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At and conferences
He eliminates Woolton by a prolonged scheme: At the party conferences, Urquhart pressures O ' Neill into persuading his personal assistant and lover, Penny Guy, to have sex with Woolton in his suite, with the encounter recorded through a bugged ministerial red box.
At subsequent premiers ’ conferences he opposed the ' centralising ' tendencies of Canberra and became a strong advocate of the rights of the states.
At least two modern conferences within Hellenic philosophy fields of study have been held in order to address what Plotinus stated in his tract Against the Gnostics and who he was addressing it to, in order to separate and clarify the events and persons involved in the origin of the term " Gnostic ".
* At the Roses Theatre in Tewkesbury, the Eric Morecambe Room is used by local and national companies for conferences and meetings.
At the same time, Irving started to appear more frequently at the annual conferences hosted by the IHR.
At various Iraq reconstruction conferences, the Baghdad Museum Project gave presentations to the reconstruction community advocating preservation of Iraq's cultural heritage in rebuilding projects.
At the latter of these two conferences, when Doellinger was seventy-six years of age, he delivered a series of marvellous addresses in German and English, in which he discussed the state of theology on the continent, the reunion question, and the religious condition of the various countries of Europe in which the Roman Catholic Church held sway.
At the same time he continued to express elements of his longstanding germanophobia by arguing in La Seule France that Frenchmen must not be drawn to the German model and by hosting anti-German conferences and he opposed both the " dissidents " in London and the collaborators in Paris and Vichy ( such as Lucien Rebatet, Robert Brasillach, Pierre Laval, or Marcel Déat ).
At a senior level as of 2011, it is played by fifteen teams divided into two regional conferences, North ( Scotland ), and South ( England & Wales ) with the top teams qualifying for playoffs at the end of the season.
At the time, the traditional four " major " bowl games — the Cotton, Orange, Sugar and Rose — had contracts with the major conferences whose champions were guaranteed selections.
At full-building use, the Complex can host conferences, conventions and trade shows with up to 1200 delegates / exhibitors.
At first he ordered story conferences at his home, typically with start times of eleven p. m., to both Hecht's and Hitchcock's profound annoyance.
At foreign conferences Irish delegates stated their cause for the ending of partition.
At the outset of the administration, Tumulty convinced Wilson, who was known for his distaste of the press, to hold news conferences on a regularized schedule, sometimes as much as twice every week.
At his direction his theologians were prominent in the various conferences where representative Roman Catholics and Protestants assembled to attempt to find a working basis for reunion.
At the core of the service were many thousands of " conferences "-groups established by users to discuss particular topics, conceptually not unlike newsgroups but limited to CIX subscribers ( who sometimes describe themselves as ' Cixen ').
At the Charlottetown Conference and the two later conferences discussing the confederation, Johnson vigorously asserted the fact that the provincial governments should not hold any power above the course of the county or zone.
At the age of sixteen, Eleanor became her father's secretary and accompanied him around the world to socialist conferences.
At the north end of the college is the Kresge Town Hall, which has seen many groundbreaking performances, including the first Talking Heads concert on the west coast, and the legendary acid conferences which included appearances by the likes of Allen Ginsberg and Owlsley.
At the 2010 season's end, six teams from the Western Conference qualified for the playoffs, whereas only two clubs from the East qualified, making it the largest disparity between the two conferences in league history.
At both the 2007 BikeWalk California conference and at other bicycling conferences, Oberstar advocated converting the U. S .' s transportation system " from a hydrocarbon-based system to a carbohydrate-based system.
At their party conferences each year, they play to the gallery by projecting themselves as the communal heroes.
At AASG we build awareness through our publications, school curricula, conferences, and Speakers ’ Bureau — consisting mainly of survivors of slavery.
At branch meetings and national conferences, all members have full democratic rights of discussion, debate, and voting rights.

At and compelled
At the battles of Thermopylae and Magnesia, Antiochus's forces were resoundingly defeated and he was compelled to make peace and sign the Treaty of Apamea in ( 188 BC ), the main clause of which saw the Seleucids agree to pay a large indemnity, retreat from Anatolia and to never again attempt to expand Seleucid territory west of the Taurus Mountains.
At the same time, however, and owing to both the presence of another prominent sociologist at the Institute, Karl Mannheim, as well as the methodological problem posed by treating objects-like " musical material "-as ciphers of social contradictions, Adorno was compelled to abandon any notion of " value-free " sociology in favor of a form of ideology critique which held on to an idea of truth.
At the same time Gediminas privately informed the papal legates at Riga through his ambassadors that his difficult position compelled him to postpone his steadfast resolve of being baptized, and the legates showed their confidence in him by forbidding the neighboring states to war against Lithuania for the next four years, besides ratifying the treaty made between Gediminas and the archbishop of Riga.
At the apparently successful conclusion of the Council of Lyon, a Union of Churches was declared, and Charles and Philip of Courtenay were compelled to extend a truce with Michael.
At Meissen, Brandenburg, and Merseburg he succeeded in giving the papal measure due official publicity, but at Leipzig he was the object of the ridicule of the student body and was compelled to flee by night to Freiberg, where he was again prevented
At each step, the Tortoise argues that even though he accepts all the premises that have been written down, there is some further premise ( that if all of ( 1 )–( n ) are true, then ( Z ) must be true ) that it still needs to accept before it is compelled to accept that ( Z ) is true.
At issue was whether the Miranda warnings were actually compelled by the U. S. Constitution, or were rather merely measures enacted as a matter of judicial policy.
At length, having failed in an attempt to organize a revolution at Belleville on 7 February 1870, was compelled to flee from France.
At barely twenty-one years of age, Lavater greatly distinguished himself by denouncing, in conjunction with his friend Henry Fuseli the painter, an iniquitous magistrate, who was compelled to make restitution of his ill-gotten gains.
At his very first Riksdag, held at Norrköping in March 1800, the nobility were compelled, at last, to ratify Gustav III's detested Act of Union and Security, which hitherto they had steadily refused to do.
At the actual trial, a defendant can be compelled to make a statement.
At first Netanyahu refused, but as the incident grew in political significance, American President Bill Clinton intervened and compelled Netanyahu to turn over the antidote.
" At the time, statements such as this were sufficiently controversial that Western publishers felt compelled to include disclaimers in versions of his books that were translated for distribution to English-speaking countries.
At first major-general commanding the West Prussian brigade, afterwards inspector-general of light infantry, he was finally appointed second in command to General Grawert, the leader of the auxiliary corps which Prussia was compelled to send in support of Napoleon's invasion of Russia.
At the Diet of Regensburg ( 1630 ) Ferdinand was compelled to assent to this demand, but the sequel was disastrous both for Bavaria and its ruler.
At the Battle of Sedan, the two German armies surrounded the French army, which on September 1 was attacked and compelled to surrender.
At Bethlehem, 7 March 1799, the United States marshal was compelled by this party to release 30 prisoners who had been arrested for refusing to obey the law.
At Vagnas, on February 10, 1703, he routed the royal troops, but, defeated in his turn, he was compelled to find safety in flight.
At Harvard, his ardent patriotism led him to adopt measures that were obnoxious to the Tory students, and although he endeavored to administer the government of the college with justice, his resignation was virtually compelled in 1780.
At a general level, self-psychology is compelled to investigate the question of how the personal self relates to the social environment.
At the time, most of Ragibagh's army were involved on the Great Wall front, and the Shangdu court was compelled to surrender on the very next day.
At the Battle of Loos, on 25 September 1915 near Hulluch, France, during very heavy fighting, when the front line was compelled to retire in order to reorganise, Private Peachment saw his company commander lying wounded and crawled to help him.
At the Crag Picquet the regiment saw fierce fighting on 30 October, to such an extent that the regiment was compelled to withdraw from the hill ; it was retaken shortly afterwards and two Victoria Crosses ( VC ) were later awarded.
At trial, Mrs. Crawford could not be compelled to testify by the state, since under Washington's spousal privilege law, a spouse cannot testify in court without the defendant spouse's consent ( except when a spouse is a complainant ).

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