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Page "news" ¶ 1974
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Some Related Sentences

other and words
In other words, nationalism worked well enough when it had limited application, both as to geography and as to population ; ;
But because it is the function of the mind to turn the one into the other by means of the capacities with which words endow it, we do not unwisely examine the type of distinction, in the sphere of politics, on which decisions hang.
by this term he means to ridicule their professions of acting in the interest of the Church despite their own education and manner of life -- a gibe, in other words, at the `` Presbyterianism '' in Harley's family and at Bolingbroke's reputed impiety.
Once more, in other words, Steele is said to be indebted to Swift for his `` wit '' ; ;
In other words, as students go through college, those who are most successful academically tend to become more committed to a `` Bill of Rights '' orientation.
in other words its existence belongs to the period of Roman Britain.
The problem, in other words, is strictly a chronological one.
In other words, atrocities by savages wearing the uniform of the central government might be condoned, had the victims been serving the cause of dissident Katanga.
In other words, the Secretary General is to be a nonpartisan, international servant, not a political, national one.
In other words, the whole storage and pipeline system does not belong to the homeowners nor to the town but rather to Tri-State.
Poster Products Inc., Chicago, Ill.: a changeable copy and display sign which consists of an extruded impact styrene background in choice of colors, onto which are mounted snap-in letters, figures, or words screened on acetate or other types of sheet stock.
In other words, if an ideal gas is compressed and kept at constant temperature, the work done in compressing it is completely converted into heat and transferred to the surrounding heat sink.
In other words, the anastomoses between the bronchial artery and pulmonary artery should be considered as functional or demand shunts.
In other words, if F satisfies the differential equation Af, then F is uniquely expressible in the form Af where Af satisfies the differential equation Af.
In other words, these curves have only fixed intersections common to them all.
But if no two lines of the regulus of multiple secants of **zg can intersect, then the regulus must be quadratic, or in other words, **zg must be either a Af or a Af curve on a nonsingular quadric surface.
In the urban area, in other words, they, unlike some urban ethnic groups, do not concentrate in ghetto colonies.
In other words, the Soviet Union was determined to create a Poland so strong as to be a powerful bulwark against Germany and so closely tied to Russia that there would never be any question of her serving as a cordon sanitaire against the Soviets or posing as an independent, balancing power in between Russia and Germany.
In other words the burden of pleading clearly rested upon the pleader by state law.
It will not, however, be used for symbolic assignment until all other index words or electronic switches have been assigned for the first time.
In other words, like automation machines designed to work in tandem, they shared the same programming, a mutual understanding not only of English words, but of the four stresses, pitches, and junctures that can change their meaning from black to white.
Even less regard for mom and mom's apple pie goes with: Af In other words, the way the speaker relates to mother is clearly indicated.
In other words, the promulgators of the murder plan made clear that physically exterminating the Jews was but an extension of the anti-Semitic measures already operating in every phase of German life, and that the new conspiracy counted on the general anti-Semitism that had made those measures effective, as a readiness for murder.
Although it was at the Battle of The Little Horn, about which more words have been written than any other battle in American history, that the 7th Cavalry first made its mark in history, the regiment was ten years old by then.

other and anti-trust
If the franchisor requires purchase from his stores, it may come under anti-trust legislation or equivalent laws of other countries.
Because INS had been a subsidiary of Hearst's King Features Syndicate and Scripps controlled several other newspaper syndicates, both companies feared possible anti-trust issues.
Judge Robert Bork's writings on anti-trust law, along with those of Richard Posner and other law and economics thinkers, were heavily influential in causing a shift in the U. S. Supreme Court's approach to antitrust laws since the 1970s, to be focused solely on what is best for the consumer rather than the company's practices.
In 1925, IT & T purchased the Bell Telephone Manufacturing Company of Brussels, Belgium and other worldwide subsidiaries from AT & T, to avoid an anti-trust action.
In 1958, and as a result of the consent decree from the 1956 anti-trust case, United States v. General Motors Corp., GM was mandated to sell their bus components, engines, and transmissions to other manufacturers, free of royalties.
Although anti-trust actions were not a threat to baseball, which has long been exempt from anti-trust laws, that sport's reserve clause was struck down by a United States arbitrator as a violation of other labor laws.
However, on June 12, 2006, federal regulators from the U. S. Department of Justice asked for more time to review the purchase, citing possible anti-trust concerns over MediaNews ' ownership of other newspapers in the region.
As it was, the Showboats ceased to exist, along with all other USFL franchises, when the league failed to collect significant damages in its 1986 anti-trust suit against the NFL.
In other cases he helped end the income tax ( Pollock v. Farmers ' Loan and Trust Company ), limited anti-trust law ( United States v. E. C.
The railroads attempted to coordinate their efforts to support the war by creating the Railroads ' War Board, but private action ran into anti-trust and other regulatory barriers .< ref > Observers noted, for example, that sometimes competitive practices prevailed that were not in the best interests of efficient mobilization.
In May 1998, Blumenthal, along with attorneys general from 19 other states and the District of Columbia, filed an anti-trust lawsuit against Microsoft accusing the company of abusing its monopoly power to stifle competition.
As a result, many countries have anti-trust or other legislation intended to limit the ability of firms to accrue market power.
In those days before US anti-trust laws were created, many smaller railroads which appeared to be in competition with each other were essentially under common control.
In anticipation of gaining all necessary approvals for the proposed alliance — including anti-trust immunity, BA decided to reserve the required slots at Heathrow by moving all long-haul services to East, Central and Southern Africa ( other than those to South Africa itself ) as well as to Latin America to Gatwick over the 1996 summer timetable period as well as the 1996 / 7 winter timetable period.
The Indiana Health Law Review addresses issues related to bioethics, malpractice liability, managed care, anti-trust, health care organizations, medical-legal research, legal medicine, food and drug, and other current health-related topics.
Judiciary Committee Chairman James Sensenbrenner also had some complaints about the anti-trust issues that he thought would arise from the proposed legislation since Southwest will be able to operate from 16 gates, American 2 gates, and Continental 2 gates without further gates available for other carriers.
Describing the Corporation as the " largest concern in the motion picture industry and the biggest theater owner in the world ," the Federal Trade Commission accused Famous Players-Lasky and eleven other correspondents with " conspiracy and restraint of trade " in violation of the anti-trust laws.

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