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Fees and for
Fees were collected for damages, the most common being " greasing " by wax dripped from the candles by which the patrons read.
Fees are usually charged for distribution on compact discs and bootable USB drives, or for services of installing or maintaining the operation of free software.
Fees apply both for entering and docking in the country.
Time Based Charges and Access Fees: In a time-based charging regime, a road user has to pay for a given period of time in which he may use the associated infrastructure.
Fees can range from thousands of dollars a year per person for the most elaborate parades to as little as $ 20 a year for smaller marching clubs.
Fees can be used for such things as transportation improvements, new parks, and expansion of schools.
Fees of six guineas a term were doubled in 1906, except for the children of actors, who paid only half.
Fees for February 17, 2007 until January 1, 2010 are as follows ;
This option is charged for in England in an Anglican church where the fee is set by the Table of Parochial Fees (£ 36 to incumbent and £ 78 to church council ) a total of £ 114 in 2010 with a marker charged as extra.
Most of these conferences, and in particular the elections held at them, are contested by factions including Conservative Future, Education Not for Sale, Labour Students, Liberal Youth, National Campaign Against Fees and Cuts, the Organised Independents, Socialist Students, Socialist Workers ' Student Society, Student RESPECT and Student Broad Left.
Fees to be levied for the performance of the rites.
Fees usually allow for overhead, wages, costs, and markup.
Fees are usually charged for various government services, including license plates and annual motor vehicle registration, as well as driver licenses and professional licensing.
Fees are also charged for various permits, like demolition and building permits, rezoning, and land grading ( which causes silt ); and sometimes for increasing stormwater runoff, destroying native vegetation, and cutting-down healthy trees.
Fees range from under £ 1, 000 per term to £ 7, 000 and above per term for a day pupil, with wide variations depending on the age of the child, the staff / pupil ratio and so on – and up to £ 9, 000 + per term for boarding.
The AWL is active in campaigns such as No Sweat, Education Not for Sale, Feminist Fightback, Workers ' Climate Action and the National Campaign Against Fees and Cuts.
Along with many MPs, in 2009 Lord Deben attracted attention because of his parliamentary expense claims, approved by the Parliamentary Fees Office, in which he claimed for garden maintenance at his constituency home.
Fees are charged to the condo owners for maintenance of the common areas.
Two years after the Fees Office rejected a claim for mortgage interest on Maude's Sussex home, Maude purchased a flat in London, close to another house he already owned.
In April 2004, the needed $ 60, 000 in funding was restored, which allowed for the magazine's continued existence after the Student Services Fees Committee had initially declined to fund it.

Fees and are
Fees are not the same and some states do not require certain craft, such as sailboats with no power, to be registered at all.
`` Fees are about half to a third of what they were 25 years ago ''.
Fees charged by private colleges are approximately twice those of public institutions.
Fees apply, a locked gate key and permit are essential to use this trail with a vehicle.
Reduced Final Value Fees are available to business registered customers.
Fees based on volume of traffic are unpopular because they provide a counterincentive to growth of the exchange.
Fees and fines are also assessed by the local municipality ; however, parking is usually free on weekends and most holidays.
Fees are collected by APEGBC for the Limited Licence.
" Fees themselves are unfair and act as a barrier to education, widening the rich-poor divide which exists in this country.
Fees are required.
Fees for 2011-12 are £ 9, 996 per annum.
Fees, which are partially courseload-sensitive, are up to a maximum of $ 473. 36 for the MSU, plus up to a further $ 574. 94 in other university supplementary fees which are approved by MSU referenda fee schedule.
Fees are charged for job postings and access to search resumes.
Fees are based solely on the " ability to pay.
Fees for doctors, hospitals and other providers are set by negotiations among doctors ' associations, provincial or regional governments, and the national government.
Fees, which are charges for attorney and legal assistant time, are coded with task and activity codes.

Fees and set
The fees were set out in The Commission for Social Care Inspection ( Fees and Frequency of Inspections ) Regulations 2004.
Fees for all health care services are set every two years by negotiations between the health ministry and physicians.
As of April 2011, the University of Worcester has proposed to set its undergraduate Tuition Fees at £ 8, 100 under the new regime announced by the Coalition Government.

Fees and by
An explanatory memorandum ( PDF, 2 pages 23KB ) on the Fees Regulations describe them as setting out " the fees payable in connection with the services and facilities provided by the DTI in respect of a new form of company, the European Public Limited-Liability Company or ' Societas Europaea ' ( SE ).
Fees or tolls usually vary by vehicle type, weight or number of axles.
Fees or tolls were traditionally collected by hand by toll gate workers at toll booths, toll houses, toll plazas, toll stations, toll bars or toll gates.
The first mention of Newington ( or Neweton ) occurs in the Testa de Nevill ( a survey of feudal tenure officially known as the Book of Fees compiled 1198-1242 ) during the reign of Henry III, wherein it is stated that the queen's goldsmith holds of the king one acre of land in Neweton, by the service of rendering a gallon of honey.
* Lawrence A. Cunningham, Private Standards in Public Law ( Article on FASB's Policy of Copyrighting and Selling its Materials Despite Being Funded by Public Company Fees ), Michigan Law Review ( 2005 )
He was an able judge, and he issued some important orders in chancery, probably alluded to by Wood, who ascribes to him a tract on " The Fees of all law Officers ".
Fees were paid by lawyers who used the archives to consult a limited number of documents.
*" Physician Panel Prescribes the Fees Paid by Medicare ," The Wall Street Journal, October 26, 2010
In 1896 appeared the Red Book of the Exchequer ( Rolls series ), which, with the Book of Fees ( Public Record Office ) and the Pipe Rolls ( published by the Record Commission and the Pipe Roll Society ), provides the chief record authority on the subject ; but the editor misdated many of the scutages, and JH Round in his Studies on the Red Book of the Exchequer ( privately issued ) and his Commune of London and other Studies ( 1899 ) severely criticized his conclusions.
These claims were submitted and approved by the Fees Office despite the fact that it was in excess of the so-called ' John Lewis List ' which was not issued to MPs to guide them in their expense claims.
The claim was rejected by the Fees Office.
Hamilton responded in a statement released on his website that this was " a genuine mistake " and that the money was paid back when the error was discovered by the House of Commons Fees Office.
* Red Book, nickname for the Statement of Fees and Allowances, adopted by the UK General medical services in 1990 and abolished in 2004
In Reed's case it was because of an accounting error by the Fees office and the amount was outstanding at publication on 4 February 2010.
Fees vary depending on the ITF circuit chosen by the player.

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