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Denouncing and called
Denouncing the name Ben Carter and calling it his " slave name ," Ben Ammi says that in 1966 he had a " vision ," in which the Archangel Gabriel called him to take his people, African Americans, back to the Holy Land of Israel.
Denouncing the mill owners, sympathizing with the toil of textile workers, Ettor called for an even larger walkout.

Denouncing and for
Denouncing a " state scandal " and an " increasing financial black hole for the French social security system ", she " pledges to repeal the AME as soon as she will come to power ".

Denouncing and be
Denouncing the view that the sexual union is an end in itself, the Conference declared: `` We steadfastly uphold what must always be regarded as the governing considerations of Christian marriage.

Denouncing and .
Denouncing Telemann as an " opera musician ", Kuhnau petitioned the city council several times against the younger composer.
Cicero Denouncing Catiline by Cesare Maccari. One of several political conflicts in the Roman Republic during this century
Denouncing her as a whore, he makes her swear on the Bible never to see Surtees again and to lock herself in her room.
* Anti-Copperhead Broadside Denouncing Former Pres.
Soane acquired three works by his friend J. M. W. Turner: St Hugues Denouncing Vegeance on the Shepherd of Cormayer Val D ’ Aoust ( an oil painting ), Kirkstall Abbey ( watercolour ) & Admiral Van Tromp ’ s Barge entering the Texel ( an oil painting ).
Denouncing an " accelerated policy of Islamisation " and a " breach of the constitutional principle of secularism ", she claimed that Quick had been owned by the French state since October 2006 and that the UMP state is the owner of Quick through the Caisse des dépôts et consignations ( Qualium Investissement subsidiary ), which holds 99. 63 % of its capital.
Denouncing a " double standards diplomacy ", she claimed that the Economic Community of West African States ( ECOWAS ) is not legitimate to decide a military intervention in Côte d ' Ivoire since it had not intervened in Niger after the coup d ' état led by Salou Djibo on 18 February 2010.
Denouncing her perceived betrayal, Cobra Commander abandoned his wife and took Billy with him.
Denouncing the Jacobin dictatorship, Jean Varlet wrote in 1794 that " government and revolution are incompatible, unless the people wishes to set its constituted authorities in permanent insurrection against itself.
Denouncing the official results as fraudulent, Mba Abessole declared himself President and appointed RNB First Secretary Pierre-André Kombila as Prime Minister.
Denouncing the project since its outset, some indigenous communities, NGOs, and human rights organizations have objected to the HGDP's goals based on perceived issues of scientific racism, colonialism, biocolonialism ( patenting ), informed consent and the prospect of biological warfare.
Denouncing Deng Xiaoping concerns 800 million people.
" Bruckner agrees that the history of the twentieth century attests to the fanaticism of modernity, but argues that the modern thought that issued from the Enlightenment proved capable of criticizing its own errors, and that " Denouncing the excesses of the Enlightenment in the concepts that it forged means being true to its spirit.
Denouncing the agreement to the Belém press, the journalist has to escape.
Denouncing the secretary asas glorious and as malicious a harlot as any that I know ’, Bonner also accused Mason of treasonous contact with Cardinal Pole and described him as a papist.
Denouncing the idolatry and ritualistic worship prevalent in Hinduism at the time, he worked towards reviving Vedic ideologies.

undue and burden
The Americans with Disabilities Act ( ADA ) and, if the government entities receive Federal funding, the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, generally require that State and local governments provide qualified individuals with disabilities equal access to their programs, services, or activities unless doing so would fundamentally alter the nature of their programs, services, or activities or would impose an undue burden.
* The goods were specially manufactured for the buyer and the seller either 1 ) began manufacturing them, or 2 ) entered into a third party contract for their manufacture, and the manufacturer cannot without undue burden sell the goods to another person in the seller's ordinary course of business: for example, t-shirts with a little league baseball team logo or wall-to-wall carpeting for an odd-sized room.
Lawyers must be held to rather specific ethical codes, e. g. rules of civil procedure, to ensure that their tactics do not cause an undue burden on larger society, e. g. freeing defendants who have admitted that they are not only guilty but intend to offend again.
The plurality also replaced the heightened scrutiny of abortion regulations under Roe, which was standard for fundamental rights in the Court's case law, with a lesser " undue burden " standard previously developed by O ' Connor in her dissent in Akron v. Akron Center for Reproductive Health.
A legal restriction posing an undue burden was defined as one having " the purpose or effect of placing a substantial obstacle in the path of a woman seeking an abortion of a nonviable fetus.
The plurality upheld the State's 24-hour waiting period, informed consent, and parental consent requirements, holding that none constituted an undue burden.
Roe had held this to be " strict scrutiny "-the traditional Supreme Court test for impositions upon fundamental Constitutional rights-whereas Casey created a new standard referring to " undue burden ", specifically to balance the state's and the woman's interests in the case of abortion.
* Morgan v. Commonwealth of Virginia, 328 U. S. 373 ( 1946 )-In a 7-to-1 ruling, Reed applied the undue burden standard to a Virginia law which required separate but equal racial segregation in public transportation.
Reed found that the law created an undue burden because uniformity of law was essential in certain interstate activities, such as transportation.
The Supreme Court struck down spousal consent requirements for married women to obtain abortions, but found no " undue burden "— an alternative to strict scrutiny which tests the allowable limitations on rights protected under the Constitution — from the other statutory requirements.
She then explained that she voted to uphold Missouri's law because she did not feel that it would place an undue burden on the right to abortion.
The district is also piloting the requirement of a culminating project, which is being considered by the state, a move also protested by some parents who consider it an undue burden.
Although cable providers argued that such regulation would impose an undue burden on their flexibility in selecting which services would be most appealing to their customers, the current " must-carry " rules were enacted by the U. S. Congress in 1992 ( via the Cable Television Protection and Competition Act ), and the U. S. Supreme Court upheld the rules in rejecting the arguments of the cable industry and programmers in the majority decision authored by Justice Anthony Kennedy.
Per the Attorney General's office: " Massachusetts law prohibits discrimination against blind persons and requires businesses to allow service animals in their establishments even when there is an existing “ no pet ” policy, as long as the animal is controlled and does not otherwise pose an undue burden.
On the Catholic version of the distinction, the natural provision of life necessities, such as food, air, and water, is an example of ordinary care, although it does not exhaust ordinary care, since easily performed medical procedures ( that do not impose an undue burden on patient and community ) will also be ordinary care.
If done with care, such a reform would not impose an undue burden on mature native speakers.
The subsequent Planned Parenthood v. Casey ( 1992 ) modified the " trimester framework ," permitting the states to regulate abortion in ways not posing an " undue burden " on the right of the mother to an abortion at any point before and after viability ; on account of technological developments between 1973 and 1992, viability itself was legally dissociated from the hard line of 28 weeks, leaving the point at which " undue burdens " were permissible variable depending on the technology of the time and the judgment of the state legislatures.
# Is the standard properly designed to ensure that the desired qualification is met without placing an undue burden on those to whom the standard applies?
The latter concern had its origin in Darden's actions as Governor of Virginia, where he recommended barring students at the College of William and Mary from living in fraternity or sorority houses on the grounds that it was " undemocratic " and placed undue financial burden on parents.
LeRoy Carhart, a Nebraska physician who specialized in late-term abortions, brought suit against Don Stenberg, the Attorney General of Nebraska, seeking declaratory judgment that a state law banning certain forms of abortion was unconstitutional, based on the undue burden test mentioned by a dissenting opinion in Akron v. Akron Center for Reproductive Health and by the Court in Planned Parenthood v. Casey.
Justice Stephen Breyer, in writing the opinion of the Court, cited Planned Parenthood v. Casey and said that any abortion law that imposed an undue burden on a woman's " right to choose " ( abortion ) was unconstitutional.
He said that causing those who procure abortions to " fear prosecution, conviction, and imprisonment " was an undue burden, and therefore declared the law to be against the Constitution.
In his dissent, Justice Scalia recalled his prior dissent in Casey in which he had criticized the undue burden standard as " doubtful in application as it is unprincipled in origin.
" What constitutes an undue burden is a value judgment, argued Scalia ; it should therefore be no surprise that the Court split on whether the Nebraska statute constitutes an undue burden.

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