These standards call for meaningful participation by a faculty body in deciding whether a financial exigency exists or is imminent. |
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The innovative readings in this essay arise from the theoretical exigency I mentioned as requisite these days. |
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Virtually all of the Administration's actions may well be held to be entirely constitutional, depending on the exigency of the circumstances. |
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Financial exigency could thus join seamlessly with reorganization to become an everyday occurrence. |
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Look, given the exigency of the situation, my requirements must be fulfilled with utmost haste. |
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Equally halting, the ants simile in canto XXVI represents the occasional conflict between narrative clarity and structural exigency. |
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Still, how far does exigency take you, before you're simply recreating the same dictatorship you came to overthrow? |
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In truth, the exemption of fishing craft is essentially an act of grace, and not a matter of right, and it is extended or denied as the exigency is believed to demand. |
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Situations of exigency and urgency may affect the content and the modalities of the duty to bargain in good faith. |
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The investigating committee concluded that the administration had acted without demonstrating financial exigency that mandated the termination of continuing appointments. |
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Emergency powers are supposed to apply only while the exigency persists. |
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There are no definable formulae, but a categorical imperative for artistic exigency, fuelling constant critical examination. |
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The Division explained that the shortened bidding time was due to an exigency. |
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Each client, no matter where he is located, is served with the same exigency of reliability and quality. |
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And we may be assured that divine grace, which capacitates for the first act of self-denial, is sufficient, in its more copious communications, for every possible exigency. |
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Every human death must be attributed to an accidental cause, such as heart disease, pneumonia, or some other exigency. |
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The leader combines friendliness with firmness. Her kindness is a mixture of exigency and tenderness. |
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Lines that support such a journey have been assumed in what a Greek genitive expresses, the indefinite work of anthropology, in its etymological exigency. |
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After countless false dawns, Japan may at last have the combination of political circumstance and economic exigency to make reform inevitable and, in Mr Abe, a leader with the nous to bring it about. |
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Summary: C2C responds to the exigency of tackling the issue of fragmentations in the cross-border logistic supply chains by better connecting ports with their hinterland and ports with other ports. |
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Louis XIII's overnight lit de justice, as much as it owes political exigency, constituted a ceremonial fulfillment of that new definition of royal succession. |
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