute as a modifying form, word, or phrase that depends on another form, word, or phrase, being an element of clause structure with adverbial function.
Where the collective agreement ’ s words are clear, a " last in first out " rule was held to potentially qualify, but another clause purporting to censure compulsory redundancies was held to sound like it was binding ‘ in honour ’ only.
The above passage by Marshall highlights two ways in which the ceteris paribus clause may be used: The one is hypothetical, in the sense that some factor is assumed fixed in order to analyse the influence of another factor in isolation.
Some philosophers, in particular, worry that the arguments against ceteris paribus analyses depend on a tacit reductionism about analysis: The assumption seems to be that, in order to give a conceptual analysis of a concept C, you must be able to explain C entirely in terms that have nothing to do with C. For these philosophers, a ceteris paribus clause may be indicative of virtuous circularity in an analysis rather than vicious circularity: That is, that we cannot ultimately explain ( say ) causation in terms that do not tacitly or explicitly have causal implications ; but rather than indicating the need for further analysis, they argue, the ineliminable dependence on ceteris paribus clauses or further causal talk may just show that causality cannot be explained in non-causal terms, but rather that terms like " natural law " and " cause " and " accident " can be explained only in terms of one another, by elucidating the connections between them.

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