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Page "Bernardino Ochino" ¶ 7
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own and breach
While in many instances an improper purpose is readily evident, such as a director looking to feather his or her own nest or divert an investment opportunity to a relative, such breaches usually involve a breach of the director's duty to act in good faith.
However, doing this for a town that only has two black males in this age group would be a breach of privacy because either of those persons, knowing his own income and the reported average, could determine the other man's income.
Portugal claims the de jure sovereignty over Olivenza / Olivença on the grounds that the Treaty of Badajoz was revoked by its own terms ( the breach of any of its articles would lead to its cancellation ) when Spain invaded Portugal in the Peninsular War of 1807.
" Thirdly, because unlike non-state actors, states are signatories in international laws and conventions prohibiting terrorism, so when a state commits acts of terrorism it is " in breach of its own solemn international commitments.
Otherwise, a party that prematurely and perhaps wrongfully suspends or terminates its own obligations due to an alleged breach itself runs the risk of being held liable for breach.
Additionally, parties may choose to overlook treaty breaches while still maintaining their own obligations towards the party in breach.
A party cannot base this claim on change brought about by its own breach of the treaty.
In addition he asserted that the civil magistrates may not punish any sort of " breach of the first table the Ten Commandments ", such as idolatry, Sabbath-breaking, false worship, and blasphemy, and that every individual should be free to follow his own convictions in religious matters.
Under its own ' Good Samaritan ' laws, Belgium was legally culpable for failing to prevent the assassination from taking place and was also in breach of its obligation ( under U. N.
SST ended up distributing Damaged on its own ; as a result, Unicorn filed lawsuit against Black Flag and SST, claiming breach of contract.
I am happy to say, that no violence or breach of the public peace was attempted, so far from this, that all except a very few, attended to their own avocations and left the gentleman to hold forth his own arguments to nearly naked walls.
It was only by a breach of his own constitution that he had been able to declare war against Russia in April 1788 ; the Conspiracy of Anjala ( July ) had paralysed all military operations at the very opening of the campaign ; and the sudden invasion of his western provinces by the Danes, almost simultaneously ( September ), seemed to bring him to the verge of ruin.
In the meantime, Sifton was facing a breach in his own party on the railway question.
The court noted that " orcing a woman, by threat of criminal sanction, to carry a foetus to term unless she meets certain criteria unrelated to her own priorities and aspirations " and that the law " asserts that the woman's capacity to reproduce is to be subject, not to her own control, but to that of the state " were essentially a breach of the woman's right to security of the person, which is guaranteed under Canada's Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
Prime Minister Qarase said that the NFP decision to give its preferences to the opposition Fiji Labour Party ( FLP ) in a number of marginal electorates was a breach of promise, and withdrew his own earlier offer to include the NFP in his post-election Cabinet.
Dayton had already told Seward of his own meeting with Thouvenel, in which the French foreign minister had told him that Wilkes ’ actions were “ a clear breach of international law ” but that France would “ remain a spectator in any war between the United States and England .” A direct message was received on Christmas from Thouvenel ( it was actually delivered during the cabinet meeting ) urging that the United States release the prisoners and in so doing affirm the rights of neutrals on the seas that France and the United States had repeatedly argued against Great Britain.
... in an appalling breach of its own principles and procedures, the UN Human Rights Council has institutionalised a permanent agenda item indicting one member state -- agenda item No 7, which speaks of " Israeli human rights violations in the occupied Palestinian territories " -- while agenda item No 8 speaks of " human rights violations in the rest of the world ".
Examples of terms that would breach this commitment are ; requiring licensees to buy licenses for products that they do not want in order to get a license for the products they do want ( bundling ), requiring licensees to license their own IP to the licensor for free ( free grant backs ) and including restrictive conditions on licensees ’ dealings with competitors ( mandatory exclusivity ).
Most CB operators prefer to use self-assigned handles reflecting some aspect of their personality ; it is generally considered a breach of CB etiquette to use real names, even your own.
Cazzetta considered the event an unforgivable breach of the outlaw code and, rather than joining the Hells Angels, in 1986 formed his own smaller gang, the Rock Machine, with his brother Giovanni.
On an appeal to the Divisional Court in 1957 concerning a pure breach of the Code of Professional Conduct under the legislation then in force ( the architect was practising an estate agent's business as well as his own ), when the registration body was constituted under the name the Architects ' Registration Council of the United Kingdom, Mr Justice Devlin ruled: " It is not of itself disgraceful to disagree with a majority view and to act accordingly.

own and with
Unconcerned, indifferent, unmotivated, the forest was simply there -- fighting man's depredations with more abundant growth and man's follies with its own musical evening laughter.
Already a few hardy folk from their own train were zealously chipping away at the register rocks, leaving their own records along with those made by the earlier trains.
In the hut to which I was assigned -- Max had his own quarters -- my food was brought to me by a wrinkled crone with bare drooping breasts who seemed to enjoy conversing with me in rudimentary phrases.
Is it not characteristic of the greatest art that it confronts us with something we cannot clarify, demanding that the viewer respond to it in his own never-predictable way??
That world was in scale with my own smallness.
They bring an inextricable component of value within themselves, with attractions and repulsions native to their own quality.
Wolfe refuses to ever leave his own house, and spends most of his time drinking beer and playing with orchids.
By upholding his own personal code of behavior, the private detective has placed himself in opposition to a society whose fabric is permeated with crime and corruption.
Hence the prime issue, as I see it, is whether a democratic or free society can master technology for the benefit of mankind, or whether technology will rule and develop its own society compatible with its own needs as a force of nature.
We are tempted to blame others for our problems rather than look them straight in the face and realize they are of our own making and possible of solution only by ourselves with the help of desperately needed, enlightened, competent leaders.
Henrietta, however, was at that time engaged in a lengthy correspondence with Joe's older and more serious brother, Morris, who was just about her own age and whom she had got to know well during trips to Philadelphia with Papa, when he substituted for Rabbi Jastrow at Rodeph Shalom Temple there during its Rabbi's absence in Europe.
He has his own system of shorthand, devised by abbreviations: `` humility '' will be `` humly '', `` with '' will be `` w '', and `` that '' will be `` tt ''.
New Nations, and others struggling with the problems of development, will progress only -- regardless of any outside help -- if they demonstrate faith in their own destiny and use their own resources to fulfill it.
I cannot express to you the depth of my conviction that, in our own and free world interest, we must co-operate with others to help these people achieve their legitimate ambitions, as expressed in their different multi-year plans.
Much to Damon Runyon's amazement, as well as my own, I got along splendidly with the Hetman ; ;
Inherently incapable of cooperating with others, he ran his own show regardless of how many party-line Democratic toes he stepped on.
He was a political maverick, a reformer with his own program, determined to bulldoze it through or to blazon the infamy of those who balked him.
If it is not one of his best books, it can only be considered unsatisfactory when compared with his own Garibaldi.
In addition, he believed in the `` dramatic unity and separateness of the period from 1702-14, lying between the Stuart and Hanoverian eras with a special ethos of its own ''.

own and Roman
The nineteenth-century immigration, whether Protestant or Roman Catholic, was not so much concerned, for very few if any among them held slaves: they were mostly in the Northern states where slavery had disappeared or was on the way out, or were too poverty-stricken to own slaves.
However, this was not successful, for according to Gregory of Tours, Amalaric pressured her to forsake her Roman Catholic faith and convert to Arian Christianity, at one point beating her until she bled ; she sent to her brother Childebert I, king of Paris a towel stained with her own blood.
The Roman poet Horace modelled his own lyrical compositions on those of Alcaeus, rendering the Lesbian poet's verse-forms, including ' Alcaic ' and ' Sapphic ' stanzas, into concise Latin-an achievement he celebrates in his third book of odes.
According to Herodian, the Roman armies suffered a number of humiliating setbacks and defeats, while according to the Historia Augusta as well as Alexander's own dispatch to the Roman Senate, he gained great victories.
His son, Lord Downpatrick, converted to Roman Catholicism in 2003 and is the most senior descendant of Sophia to be barred as a result of his own religion.
Roman control of Britain finally ended in the early part of the 5th century ; the date usually given as marking the end of Roman Britain is 410, when the Emperor Honorius sent letters to the British, urging them to look to their own defence.
The form used in the Roman Rite included anointing of seven parts of the body while saying ( in Latin ): " Through this holy unction and His own most tender mercy may the Lord pardon thee whatever sins or faults thou hast committed deliquisti by sight hearing, smell, taste, touch, walking, carnal delectation ", the last phrase corresponding to the part of the body that was touched ; however, in the words of the 1913 Catholic Encyclopedia, " the unction of the loins is generally, if not universally, omitted in English-speaking countries, and it is of course everywhere forbidden in case of women ".
St Athanasius ' long episcopate lasted 45 years ( c. 8 June 328 – 2 May 373 ) of which over 17 years were spent in five exiles ordered by four different Roman Emperors, not counting approximately six more incidents in which he had to flee Alexandria for his own safety to escape people seeking to take his life.
The Batavi were still mentioned in 355 during the reign of Constantius II ( 317-361 ), when their island was already dominated by the Salii, a Frankish tribe that had sought Roman protection there in 297 after having been expelled from their own country by the Saxons.
: When, after the action had thus occurred, his own men returned to each general, Scipio could adopt no fixed plan of proceeding, except that he should form his measures from the plans and undertakings of the enemy: and Hannibal, uncertain whether he should pursue the march he had commenced into Italy, or fight with the Roman army which had first presented itself, the arrival of ambassadors from the Boii, and of a petty prince called Magalus, diverted from an immediate engagement ; who, declaring that they would be the guides of his journey and the companions of his dangers, gave it as their opinion, that Italy ought to be attacked with the entire force of the war, his strength having been nowhere previously impaired.
The writer of the pesher draws a comparison between the Babylonian invasion of the original text and the Roman threat of the writer's own period.
* Tying Falcone up: In the graphic novel Batman ties The Roman in his own house ; in the film, he ties The Roman to a searchlight.
James wished to achieve toleration for those of his own Roman Catholic faith, whose practices were still banned.
The Byzantine Empire used Roman and Greek architectural models and styles to create its own unique type of architecture.
It was not uncommon for an organisation under Roman private law to copy the terminology of state and city institutions for its own statutory agents.
There are also churches for Roman Catholic, Methodist and other denominations, including Cheddar Valley Community Church, who not only meet at The Kings of Wessex School on Sunday, but also have their own site on Tweentown for meeting during the week.
He named his own pope Antipope Clement III in the old manner of the Holy Roman Emperors.
Parliament reluctantly agreed to the marriage, with the promise from both James and Charles that the marriage would not entail a liberty of religion being accorded to any Roman Catholic not of the Princess ' own household.
Most Christians believe that the kosher food laws do not apply to them as they are no longer under the Law of Moses, and that, as Jesus taught in Mark 7: what you eat doesn't make you unclean but what comes out of a man's heart makes him unclean — although Roman Catholicism and Eastern Orthodoxy have their own set of dietary observances.
Roman Catholics view the Bishop of Rome as the " Successor of Peter " to serve as universal pastor to the entire Church, though all the particular Churches in communion with him have their own distinct pastoral heads, who, taken as a college in union with the Successor of Peter, are considered to be the subject of supreme power in the universal Church.
The Arabs who conquered large parts of the land that once belonged to the Eastern Roman Empire issued their own Gold dinar.

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