Guizhou province uses blocking software and hawk-eyed operators to censor pager and handphone text messages on examination day. |
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Thereafter came praetorship and consulship, and finally the quinquennial office of censor, the crown of a republican politician's career. |
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They have pointed out that there have also been attempts by school officials to censor views deemed excessively chauvinist or racist. |
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Staff members are more likely to censor themselves for fear of later exposure. |
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We should not strive for a state where we censor our business contacts and limit them only to a closed clique. |
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Sometimes the very act of trying to censor what reaches the public domain can backfire and achieves the reverse result to the one intended. |
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He was staring out of the window, disconsolate that he had to urge me to censor my work. |
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As if to prove his point, the publishing empire tried to censor, then shelve, the book. |
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Revised plays had to be relicensed by the censor, but this requirement seems to have been ignored by most acting companies. |
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The censor Board has refused to renew the certificate of the film, since many of its scenes show Saibaba smoking. |
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Sorry, would-be martyrs, we do not censor your favorite sites from comments, unless you're into mature mamas or something. |
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He decides to censor it and to supervise the author, watching out for further subversiveness lest it become necessary to deport him to an island. |
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A movie is good, I think, when the censor does not understand what should be censored. |
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The magistracy continued to be controlled by patricians until 351 BC, when Gaius Marcius Rutilus was appointed the first plebeian censor. |
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These are the people who like to censor rap lyrics and condemn gratuitous violence, and the violence here seems pretty gratuitous. |
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A Government on the defensive will even censor Parliament proceedings if it has to. |
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The censor deciphered most of these codes fairly easily, although some of the more subtle ones may have eluded him. |
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He makes some daring analyses about censor interference that were fascinating grist for rumination. |
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In most cases, a censor and a chiliarch or centurion from the Imperial Guard were ordered to jointly oversee campaigns to apprehend brigands. |
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The goal of Freudian dream interpretation is to undo the work of the censor. |
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Television network news has obediently complied with requests to censor the statements. |
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It is baffling to me why anyone would want to create a monopoly, a power to censor and prohibit, and ban the reporting of open justice. |
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They were almost impossible to censor and their authors were anonymous, so that retaliation against them was not possible. |
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Marcius was the only man in Roman history to serve as censor twice, a feat for which he earned the agnomen Censorinus. |
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A judge, although it may be that on occasions he can legitimately exercise the functions of an aedile, is no censor. |
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I wonder, has this censor never found in poetry a vision of truth more profound than can be told in syllogisms? |
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But Pyle was obsessed by the stories he could not tell, especially when the censor quashed his column on battle fatigue. |
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They sat in a windowless room and a censor turned on their speakers and mics when he or she wanted them to listen or talk. |
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It also requires school officials to demonstrate some reasonable educational justification before they can censor anything. |
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However, the filmmaker who cleared the film with the censor board earlier this month seems unperturbed by the controversies. |
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He talks about the class interests that spawned the early pamphlets and broadsheets and those who did their best to censor and destroy them. |
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I always thought I played safe in that respect but I guess the censor was browned off or something, it's silly to take things to that extent. |
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After the film has been edited and completed for release in India it has to go through the censor board, where they can also make cuts. |
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They are Stalinists who would censor the arts to suit their own political ends. |
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Such an act permits a government to censor and penalize the publication of information it deems secret. |
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The attempts to censor news in Mainland China about the protests backfired. |
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He refers generically to alterations ordered by the military, then writes that the army did not censor his account of events or materially alter the book. |
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This would include getting appliances fitted like personal pendants, security and censor lights, window and door locks, door chains and spy holes. |
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I did a broadcast in which I said, I'm signing off now because there's a censor standing there and I'm not supposed to say something and I'd rather say nothing. |
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Kelleher was appointed official film censor in 2003 and today he divides his time between Dublin and west Cork, where he lives with his wife and two children. |
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The government oversteps its discretionary power to censor political speech when protesters are discriminated against merely based on the content of their unpopular speech. |
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I think it was rosemary and frankincense in it perhaps, that the swinging censor of incense, and I just found it all so beautiful and evocative, that ritual going on. |
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But soon the censor, fearful of wider social problems, put the lid on the news. |
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As a result, such allegations are retained in family court and nothing is done to censor the perpetration of fraud upon the courts. |
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The law also gives the government the right to censor and close down newspapers at will in the name of national security. |
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Who was the fraud, the vicious self-appointed censor, or the artist who toiled daily to transmit to future ages his graceful and winning reveries? |
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In the long run of history, the censor and the inquisitor have always lost. |
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Denying the comic power of this cover would be another way to censor it, smothering the joke with anxieties. |
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I left because there was an attempt by an Ottawa bureaucrat to censor a paper of mine. |
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I have seen this world, the seamy side of it, in all places, but this stuff that we are allowing into this country, and the censor is allowing in, is absolutely disgusting. |
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Journalists are expected to censor themselves, and those that don't are fired and demoted or worse. |
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I wonder if anyone still thinks it's possible to disapprove without trying to silence, censor or punish. |
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The consensus was that you cannot censor the media, you cannot tell them what to do. |
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What I understand is that the leader of the Liberal Party wants to turn to the courts to censor the media. |
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All stories concerning military issues must be sent before publication to a military censor. |
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Security of employment means that staff cannot be unduly pressured to withdraw or censor unwelcome results. |
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The threat of having excessive sanctions imposed, in turn, may lead individuals to censor themselves unduly. |
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Since then similar games have seen the light of day and consumers continue to complain, governments around the world continue to censor them. |
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Hes an outspoken libertarian in his back-page soapbox columns, bashing Bible-thumpers and left-lib control freaks with equal venom for their efforts to censor comics. |
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During the mid-50s, facing a bilious Senate, the comic-book industry had agreed to censor itself, guaranteeing parents that their books would conform to basic moral standards. |
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She found a school newspaper a pedagogical instrument and so a nonpublic forum, allowing the school administration to censor content within the paper. |
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The debate has been often held about Google's role in acceding to the Chinese government's demands to censor search results. |
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Stations have to allow campaigns for federal office to buy time and cannot censor their ads, regardless of content. |
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Still, was it possible that Russian authorities could censor the Internet and make Meduza inaccessible for Russian readers? |
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Activists still have to reach the site on their own, escaping efforts to censor or monitor the internet in their home countries. |
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As the editor of a Bombay magazine during the Emergency, Mehta was a target of the censor. |
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The law would increase the authorities' powers to control and thus to censor everything printed in newspapers, as well as other media and other published material. |
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The Chinese government does not censor the dispatches of foreign correspondents, but the authorities can express disapproval of a writer's work by withholding visa renewals — a not uncommon practice. |
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China is challenging the notion that the Internet is impossible to control or censor, and if it succeeds there will be far-ranging implications, not only for the medium but for press freedom all over the world. |
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The sales manager stated that, aside from 'rejecting commercials that are in obvious and extremely bad taste, we do not feel it is our rightful role to act as a censor board. |
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Companies that provide internet services or network infrastructure should be reminded of their corporate social responsibility not to aid and abet authoritarian governments to censor free information. |
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A road was renamed if the censor ordered major work on it, such as paving, repaving, or rerouting. |
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I fear you would have to censor and expurgate with a free wrist movement. |
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The media has historically come under varying degrees of pressure over time to censor their criticism of the government. |
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The giraffe was characterized by its length, the hare by its mischievousness, it's slyness in Senegalese society and that's how Mame Less Dia was able to transmit certain messages without crossing the censor. |
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He wrote it exactly as he wanted to, without regard for the censor. |
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Basically a citizen's lobby group, they oppose all efforts to censor the ABC, or to compromise its independence through the introduction of advertising. |
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In 85, he nominated himself perpetual censor, the office that held the task of supervising Roman morals and conduct. |
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There is a sort of implicit class assumption that you censor the mass media like films, that the weak-minded lower orders might have their minds twisted. |
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So while it may truly serve the common good to expropriate my land, censor my books, or lock me up in prison, my rights to property, freedom of speech, and fair trial protect me. |
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It was because, for their own political reasons and to outwit the censor, they talked about reality, but in slightly fantasised and disguised terms. |
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It was considered daring at the time for the amount of cleavage exposed by her low-cut gowns, and had to be reshot for the American censor. |
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Except as otherwise provided on this Web site, Abbott will not edit, censor or otherwise control any content provided by third parties on any bulletin board, chat room or other similar forums posted on its Web site. |
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An editorial decision by DC to censor Veitch's final storyline caused both Gaiman and Delano to withdraw from the title. |
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Whether presidents, ministers, chiefs of staff, religious leaders or the heads of armed groups, these predators of press freedom have the power to censor, imprison, kidnap, torture and, in the worst cases, murder journalists. |
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Extending Ofcom's powers to enable it to take pre-emptive action would move it from its current position as a post-transmission regulator into the role of censor. |
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If we are 'offended' we can just look away, not censor. |
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Most of the Zulus involved had never been to a cinema, and black audiences were banned from seeing the film by the apartheid censor board, but special arrangements were made to show it to those who took part. |
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Later that same year the society put on a play called The Shewing-up of Blanco Posnet which had been banned by the censor. |
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There is no censorship but networks and their editors censor themselves. |
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In 47 he assumed the office of censor with Lucius Vitellius, which had been allowed to lapse for some time. |
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Also, the first aqueduct was the Aqua Appia built in 312 BC by the censor Appius. |
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Roman roads were named after the censor who had ordered their construction or reconstruction. |
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Indeed, when watched, most of us censor our speech and our behaviour. |
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The same person often served afterwards as consul, but the road name is dated to his term as censor. |
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But in some circumstances its denial by the elected assembly would amount to the exercise of a last resort political power to censor the judiciary, and to a constitutional crisis. |
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Since 2003, the Supervisory Board also includes a censor, a non-voting member, who may be called to attend all meetings of the Supervisory Board and has a consultative role in deliberations. |
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Vietnam models its efforts to censor internet content on those of China, but it lacks the resources that allow China to employ 50,000 tech-savvy workers to monitor the online world. |
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Young J: Why censor things if I have facts? |
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Ms. Colette Neuville was appointed by the Board of Directors meeting held on 13 April 2010 as censor of the Board, for a term of one year, pursuant to article 26 of the articles of association. |
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It also required the censor to appoint any newly elected magistrate to the senate. |
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After the ball was over and the taxi-cab was underway some one suggested midnight chow, permitted by the censor. |
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With the powers of a censor, Augustus appealed to virtues of Roman patriotism by banning all attire but the classic toga while entering the Forum. |
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Shortly before his assassination, the Senate named him censor for life and Father of the Fatherland, and the month of Quintilis was renamed July in his honour. |
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It's got plenty to make them blanch if and when it is shown them, although the New York State censor board okayed it with insignificant scissorings. |
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The headmaster was an even stricter censor of his boarding pupils' correspondence than the enemy censors had been of his own when the country was occupied. |
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If the road was older than the office of censor or was of unknown origin, it took the name of its destination or of the region through which it mainly passed. |
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The several sects perform the office of a censor morum over each other. |
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By law, Augustus held a collection of powers granted to him for life by the Senate, including supreme military command, and those of tribune and censor. |
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Although Sallust's purposes in writing have been debated over the years, it seems logical to classify him as a senatorial historian who adopted the attitude of a censor. |
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Religious, military, and cultural propaganda fostered a cult of personality, and by nominating himself perpetual censor, he sought to control public and private morals. |
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Next the Censor Board denied the film a certificate for a whole year until the Bombay High Court ordered that the film could be publicly screened without cuts. |
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One film was released in 2013 while another, titled Quom De Heere, could not get a clearance from the Censor Board. |
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In fact, his assumption of the office of Censor may have been motivated by a desire to see his academic labors bear fruit. |
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Most of these conspiracies took place before Claudius' term as Censor, and may have induced him to review the Senatorial rolls. |
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The historian Tacitus suggests that Claudius's ongoing term as Censor may have prevented him from noticing the affair before it reached such a critical point. |
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