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When and citing
When Guillermo Endara won the Presidential elections held in May 1989, the Noriega regime annulled the election, citing massive US interference.
The translator Arthur Waley noted that, " A certain idealization of the ' noble savage ' is to be found fairly often in early Chinese literature ", citing the Zuozhuan maxim, " When the Emperor no longer functions, learning must be sought among the ' Four Barbarians ,' north, west, east, and south.
When the board of directors rejected Disney's request for an extension of his term as board member, he announced his resignation on November 30, 2003, citing " serious differences of opinion about the direction and style of management " in the company.
Within three years, by 1796, he was made a captain, to the combined envy and disgust of the older officers, who felt that: " our general ’ s friend was now the general .” When his regiment was sent from London to Manchester he immediately resigned his commission, citing the city's poor reputation, lack of atmosphere, and an absence of culture and civility.
When he tried to get his Harmony ( the first part of his New Musical Theory and Fantasies ) published by Breitkopf & Härtel, it was rejected, the publisher citing Hugo Riemann's work to have covered all that was necessary.
When he refused, citing the neutrality of Albania in the Treaty of London, the remuneration that he had been receiving was cut off.
When Jerry Nelson left the Muppets citing health reasons, Muppeteer Steve Whitmire ( also a puppeteer for Sesame Street ) took over adding yet another new role to his credits ; his first two were that of Kermit the Frog ( Jim Henson ) and Beaker ( Richard Hunt ).
When teaching he is never cited in the Analects as lecturing at length about any subject, but instead challenges his students to discover the truth through asking direct questions, citing passages from the classics, and using analogies ( Analects 7. 8 ).
When Śākyamuni Buddha learns of the situation he asks each of his ten major monk disciples to visit Vimalakīrti during his illness, but each in turn declines to do so, each citing a past incident during which he was reproved by Vimalakīrti for some deficiency in his understanding of the Dharma.
When Seale refused to be silenced, the judge ordered Seale bound and gagged in the courtroom, citing a precedent from the case of Illinois v. Allen.
When Chevènement decided not to run, he publicly, and controversially, declined to support Royal's bid for the presidency, citing differences over nuclear energy, GMOs and stem-cell research.
When writing the screenplay for Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl, Ted Elliott and Terry Rossio envisioned Jack Sparrow as a supporting character, citing Bugs Bunny and Groucho Marx as influences.
When he publishes a line to this effect in his latest book, citing " fifteen thousand " as subject of surgery without anaesthesia by Dr. Kelno, he and the publishing house are sued for libel.
When Godwin visited her to make a formal proposal, she rejected him, citing their different philosophies and religious beliefs.
When Nabis refused, citing the Roman acceptance of his friendship at a time when he had already been in possession of the city as justification, Flamininus invaded Laconia.
When he was offered Secretary of War instead, he declined citing his Quaker beliefs and heritage.
When this happened on 25 July Bradford abandoned the idea, citing an adverse public reaction.
When friends of his were busted by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, Marks decided to retire from drug smuggling to concentrate on his legitimate businesses ; citing the fate of his friends and contacts, who were either in jail, informing the DEA, or smuggling heavier drugs.
When the sisters published an expose of an adulterous affair between Reverend Henry Ward Beecher and Elizabeth Tilton, he had the sisters arrested under laws forbidding the use of the postal service to distribute ' obscene material '– specifically citing a mangled Biblical quote Comstock found obscene – though they were later acquitted of the charges.
When they objected, citing their already-acquired target lock, Commander Feral used his jet to slap their wing, sending Chance and Jake's jet crashing into Enforcer headquarters and allowing Dark Kat to get away.
When the deadline for withdrawal arrived on March 2, 1946, six months after the end of hostilities, the British began to withdraw, but Moscow refused, " citing threats to Soviet security ," sparking the Iran crisis of 1946.
When DC left the venture, citing poor sales, Rebellion created its own line of American graphic novels, distributed through Simon & Schuster.
When Star Trek: Deep Space Nine ended in 1999, Moore transferred over to the creative staff of Voyager as a co-executive producer, but quickly departed citing problems working with his old writing partner, Braga:
When confronted, Zora said that in exchange for this deed, he had been promised a promotion, citing jealousy against Shubas, who had been promoted while Zora had not, despite the two of them being close friends and having entered the Hittite armies at roughly the same time.

When and cases
When this happens, the anchor may be pulled out of the bottom, and in some cases may need to be hauled up to be re-set.
When the new metropolitan counties ( Greater Manchester, Merseyside, Tyne & Wear, West Midlands, South Yorkshire and West Yorkshire ) were created in 1974, their sub-divisions also became metropolitan boroughs ; in many cases these metropolitan boroughs recapitulated abolished county boroughs ( for example, Stockport ).
Though attractive in many cases, a general-purpose DBMS is not always the optimal solution: When certain applications are pervasive with many operating instances, each with many users, a general-purpose DBMS may introduce unnecessary overhead and too large " footprint " ( too large amount of unnecessary, unutilized software code ).
When the database is ready ( all its data structures and other needed components are defined ) it is typically populated with initial application's data ( database initialization, which is typically a distinct project ; in many cases using specialized DBMS interfaces that support bulk insertion ) before making it operational.
When used in chronic cases it has been much less efficient.
When using a single stage press, cases are loaded in batches, one step for each cartridge per batch at a time.
When previously fired cases are used, they must be inspected before loading.
When Richard Nixon tried to use executive privilege as a reason for not turning over subpoenaed evidence to Congress during the Watergate scandal, the Supreme Court ruled in United States v. Nixon,, that executive privilege did not apply in cases where a president was attempting to avoid criminal prosecution.
When his lawyer pointed out an error in the wording of the act which seemed to limit its application to cases of the destruction of objects worth no more than five pounds, he was convicted instead of the destruction of the glass case in which the vase had sat.
When both parasites are present, the losses would normally be expected to total less than 20 %, yet, in some cases, losses are significantly greater.
When heavy, wet snow with a snow-water equivalent ( SWE ) ratio of between 6: 1 and 12: 1 ( in extreme cases, as heavy as 4: 1 ) and a weight in excess of 10 pounds per square foot (~ 50 kg / m < sup > 2 </ sup >) piles onto trees or electricity lines – particularly if the trees have full leaves or are not adapted to snow – significant damage may occur on a scale usually associated with hurricanes.
When the Supreme Court revisited some of the territory covered by Luther v. Borden in cases like Baker v. Carr,, the Fourteenth Amendment's equal protection clause was the basis of its changed decisions.
When the opposition controls the National Assembly ( and thus government funding and most legislation ), the President is in effect forced to choose a Prime Minister from the opposition ; in such cases, known as cohabitation, the government controls internal state policy, with the President restricted largely to foreign affairs.
When light travels from a medium with a higher refractive index to one with a lower refractive index, Snell's law seems to require in some cases ( whenever the angle of incidence is large enough ) that the sine of the angle of refraction be greater than one.
When a Roman commander is slaughtered, in most cases, it is taken as a sign that a state of war is in existence, and if we can associate the death of Heraclianus in 270, as well as an inscription from Bostra, recording the rebuilding of a temple destroyed by the Palmyrene army, then these violent acts could be interpreted the same way.
When it is added, that the quantity of grain gained from the superior powers of the machine is fully equal to a twentieth part of the crop, and that, in some cases, the expense of thrashing and cleaning the grain is considerably less than what was formerly paid for cleaning it alone, the immense saving arising from the invention will at once be seen.
When the characters were not in use he had them arranged with paper labels, one label for each rhyme-group, and kept them in wooden cases.
When they were later permitted to return ( in some cases not until 1799 ), it was often to find that their lands and homes had been confiscated.
When there are just a few species being organized, it is possible to do this step manually, but most cases require a computer program.
When challenged at trial over the nature of this testing, and particularly over the fact that the testing was designed in some cases to cause death and only to measure the time which elapsed until death was caused, one Nazi doctor's defence was that, though a doctor, he was " legally appointed executioner ".
When performed later, after 70 days from fertilization ( at week 13 of gestational age ), it gives an accurate result in almost 100 % of cases.
When exclusive dealings or tying arrangements are challenged under Clayton-3 ( or Sherman-1 ), they are treated as rule of reason cases.
When traveling across a number of time zones, the body clock will be out of synchronization with the destination time, as it experiences daylight and darkness contrary to the rhythms to which it has grown accustomed: the body's natural pattern is upset, as the rhythms that dictate times for eating, sleeping, hormone regulation and body temperature variations no longer correspond to the environment nor to each other in some cases.
When cases of torture began to emerge among POWs returning to the United States, Fonda called the returning POWs " hypocrites and liars ".

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