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onerous and work
Our own Jewish educational system must serve to prepare the youth to be upright Jews, secure in their faith, who will draw the strength to face the onerous demands which life will make on them from conscious solidarity with the Jewish community, from work for the Jewish present and faith in the Jewish future.
However, tanned skin became increasingly popular after Coco Chanel showed off a tan after spending too much time in the sun on holiday – it suggested a life of leisure, without the onerous need to work.
" Controversy and attention surrounding " Regional Airline " pilot qualifications, experience and comparatively onerous work and rest rules increased after the crash of Colgan 3407 in 2009.
Michael Wines of the New York Times wrote that although Bo was possessed of “ prodigious charisma and deep intelligence ,” these qualities were offset by a “ studied indifference to the wrecked lives that littered his path to power … Mr. Bo ’ s ruthlessness stood out, even in a system where the absence of formal rules ensures that only the strongest advance .” Bo placed onerous demands on government officials in the city, requiring them to be available to work all day and all night, seven days a week.
The work is low-paid and very onerous.
He received much recognition for his work as he " discharged his responsible and onerous duties in a manner which drew the admiration and approbation of the community.
Despite the increases in height, the dam suffered numerous breaches ( recorded major incidents occurred in 449, 450, 542 and 548 ) and the maintenance work became increasingly onerous ; the last recorded repairs took place in 557.
* Easy to manage with the same tools used for other datacenter based HW and SW ( otherwise it becomes onerous extra work )

onerous and following
Failure to create an independent parliament, following the rather onerous conditions of the 1979 devolution referendum, led a campaign group to set up adjacent to the Royal High School at the foot of the access road to Calton Hill.
In his first managerial role at Coventry City he had the onerous task of following Jimmy Hill who had taken the club into the First Division for the first time in their history.

onerous and at
The book portrays a society in which suffrage is earned by demonstrated willingness to place society's interests before one's own, at least for a short time and often under onerous circumstances, in government service ; in the case of the protagonist, this was military service.
Countries are still expected to maintain their SDR holdings at a certain level, but penalties for holding fewer than the allocated amount are now less onerous.
" Some people argue that this can also be taken as meaning not to kill at all, animals nor humans, or at least " that one shall not kill unnecessarily ," in the same manner that onerous restrictions on slavery in the Bible have been interpreted by modern theologians as to suggest banning the practice.
This was a price most were unwilling to pay, as at the time C ++ was more widely used and the effort to shift codebases to an entirely new language and paradigm was considered too onerous.
The Synod of Hippo of 393 ordered a general meeting yearly, but this was found too onerous for the bishops, and in the Synod of Carthage ( 407 ) it was decided to hold a general synod only when necessary for the needs of all Africa, and it was to be held at a place most convenient for the purpose.
The requirement often was not greatly onerous, contrary to popular belief and was often only seasonal, for example the duty to help at harvest-time.
By this point, Fogerty was not only at direct odds with his bandmates, but he had also come to see the group's relationship with Fantasy Records as onerous, feeling that label owner Saul Zaentz had reneged on his promise to give the band a better contract.
It is now recognized and accepted by an increasing number of regulators that the microbiological risks of greywater reuse at the single dwelling level where inhabitants already had intimate knowledge of that greywater are in reality an insignificant risk, when properly managed without the need for complex, expensive and onerous red tape approval processes.
On these occasions, as at the Jubilee itself, special facilities are usually accorded for absolution from reserved cases, though on the other hand, the great indulgence is only to be gained by the performance of conditions much more onerous than those required for an ordinary plenary indulgence.
In another instance, Harold Ballard, owner of the Toronto Maple Leafs, deliberately made the Toronto Toros ' lease terms at Maple Leaf Gardens as onerous as possible after they moved from Ottawa.
From 1835 the freedom " without the intervention of a Livery Company " has been bestowed by a general resolution of Common Council, by ' redemption ' ( purchase ), at one time for an onerous sum, but now for a donation to the Freemen's School.
The passage of a law that required the peasants to defend the châteaux that were emblems of their oppression was the immediate cause of the spontaneous uprising ; it was particularly onerous as many common people already blamed the nobility's corruption for the defeat at Poitiers.
Although their demands for pay had been the cause for Al-Bardisi's onerous levies that led to the public disturbances, Muhammad Ali Pasha's proclamation and concessions resulted in the Albanian forces gaining in popularity amongst the citizens, at the expense of the Mamelukes.
Its onerous responsibility is to provide goods and liquors at a rate cheaper than the prevailing market rates to the troops.
Clarke himself enjoyed his time at the district level, finding his duties not too onerous and the variety of cases before him stimulating.
Also, O ' Malley imposed fairly onerous lease conditions on the Angels ; for example, he charged them for 50 % of all stadium supplies, even though the Angels at the time drew at best half of the Dodgers ' attendance.
This circumstance, it is said, together with the onerous tax imposed by King George II on all gamesters, so incensed him that he at once resolved to emigrate to the American colonies, where he could be at liberty to enjoy the pleasures of the forest unrestrained by stringent laws or the caprice of titled nobility.
During the partition riots across the country, Swayamsevaks took up the onerous task of arranging for the safe migration of thousands of Hindus at great risk.
Ill health forced him to take a less onerous job, so he became Director of Sixth Form Studies at Longsands School, later Longsands Community College, St. Neots, 1976 – 88.
Section 13 originally set the state's usury limit at 10 %; it was amended in the early 1980s to 5 % above the Federal Reserve Discount Rate on 90-day commercial paper ( see the latest rates ), but falling interest rates and poorly-worded provisions made the amended version even more onerous than the original.

onerous and broke
When the starving and broke Capp first sold Li ' l Abner in 1934, he gladly accepted the syndicate's standard onerous contract.

onerous and down
The growth of Internet radio from a small experimenter's toy in the mid-1990s to a huge phenomenon allowing both small do-it-yourselfers and large commercial stations to make their offerings available worldwide was seen as a threat to over-the-air music broadcasting, and was nearly shut down by onerous licensing demands made by the recording industry.

onerous and constitution
This need not, however, wholly supersede a narrower sense of ' constitution ', which identifies those relatively ' high ' legal norms that can be changed only through a specially onerous process such as a large parliamentary majority or a popular referendum.

onerous and died
In 1535, when Francesco II Sforza ( the last Duke of Milan ) died, there started for Lombardy and for the lands of the Lake of Lario two centuries of onerous Spanish rule ( the period about which the novel The Betrothed was written by Alessandro Manzoni ).

onerous and on
Bishop Hans Brask's original justifications for the canal's construction were the onerous Sound Dues imposed by Denmark – Norway on all vessels passing through the narrow Øresund channel between Sweden and Denmark and the trouble with the Hanseatic League.
Once designated, there are onerous limitations on the use of this formally designated masjid, and it may not be used for any purpose other than worship ; restrictions that do not necessarily apply to other areas of the mosque complex ( although such uses may be restricted by the conditions of the waqf that owns the mosque ).
Ralph A. Rossum, writing in the San Diego Law Review, notes that the debate over the amendment's adoption lacked " any serious or systematic considerations of its potential impact on federalism ... The popular press, the party platforms, the state memorials, the House and Senate debates, and the state legislative debates during ratification focused almost exclusively on expanding democracy, eliminating political corruption, defeating elitism and freeing the states from what they had come to regard as an onerous and difficult responsibility.
In legal reforms, King Edward I of England started the use of drawing and quartering as punishment for traitors, King Philip IV of France created the gabelle, an onerous tax on salt, and the Scots Parliament passed laws allowing women to propose marriage to men, but only in leap years.
Ulrich's connection with the Schmalkaldic League led to another expulsion, but in 1547 Charles V re-instated him, albeit on somewhat onerous terms.
From then on, PRTC's telecommunications monopoly would no longer be able to properly compete in the environment and the losses to the government would have been onerous.
In his book on the insurrection, Findley — a bitter political foe of Hamilton — maintained that the treasury secretary had deliberately provoked the uprising by issuing the subpoenas just before the law was made less onerous.
The contract, however, did not keep Roxborough and Black from attempting to cash in as Louis ' managers ; when Louis turned 21 on May 13, 1935, Roxborough and Black each signed Louis to an onerous long-term contract that collectively dedicated half of Louis ' future income to the pair.
In emergency situations when conventional treatment systems have been compromised, water borne pathogens may be killed or inactivated by boiling but this requires abundant sources of fuel, and can be very onerous on consumers, especially where it is difficult to store boiled water in sterile conditions and is not a reliable way to kill some encysted parasites such as Cryptosporidium or the bacterium Clostridium.
Initially a supporter of democracy, Pétion found the constraints imposed on him by the senate onerous and suspended the legislature in 1818.
If the slope of the lot makes it onerous to comply with the height limit -- typically due to the way the municipality's code requires height to be measured -- then a variance could be requested for a structure of increased height because of the special conditions on the lot.
Areas with rent-controlled housing are blamed for difficulty of finding vacant housing and the resulting power imbalance between landlords and tenants as tenants may " game the system " to impose onerous conditions on the landlord, forcing long cycles of judicial action, leading to considerable economic hardship for the landlord.
Lord Cranborne, who had received the title Baron Gascoyne-Cecil, of Essendon in the County of Rutland, remained active on the backbenches, until the House adopted new rules for declaration of financial interests which he believed were too onerous.
It also wrote, " About a year ago, the Food Network began aggressively trying to change that with new deals that were ' way more onerous ' from the stars ' point of view, said a person who has been affected by the changing strategy, by insisting on a stake in book deals and licensing ventures, and control over outside activities.
This misconception is partly reinforced by the fact that the existing rules for registration make it an onerous process, dependent on the consent of landlords, which effectively prevents tenants of flats from registering.
However, no one that follows this debate in any serious manner was surprised to find out that after years of no action on climate change, meeting the onerous targets negotiated under the Liberals was not a reality.
Wilson goes on to agree with the other Justices that section 251 ( prohibiting the performance of an abortion except under certain circumstances ) is procedurally unfair, adding that the violation of section 7 also has the effect of violating section 2 ( a ) of the Charter ( freedom of conscience ) in that the requirements for a woman to be permitted to obtain an abortion legally ( or for a doctor to legally perform one ) were in many cases so onerous or effectively impossible that they were " resulting in a failure to comply with the principles of fundamental justice.
The Woodrow Wilson Bridge – where eight lanes were squeezed into six – was particularly onerous, with miles-long backups daily during commuter rush hours and on heavily traveled weekends.

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