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re-instituted and reversed
( previously associated with the Newcastle division and latterly with Newcastle University ), it adopted a design of hood which was essentially the old hood reversed ( see above )-though for some reason this logic was not followed with the re-instituted LL. M.

re-instituted and reforms
* 1877 — The district was re-instituted by Meiji era land reforms.

re-instituted and made
Appius Claudius is said to have made an unjust decision which would have forced a young woman named Verginia into prostitution or as Appius ' personal slave, prompting her father to kill her, and this travesty caused an uprising against the Decemvirate ; the decemviri resigned their offices in 449 BC, and the ordinary magistrates ( magistratus ordinarii ) were re-instituted.

re-instituted and by
In 1971, the office of Lieutenant Governor of Maryland, which had existed for only a few years in the 1860s, was re-instituted by an amendment to the Maryland Constitution.
In April 2005, the editors of The Atlantic decided to cease publishing fiction in regular issues in favor of a newsstand-only annual fiction issue edited by longtime staffer C. Michael Curtis, but have since re-instituted the practice.
While noting the success of protectionism, Chang has attempted to argue that it would be unfair if the developed countries now re-instituted protectionism by stating that those countries that used protectionist policies during their growth would be trying to " kick away the ladder " from developing countries.
The policy was enacted soon after Republican President Ronald Reagan took office in 1984, rescinded by Democratic President Bill Clinton in January 1993, re-instituted in January 2001 as Republican President George W. Bush took office, and rescinded January 23, 2009, 2 days after Democratic President Barack Obama took office.
In 1827 it was re-instituted as a university by Emperor Francis I, thus gaining the name Karl-Franzens-Universität, meaning Charles Francis University.
After Napoleon's fall and the annexation of Lombardy to Austria, the order was re-instituted by the Austrian Emperor Francis I on January 1, 1816.
There is, in addition, a tradition that the order was instituted, or re-instituted, on the battlefield by Robert the Bruce at Bannockburn.
However, in 1833, Charles Albert of Sardinia, recognizing that the Military Order was too exclusive in that it could only be awarded to persons of high rank, re-instituted the medals for valor ( gold and silver ) as awards for noble acts performed by soldiers in both war and peace.
The plan was about to be approved by the powers convened at Geertruidenberg when Cosimo abruptly added that if himself and his two sons predeceased his daughter, the Electress Palatine, she should succeed and the republic be re-instituted following her death.
The rank of flight officer was re-instituted by the United States Air Force's civilian auxiliary, the Civil Air Patrol ( CAP ), in the mid-1980s, replacing the former ranks of warrant officer and chief warrant officer, which had been discontinued in the 1970s by the Air Force.
Under heavy influence from Philip IV of France, Pope Clement V had the order annihilated throughout France and most of Europe on charges of heresy, but King Denis of Portugal, who found that the Order's assets should for their nature stay in any given Order instead of being taken by the King, re-instituted the Templars of Tomar as the Order of Christ, largely for their aid during the Reconquista and in the reconstruction of Portugal after the wars.
Quisling was consequently re-instituted as head of state on February 20, 1942, although Terboven retained the sole means to use violence as a political tool, which he did on several occasions ( e. g. by imposing martial law in Trondheim and ordering the destruction of the village of Telavåg ).
While skijoriing in Whitefish began in the 1960's, the " modern era " of skijoring was re-instituted in 2003 by long-time locals Scott Ping and Dale Duff.

re-instituted and ;
Amid this tumult, the college's general education program ( including then-vanguard introductory surveys of African and Asian cultures ) was eliminated in 1971 ; a distribution requirement was re-instituted in 1993.

re-instituted and for
The rules vary when normal timing procedures take effect after a lead is diminished ( such as due to the trailing team's rally ); for instance, in Iowa, normal timing procedures are enforced when the lead is lowered to 25 points, but re-instituted once the lead grows back to 35 or more points.
The Glasgow University Dialectic Society was the original debating society for students at the University, thought to have originated from some time around the University's foundation in 1451 but re-instituted in 1861.
Warith Deen Mohammed re-instituted Saviours ' Day for his community on Feb 26, 2000, after joining the Nation of Islam's Saviours ' Day that year.

re-instituted and which
A re-instituted ceasefire later followed as part of the negotiations strategy, which saw teams from the British and Irish governments, the Ulster Unionist Party, the SDLP, Sinn Féin and representatives of loyalist paramilitary organizations, under the chairmanship of former United States Senator George Mitchell, produced the Belfast Agreement ( also called the Good Friday Agreement as it was signed on Good Friday, 1998 ).
From 2005 to 2008, with the expansion of developmental rosters, the creation of reserve teams, and contractual limits on the length of the MLS Superdraft included in the MLS Players Union Contract, MLS re-instituted the Supplemental draft, which was held after the SuperDraft those years.
Marriage was a Sunnah ( custom ) of earlier prophets which the Islamic Prophet Muhammad re-instituted and passed on to his ummah or community.
The university sponsors 19 varsity athletic teams which compete in the Mid-South Conference of the NAIA, with the women's swimming team being re-instituted in the fall of 2007.

re-instituted and is
The Glasgow University Dialectic Society, re-instituted in 1861, is a student society at the University of Glasgow, Scotland, committed to the promotion of debating, logic, ethics and literary discussion at the University.

re-instituted and .
He re-instituted old observances and archaic language.
Later still, the Prophet Samuel re-instituted the line of kings in Saul, under the inspiration of God.
The ordinary magistrates ( magistratus ordinarii ) are re-instituted.
The League was re-instituted in 1997.
Each of them re-instituted Katipunan thoughts into another two new converts.
It may be noted that when, in the late 1990s, Durham University re-instituted the degree of LL. B.
In 1999, the New Zealand Cross was re-instituted.
The Government has also re-instituted free university education.
To appease the Baganda he re-instituted the Kabaka and other royal palaces, promoted economic liberalisation and established himself as more of a civilian politician than a guerrilla leader.
The team disbanded in the 1920s but was re-instituted in 1951.

pagan and worship
The Dominicans and Franciscans argued that ancestral worship was a form of pagan idolatry that was contradictory to the tenets of Christianity.
" Clay Witt, a minister in the Metropolitan Community Church, explains how theologians and commentators like John Shelby Spong, George Edwards and Michael England interpret injunctions against certain sexual acts as being originally intended as a means of distinguishing religious worship between Abrahamic and the surrounding pagan faiths, within which homosexual acts featured as part of idolatrous religious practices: " England argues that these prohibitions should be seen as being directed against sexual practices of fertility cult worship.
Members of the congregation at Colosse had incorporated pagan elements into their practice, including worship of elemental spirits.
As the historian Owen Davies noted, " while the Church was ultimately successful in defeating pagan worship it never managed to demarcate clearly and maintain a line of practice between religious devotion and magic ," and the use of such books on magic continued.
But some see the root in its alternative sense of " sacrifice ," as if in worship, and see the word as meaning a combination for religious purposes, either Christian or pagan.
According to Thietmar of Merseburg, Géza continued to worship pagan gods ; a chronicle claims that when he was questioned about this he stated he is rich enough to sacrifice to both the old gods and the new one.
100 ), where, according to Murphy, as a result of the Jewish worship of one God, " pagan mythology fell into contempt.
Some time in the 5th century CE, the Kaaba was a place of worship for the deities of Arabia's pagan tribes.
The native pagan imagery was destroyed by Muhammad and his followers and the location Islamized and rededicated to the worship of God.
It was the first instance at Rome of the transformation of a pagan temple into a place of Christian worship.
While Sunday services in most congregations tend to be spiritual in nature ( as different from theological ), it is not unusual for a part of a church's membership to attend pagan, Buddhist, or other spiritual study or worship groups as an alternative means of worship.
An early use of the Old Russian word is in the anti-pagan treatise " Word of Saint Grigoriy ", dated variously to the 11th – 13th centuries, where pagan worship of upyri is reported.
Robert Chambers, in his 1832 work, Book of Days notes that " two popular observances belonging to Christmas are more especially derived from the worship of our pagan ancestors — the hanging up of the mistletoe and the burning of the Yule log.
* 378 – 395: Theodosius I, Roman emperor, bans pagan worship, Christianity is made the official religion of the Empire.
Perhaps almost as remarkable as the discovery of the house-church is the possibility that pagan worship may have continued in the cult room below.
It burned until 391, when the Emperor Theodosius I forbade public pagan worship.
* The Constitution of Medina ( 622 AD ; Arabia ) instituted a number of rights and responsibilities for the Muslim, Jewish and pagan communities of Medina, establishing freedom of worship for non-Muslims in return for extra taxes ( the jizya ), the security of women, a system for granting protection of individuals, and a judicial system.
Widukind then renounced his worship of pagan idols.
In 135 CE, Hadrian is said to have had the Christian site above the Grotto converted into a worship place for Adonis, the Greek pagan god of beauty and desire.
Although the god does not appear within the story, his energy certainly invokes the younger folk of the village to revel in the summer twilight, and the vicar of the village is the only person worried about the revival of worship for the old pagan god.
It would have been too much to have expected the Israelites to leap from pagan worship to prayer and meditation in one step.
Some of these, most notably the Seventh-day Adventist Church, have traditionally held that the apostate church formed when Bishop of Rome began to dominate and brought heathen corruption and allowed pagan idol worship and beliefs to come in, and formed the Roman Catholic Church, which teaches others traditions over Scripture, and to rest from their work on Sunday, instead of Sabbath, which is not in keeping with Scripture.
The idea of setting aside specific places as holy, treating certain items used in the worship of God with reverence, all go back to the Hebrew Temple worship, and to the visions the Bible records of what worship in Heaven looks like, not just to pagan ideas about " mana.

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