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private and company
A lady, you made clear to me both by precept and example, never raised her voice or slumped in her chair, never failed in social tact ( in heaven, for instance, would not mention St. John the Baptist's head ), never pouted or withdrew or scandalized in company, never reminded others of her physical presence by unseemly sound or gesture, never indulged in public scenes or private confidences, never spoke of money save in terms of alleviating suffering, never gossiped or maligned, never stressed but always minimized the hopelessness of anything from sin to death itself.
City Controller Alexander Hemphill charged Tuesday that the bids on the Frankford Elevated repair project were rigged to the advantage of a private contracting company which had `` an inside track '' with the city.
Wealthy private clients sought Rodin's work after his World's Fair exhibit, and he kept company with a variety of high-profile intellectuals and artists.
Due to the costs involved in owning, operating and driving buses and coaches, many bus and coach uses a private hire of vehicles from charter bus companies, either for a day or two, or a longer contract basis, where the charter company provides the vehicles and qualified drivers.
The jersey was purchased by another auction company on behalf of a private client and is now on loan to the Baseball Hall of Fame.
In 1977, the Bank set up a wholly owned subsidiary called Bank of England Nominees Limited ( BOEN ), a private limited company, with two of its hundred £ 1 shares issued.
For example, the nature of the business entity may be one that is traded on a public market ( public company ), not traded on a public market ( a private, limited or closely held company ), owned by family members ( a family business ), or exempt from income taxes ( a non-profit, not for profit, or tax-exempt entity ).
There are numerous types of business entities available throughout the world such as a corporation, limited liability company, cooperative, business trust, partnership, private limited company, and public limited company.
The main brand of rum in Cuba is called Havana Club, a formerly private company nationalized by the government.
Brabham had a poor season, scoring only four points, and — having run his own private Coopers in non-championship events during 1961 — left the company in 1962 to drive for his own team: the Brabham Racing Organisation, using cars built by Motor Racing Developments.
For instance, since 2006, annual Canada Day celebrations have been held at Trafalgar Square — the location of Canada House — in London, England ; initiated by the Canadian community in the United Kingdom, endorsed by the Canadian High Commission, and organised by a private promotions company, the event features Canadian performers and a demonstration of street hockey, among other activities.
After being killed by a criminal gang, police officer Alex Murphy is transformed by a private company into a cyborg cop.
TCI is a private company owned by Telecom New Zealand ( TNZ ) Ltd ( 60 %) and the Cook Islands Government ( 40 %).
In Finland, the state-owned broadcasting company Yleisradio and the private broadcaster Mainos-TV had a legal duopoly ( in the economists ' sense of the word ) from the 1950s to 1993.
* Central Romana Port, located in La Romana, belong to Central Romana Corporation which is a private company established in 1911 and has the largest sugar mill in the country.
Starting 2003, Nile Radio Production a private company was given license to operate two radio stations, Nile FM and Nogoom FM.
After a 6-month period of military training, persons may work on government projects or with private enterprises, with the private company paying a charge to the government but the worker only receiving standard national service wages.
Formation of an SE holding company is available to public and private limited companies with their registered offices in different Member States or having subsidiaries or branches in Member States other than that of their registered office.
There is a national public radio and television company Yleisradio ( Yle ), which is funded by television license fees, and two major private media companies, Alma Media and Sanoma, with national TV channels.
* The Terrafugia Transition is under development by a private company founded by MIT graduates.

private and Standard
Many private firms in the 19th century avoided the corporate model for these reasons ( Andrew Carnegie formed his steel operation as a limited partnership, and John D. Rockefeller set up Standard Oil as a trust ).
The potentially responsible parties, Olin Corporation and Standard Fuse Incorporated, are supplying bottled water to nearly 800 households with private wells.
On the consumer level, loans against securities have grown into three distinct groups over the last decade: 1 ) Standard Institutional Loans, generally offering low loan-to-value with very strict call and coverage regimens, akin to standard margin loans ; 2 ) Transfer-of-Title ( ToT ) Loans, typically provided by private parties where borrower ownership is completely extinguished save for the rights provided in the loan contract ; and 3 ) Non-Transfer-of-Title Credit Line facilities where shares are not sold and they serve as assets in a standard lien-type line of cash credit.
In 1990 they established CWB Partners, a private equity joint venture between Standard Chartered and Westdeutsche Landesbank.
The Carlyle Group, a private equity firm, acquired the Standard Aero division, now known as StandardAero.
The United States Supreme Court summarized why Congress authorized private antitrust lawsuits in the case Hawaii v. Standard Oil Co. of Cal., 405 U. S. 251, 262 ( 1972 ):
Specific bond debts owed by both governments and private corporations is rated by rating agencies, such as Moody's, Fitch Ratings Inc., A. M. Best and Standard & Poor's.
Most writing in Jamaica is done in Standard English ( including private notes and correspondence ).
A small number of students at certain private, independent schools may follow the English system and study towards GCSE instead of Standard Grades, and towards A and AS-Levels instead of Higher Grade and Advanced Higher exams.
Standard English remains a quasi-fictional ideal, despite the numerous private organizations publishing prescriptive rules for it.
Standard criminal prosecution may not be possible due to legalities surrounding private military contractors in Iraq, including the fact that the CACI contract was with the Department of the Interior.
Industries, The U. S. Army Corp of Engineers, Bony Corp., Nihon Davis Standard Corp., and many outstanding public and private collections.
On the other hand, historically, many private users of ratings data have " defaulted " to Standard and Poor's and Moody's when specifying which ratings must be used for their own purposes.
At the time of his death, he was pursuing a case before the Interstate Commerce Commission on behalf of a private client against the Standard Oil trust.
Standard Croatian license plate used on both private and commercial vehicles.
These notes were printed by private contractors and were not obligations of the federal government .< references > See James A. Haxby, Standard Catalog of United States Obsolete Banknotes, CD-ROM ed.
The CI uses the conditional access module ( PCMCIA ) connector and conforms to the Common Scrambling Algorithm ( CSA ), the normative that specifies that such a receiver must be able to accept DES ( Data Encryption Standard ) keys in intervals of some milliseconds, and use them to decode private channels according to a specific algorithm.
Standard Bearers: Horticultural exports and private standards in Africa.

private and regulation
A second group, headed by Chief Justice Edward D. White and Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., stood for " reasonable " market regulation, managed either by private agreements among producers ( long permitted under common law ) or by public administrative agencies.
Prior to the modern proliferation of environmental regulation, the doctrines of nuisance ( public or private ), trespass, negligence, and strict liability apportioned harm and assigned liability for activities that today would be considered pollution and likely governed by regulatory regimes.
In the current system, private banks are for-profit businesses but government regulation places restrictions on what they can do.
Excessive disparities in income distribution emerging from private ownership are alleged by proponents of this system to lead to social instability that requires costly corrective measures in the form of social welfare and redistributive taxation and heavy administrative costs to administer them while weakening the incentive to work, inviting dishonesty and increasing the likelihood of tax evasion while reducing the overall efficiency of the market economy and necessitating government regulation over markets.
As a result, governments began to seek other solutions, namely regulation and providing services on a commercial basis, often through private participation.
Beginning with Allgeyer v. Louisiana ( 1897 ), the Court interpreted the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment as providing substantive protection to private contracts and thus prohibiting a variety of social and economic regulation, under what was referred to as " freedom of contract ".
* financing public sector programs through the capital market ( with adequate regulation or measures to prevent situations where the central government bears the risk for this borrowing ) and allowing private organizations to participate ; and
Transport economics considers issues of the economic regulation of the supply of transport, particularly in relation to whether transport services and networks are provided by the public sector ( i. e. socially ), by the private sector ( i. e. competitively ) or using a mixture of both.
The Esch – Cummins Act of 1920, or Railroad Transportation Act, was a United States federal law that returned railroads to private operation after World War I, with much regulation.
Parties of the centre-right generally support liberal democracy, capitalism, the market economy ( though they may accept government regulation to control monopolies ), private property rights, and a limited welfare state ( for example government provision of education and medical care ).
There is not one single definition for a mixed economy, but the definitions always involve a degree of private economic freedom mixed with a degree of government regulation of markets.
Article 112 states the main principle: the power to judge disputes of private law and the law of obligations is exclusively attributed to the judiciary ( subarticle 1 ); formal law can attribute other judicial powers to either the judiciary or other courts ; delegation is possible as regards the regulation of the procedures and the implementation of rulings ( subarticle 2 ).
Management of ecotourism sites by private ecotourism companies offers an alternative to the cost of regulation and deficiency of government agencies.
The Forestry Commission is also the government body responsible for the regulation of private forestry ; felling is generally illegal without first obtaining a licence from the Commission.
When a government regulation effects a taking of private property by such excessive regulation, the owner may initiate inverse condemnation proceedings to recover the just compensation for the taking of his or her property, provided that procedural hurdles have been overcome.
For about a decade, the use of regulation to channel private commerce to designated private disposal sites was greatly restricted as the result of the Carbone decision discussed below
Waste hauling in the Town of Clarkstown was accomplished by private haulers, subject to local regulation.
The citizens could have left the entire matter for the private sector, in which case any regulation they undertook could not discriminate against interstate commerce.
Earlier critics of the 1933 Banking Act, and of other restrictive banking regulation, argued it did not prevent the return of financial instability beginning in the mid-1960s. Hyman Minsky, a supporter of traditional banking regulation, described the 1966 return of financial instability ( and its increasingly intense return in 1970, 1974, and 1980 ) as the inevitable result of private financial markets, previously repressed by memories of the Great Depression.
The first plan of its kind to be used in Ireland, the IAP sought to go beyond the often cosmetic changes undertaken by local authorities in addressing rundown areas, seeking to intervene and exert control in as many aspects of the street as possible, ranging from pedestrian and vehicle interaction, the governing of retail outlet type and buildings ' upper floor uses, the protection of architectural heritage and wider historic character of O ' Connell Street, the regulation of signage and decorative state of private property, as well as radical improvement works to the public domain.
In the 1930s, during the New Deal, the majority of the Supreme Court justices gradually shifted their legal theory to allow for greater government regulation of the private sector under the commerce clause, thus paving the way for the Federal government to enact civil rights laws prohibiting both public and private sector discrimination on the basis of the commerce clause.

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