The statute essentially applies the strictures imposed by section 246 to deals involving foreign equities. |
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In suburbs, one could make new friendships and associations without worrying about old social conventions and strictures and separations. |
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Teachers often complain that it imposes too many strictures on them that force them to teach too much too fast. |
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Significantly, ministers are to impose new strictures on police and social workers. |
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Those same strong students will ultimately supercede the strictures imposed in the educational studio, but at what cost? |
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Critics of both films offered strictures that suggest more than an awareness of this axiom. |
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You are released from restrictions and strictures that may have been binding for some time. |
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Understanding the historicity of Adorno's strictures and imperatives is an unavoidable task for critical theory and aesthetics today. |
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All patients should be evaluated for esophageal rings and strictures after the foreign body is removed. |
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Post inflammatory strictures most commonly develop in the colon, and are best demonstrated by barium enema. |
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The behemoth of Lothian Road is visibly swinging around to meet the strictures of the stock market. |
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To many minds, we live in a post-feminist era when denouncing sexist strictures is anachronistic. |
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They are also at risk for peptic strictures, which may obstruct the esophagus and result in dysphagia. |
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Many of their strictures are sheer nannying about the obvious, which hardly merits its respectable disguise in the shreds of theory. |
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It was an act of rebellion against the rigid strictures of both the contemporary social mores and the strict code of ballet. |
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We got sprung from the strictures of the nuclear family, parish church, small town by our aberrant sexualities. |
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Think of the company, and its blatant disregard for honesty, fair competition and legal strictures. |
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It was directed at those same teachers and bourgeois parents whose sanctions and strictures many of us young whelps so deeply resented. |
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For instance, some solicitors are required to trim professional standards in order to meet the firm's strictures on cost effectiveness. |
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Suspected oesophageal strictures at endoscopy were confirmed by barium swallow examination. |
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Will this direct reporting be enough to loosen the strictures of centralization and create the accountability and openness that is needed? |
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Whether or not it should be made available to everyone without any strictures is another matter. |
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The physician thoroughly examines the esophagus for signs of inflammation, hyperemia, ulcerations, or strictures. |
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Basing an exhibition around the strictures of three primary colours is a brave undertaking for any gallery. |
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She refused to accept their strictures, arguing that the colour in her scarf should not matter as long as she was decently covered. |
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By 1750 writers had begun to question the religious strictures laid down by men such as Samuel Moody. |
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Barium contrast studies and colonoscopy may show ulcers, strictures, a deformed cecum, incompetent ileocecal valve, or fistulas. |
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It must be rooted in the most difficult strictures of the scriptures of the major religions and the deepest springs of the human heart. |
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Unfettered by the strictures of plot, the movie homes in on local talent and captures the attitude towards taming the islands' cold waters. |
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Above these there is a vocal line so free and continuous that the strictures imposed by the repetition of the bass are scarcely felt. |
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Given that emphasis, it is not surprising that it is the pope's institutional strictures, not his optimism and venturesomeness, that capture the headlines. |
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The picture has been built up of stern, messianic Afrikaners indifferent to the strictures of a liberalistic and communist world. |
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Anastomotic strictures are also relatively frequent following GI tract surgery. |
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They grew up in the lap of luxury but also with the strictures of a religious and moral education. |
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Argentina, by contrast, had to contend with the strictures of its convertibility law and a largely unreformed regulatory framework. |
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Children cannot understand the seemingly senseless strictures imposed upon them by what appears to be unfeeling adults. |
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Esophageal foreign bodies can damage the esophagus and lead to strictures. |
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These tracts heed the critical strictures against both love and wit. |
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Composers such as Webern leapt on the concept and ran with it, going so far as to impose these same strictures on all aspects of music including rhythm. |
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The point is that Labour politicians see no reason to impose upon themselves the strictures against offensive language they demand be observed by others. |
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On stem-cell research, he stated that the strictures he imposed still gave scientists more than sixty usable lines of such cells, when they had only one. |
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The same intellectual strictures confined Hunter's achievements. |
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You experience freedom from restrictions imposed by ideas and strictures. |
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There is a powerful and self-regulating national interest in observing the strictures of the Convention, because prisoners are taken by both sides of any conflict. |
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The Venetian republic had three provveditori delle pompe, luxury police who ensured that sumptuary strictures were observed. |
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In present-day usage, despite Fowler's strictures, concern for classical and linguistic purity is minimal and the coining of etymological hybrids is casual and massive. |
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But there are some strictures and blockages at the present time that represent a very real lack of common sense. |
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Adario is also very worried about imminent changes in the laws in Brazil, which will once again relax the strictures against forest development. |
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Within those strictures, Heatherwick has done an admirable job of making this a stately vehicle. |
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We enter the realm of fantasy with your and others' strictures on the Regulatory Reform Bill. |
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We must protect our children by putting legal strictures in place to ensure meaningful and timely prosecution of their abusers. |
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She was warned to be inconspicuous and to avoid any contact with gang members, but the strictures and isolation became too much for Brenda. |
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That concern for me is accentuated when I read some of the strictures which come from a number of NGOs involved in the area. |
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Legislative strictures and requirements from supervisory bodies have to be met, that is true. |
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Some companies claimed to work legally while others deliberately avoided legal strictures or took advantage of the legal confusion to make money. |
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Mobile telecommunications operators, in contrast, operate without regulatory strictures on service coverage or prices. |
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In the southeast quadrant, the remaining primary forest has been set aside as a conservation area protected by legislation and supernatural strictures. |
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In practice, adhering to such strictures is onerous and difficult. |
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The Adjutant General replied that by the strictures of the 1918 act of Congress, no award could be made after three years had elapsed since the performance of the deed. |
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He received a medical degree in 1884 but was soon dismissed from Boston City Hospital after running afoul of the rigid strictures governing medical practice by young doctors. |
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Intestinal strictures and bowel obstruction may develop in patients with refractory sprue or celiac disease that has been untreated over a long period. |
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But the most frightening thing about the entire affair is that public figures like congressmen inserted themselves into the case in order to uphold religious strictures. |
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They remained tied to the strictures of their religion, caste, and customs, but now with an overlay of British Victorian attitudes. |
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It also opens the door to legislative evasion of Apprendi's strictures by simply redrafting every aggravator as a mitigator. |
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While his oath is surely no syllogistic argument, it is a performative utterance to be taken with the utmost seriousness, especially when the strictures against taking God's name in vain are recalled. |
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While Habermas' tripartite epistemological framework has been fundamental in liberating knowledge from the strictures of instrumental approaches, it has been critiqued from several perspectives. |
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Especially with the advantages of incumbency: freed from the strictures of electoral hope, Gillard has the unique opportunity to pass a law requiring every taxpayer to own a duck. |
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Quite apart from the endless physical barriers, some of them quite newly installed despite the strictures of the Equalities Act, disabled people are often isolated by the embarrassment of the rest of us. |
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Britain can help other non-euro countries who gibe at the new treaty's strictures as well as euro-zone countries that want to resist protectionism or over-regulation including Germany. |
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This is partly a reaction to traditional social strictures which stifled individual expression and helped to maintain the domination of elites in our society. |
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I have no information on the record before me to suggest that the strictures of the exemption would not be amply served by severing only the name of the patient in this case. |
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Bilateral links with and supports from possible countries of destination may also help to attenuate the strictures of the countries of first asylum. |
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Mr. Haas, 57, is an Austrian composer associated with the French spectral school, which evolved in the 1970s as a rebellion against the strictures of serialist music. |
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Harry doubted that Snape had even heard her strictures on Mulciber and Avery. |
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As such, the surveillance arguably defies the strictures of limitedness that support a conclusion that a search is reasonable. |
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Is the fact that Mr Bush sat silently in hour-long meetings with his treasury secretary, while Mr O'Neill prattled on, a sign of ignorance or of tolerance Arguably, Mr O'Neill's strictures reflect a clash of temperaments. |
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Sadly, however, most sexual assaults occur where the direct strictures of military command hierarchy fail to reach. |
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Writers are fleer than critics to ignore the strictures of periodisation, the interminable debates about location and positioning. |
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Penalties for transgressing its religious and political strictures, even in word, include hefty fines and jail sentences, beatings and beheadings. |
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This is a new treatment in the ureteral strictures resolution in Veterinary Urology, although it is not a common affection, it usually appears as a consequence of ureteritis and in the iatrogenic female genital surgery. |
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Flexible cystoscopy in surgical repair of traumatic urethral strictures in children. |
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For long segment strictures, buccal mucosa graft augmented dorsal onlay urethroplasty is preferred. |
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Lawsuits have been filed and claims have been asserted against Scandipharm and certain suppliers stemming from allegations that, among other things, certain products caused colonic strictures. |
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Then, in March, ICARUS, another experiment that studies the diaphanous particles, which are nearly as ubiquitous in the universe as photons, yet rarely interact with anything, found them to obey Einstein's strictures. |
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Would he be so vain and blandished as to limit his strictures simply because the system now in place paraded in his name? |
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Indeed, if the boson's properties obey the strictures laid down for it by Peter Higgs and the other physicists who predicted it way back in the 1960s, the moment of discovery may turn out to be something of an anticlimax. |
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While most strictures in Barrett's esophagus are located in the distal esophagus, some patients may develop ringlike or tapered strictures in the midesophagus. |
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The chapters following this one examine the questions that confront any phenomenologist who suspends the strictures against experiencing the divine. |
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In the Anglican tradition, bishops must be consecrated according to the strictures of apostolic succession, which Anglicans consider one of the marks of Catholicity. |
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That interpretation is reinforced in chapter seven, on Hegel's treatment of the proofs for God's existence, preeminently the ontological proof, rescued from Kant's strictures. |
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However, proctocolitis or inflammatory involvement of perirectal or perianal lymphatic tissues resulting in fistulas and strictures may also occur. |
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Because it can be removed, physicians can use the Alveolus stent to apply temporary and minimally invasive treatments for patients with benign lumenal strictures. |
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