Political events were to intervene, however, as the French Wars of Religion began. |
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Less controversial examples could be cited in justification of the right to intervene. |
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This provides the opportunity to intervene before the exacerbation develops fully. |
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Surely humans have the ability to intervene in any number of moral and ethical issues purely by virtue of their sentience? |
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It is nonsensical to claim that it is not the Government's role to intervene to protect people from harmful exposure to tobacco smoke. |
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For example, administrators track dropout rates from particular courses, and sometimes intervene when these rates increase. |
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So I guess we're only supposed to intervene when it will hurt our interests. |
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America cannot intervene, because the nation exists only as an abstraction. |
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The controversial move is one aspect of a massive drive to get doctors to intervene with heavy drinkers before they become chronic alcoholics. |
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It was concerned about the scheme's viability and the cost of property acquisitions it was asked to intervene in. |
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So an entire stanza or page might at times intervene between the M and the U of Mud. |
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It is inaccurate to call the tsunami an act of God, because God did not intervene to provoke the disaster. |
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The applicant in the proceedings below would be supporting an application by WEL to intervene. |
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The duke, who sits in judgement, will not intervene as Portia enters in the guise as a lawyer to defend Antonio. |
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The G-series is also outfitted with an electronic stability program designed to intervene in moments of vehicle yaw or wheelspin. |
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Martin looked at me, pretending to be highly affronted, but the other cashier chose this moment to intervene. |
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The cops intervene and the commuter walks away, shaking his head and readjusting his collar. |
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The last of the two knock-downs looked serious enough to force the referee to intervene but on each occasion Grant fought back. |
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We also need to be willing to intervene in the labor market on the demand side, by helping to create new jobs. |
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Through laws requiring development to meet housing needs or through other means, we will, when required, intervene to ensure a fair market. |
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They asked the police and Social Services to intervene because they feared the addict she was in love with was leading her astray. |
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They reduce the frequency and intensity with which the authorities must intervene as lenders of last resort to avert systemic crises. |
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I don't know about the UN's legal rights, but surely there's a moral responsibility to intervene. |
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Let's face it, the holder of a card with Wells IS NOT periodically resurveyed as a credit as long as delinquency does not intervene. |
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Local police had to intervene when a row between Labour and Lib Dem supporters threatened to turn nasty. |
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The federal government is legally limited in its powers to intervene in the refugee determination process. |
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According to reports, an off-duty police officer tried to intervene and was struck by the robber before he was apprehended and arrested. |
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However the ITC does not have a statutory locus to intervene in editorial judgments of this nature. |
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Nicola Sturgeon, the SNP's health spokeswoman, challenged ministers to intervene to ease the logjam. |
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Police went to intervene but Kitchen drove off in his car and refused to stop, despite police tailing him. |
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They are also calling for powers to allow authorities to intervene to protect young people who are at risk from drugs. |
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Not surprisingly, the avowedly liberal author was a trenchant critic of the decision to intervene militarily. |
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We show that fast can intervene between VOICE and VP, but that it does not have access to the result state of telic verbs. |
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Thus the mantra of the right, personal responsibility, requires that the State intervene. |
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If the tourism board wants to refuse to play ball, then the government will intervene. |
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There is no virtue in refusing to intervene while a dictator attempts mass murder. |
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As the game kicked off, winter threatened to intervene as snow drifted across the ground but fortunately it remained light. |
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The tahsildar had to intervene and put up a barrier blocking the movement of people and vehicles. |
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President Eisenhower was furious and the Soviets, meanwhile, threatened to intervene on behalf of Egypt. |
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We can show how the resulting infrastructure mediates social power, and how activists can intervene in the process. |
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They reportedly heard their mother arguing with the perpetrator and attempted to intervene, when he dealt several chops to the sisters. |
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We can constantly intervene in discussions and debates and ask why questions are framed in the way they are. |
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A police inspector standing nearby saw what was happening but did not intervene to help the plaintiff restrain the prisoner. |
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This self-styled superhero often spies kids getting into trouble but accepts he cannot intervene and show them the error of their ways. |
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We cannot intervene with the police to get British citizens released, nor spring them from jail. |
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They forced police in riot gear and a number of mounted police officers to intervene. |
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Specifically, teachers should know whether to intervene when a word is miscalled, when to intervene, and how to appropriately respond. |
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It is not easy for third parties to intervene in bilateral contentious litigation. |
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Their task was to delay any attempted enemy landing for long enough to allow the mobile units stationed in the interior to intervene. |
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These new powers will give us the ability to intervene when there are signs of trouble and get rid of the troublemakers. |
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The cotton factory owners were pleading with the government to intervene on the side of the South in order to lift the blockade. |
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Many pastors, youth ministers, elders, and parishioners effectively intervene to help such troubled families. |
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The city is an unending test, a constant barrage of decisions about how to interact or not, whether to intervene or not. |
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The boys slut-shame the girls, the girls slut-shame each other, and I always try and intervene. |
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Today we have a Protestant born-again who tries to enlist the Pope to intervene in an American election. |
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The scream carried a vain hope that someone would do something to intervene. |
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They say the government has no right to intervene, that her next of kin should make the decision. |
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At times, a teacher must intervene to check and control a child's impulse, or to help a child verbalize a feeling. |
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But if you are going to intervene in the north, and abandon your interests in the south for the nonce, then you may as well do so quickly. |
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The family must come to the mortuary tomorrow to collect the body for burial, or the authorities will be forced to intervene again. |
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His clothes are shabby, his shoes worn, but he is always ready to intervene if some of the young men become a bit obstreperous. |
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Labor could be up for an electoral caning over Mark Latham's plan to intervene in the way parents raise difficult children. |
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Even adults who are strangers are expected to intervene and challenge young people behaving in an anti-social manner. |
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Even teachers are reluctant to intervene and often feel it is not their responsibility to discipline young people. |
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The sadhus are ready to intervene to save Hindu religion if the army let the country down, he adds. |
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Socialists attempt to study history in order to intervene in our own society and change it for the better. |
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He reminds us that He will be with us and that the water will not overwhelm us, He will intervene and deliver us. |
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Having previously described the painfulness of chest tube removal, my colleagues and I decided to intervene. |
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If the president would find the gumption to intervene in the war, this horror show would stop immediately. |
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When these men appear in leet records it is often to intervene in cases to persuade bailiffs to pardon offenders. |
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When nations intervene, manipulating grief, they offer idolatrous, nationalistic, vengeful substitutions for the grace of God and true community. |
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Immaturity may be a reason not to leave you to your own devices, but those who intervene cannot simply impose their choice on you. |
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Feminists imply that due to phallocracy rape was never seriously punished before they began to intervene. |
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The application to intervene is consented to and, indeed, strongly supported by The National Post. |
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I am calling on the minister to intervene now and have the contractor give a commitment as to the completion date. |
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Both Conservative and Labour Governments of the early 1970s tried to intervene, but ineffectively and much too late. |
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This forced the judge to intervene and rephrase the question in plain comprehensible English. |
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In general, it means that whenever a public body exceeds or abuses the powers vested in it the courts may intervene to correct the infraction. |
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In the current era, it's rare for much ink or air time to challenge the right of the U.S. government to directly intervene in other countries. |
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And second, it's probably not good to intervene in the internal affairs of a nation that is looking for a worthy path of development. |
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The workers have tried, without success, to get the Korean consul general to intervene. |
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Synchronistic events frequently intervene to warn us if we are on the wrong path. |
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Then the Justice Department decides whether to intervene and litigate the suit for itself. |
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In our scheme of things it matters not, or it is of no import, whether the people intervene by accident of fate or by way of contrivance. |
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It appears to have been a device used to intervene in dramatic fashion in the nation's political affairs. |
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Previously, fourth officials could observe, but not intervene during matches. |
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And his critics largely do not oppose his view that Western powers should have the right to intervene militarily in troublesome states. |
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At numerous stages in the case, social workers had failed to intervene decisively to save the boy. |
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If courts are to intervene by the imposition of public law standards upon a private body they must adopt a careful and principled approach. |
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They advised the group that they were on a construction site but did not intervene in proceedings. |
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The petition calls on the government to intervene to stop the planned deregulation of letter post delivery. |
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When denial resulted in a patient's refusal to develop these skills, we had to intervene. |
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Only in this way can it intervene in social developments as an independent political force. |
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They loved him even more when he digressed from his prepared speech to intervene in domestic British politics. |
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He then leaves the figures outside to be dried by the sun and wind, allowing the elements to intervene unpredictably in the artistic process. |
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To achieve this he was, unlike many free traders, ready to intervene diplomatically or if necessary militarily. |
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He also pleaded with the international community to intervene and help disarm the rebels threatening his capital. |
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Given the impact of one's decisions on a wider group of people, oughtn't government intervene to prevent that wider discommodity? |
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After a political discussion about the campaign we discuss how to intervene that week. |
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One problem frequently encountered is determining when and how to intervene. |
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Many other factors may intervene to distort or completely eliminate the influences of seed dispersal patterns on subsequent distributions. |
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Starr stresses that universities are required under Title IX to investigate and intervene in sexual assault cases. |
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And he is asking a judge to intervene and force Kim to take some kind of parenting classes to understand what he says is the meaning of co-parenting. |
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Nothing in it was meant to change the basic operations of the capitalist economy or to intervene aggressively in class relations. |
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If you could intervene with some sort of miracle that would limit her to wee-weeing only two to three times per day instead of fifteen, it would really help me out a lot. |
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At a meeting in South Africa tomorrow, campaigners trying to protect the gorillas will make a last-ditch attempt to persuade Congolese government ministers to intervene. |
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We briefly consider helping out by setting up a huge plasma screen outside parliament showing back-to-back episodes of Trisha, but budgetary constraints intervene. |
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One of the first acts of the duumvirate was reopen the national wage case and intervene in favour of the principle of equal pay for work of equal value. |
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The fleet rendered Britain invulnerable to direct attack, while its wealth allowed it to intervene on the continent even though Britain did not possess a large army. |
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Many Syrian rebels remain furious with what they view as a cynical U.S. decision to intervene in Syria against ISIS but not Assad. |
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If we intervene only in extremity, only in order to stop mass murder and mass deportation, the idea that we are defending X's norms and not Y's is simply wrong. |
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So far the authorities are powerless to intervene because the building under construction conforms exactly to the plans approved by the local council. |
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Russian Church Patriarch Kirill asked God to intervene to end the machinations of those who wanted to separate Russia and Ukraine. |
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Convinced that he has delivered evidence of his employer's wife's infidelity, Harry tries to intervene by bugging the hotel room where he fears that she will be murdered. |
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But people appear increasingly reluctant to intervene in public places. |
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Yet in French the adverbial has to intervene between verb and object. |
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And when God and Tinker Bell and the tooth fairy intervene, we have beautiful children and perfect lives. |
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For this reason he reserved the right of the state to intervene so that the economically powerless could not be exploited by the economically powerful. |
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Under Labour's bill, consideration of development plans would be suspended after local elections intervene, so incoming members would have time to consider the plan. |
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The chair of the meeting had to intervene to say that this debate would be revisited at the next conference and could we get back to the industrial stuff! |
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Such errors normally related to the blatant misconstruction of a statute, and in limited circumstances the courts could intervene to correct the erroneous decision. |
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Some said the administration should intervene and cancel the event. |
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It is possible that the national Newspaper Guild will intervene and find some face-saving way to stage a second vote. |
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There will be times when things are going so well that sadness seems like a dim memory, and then there will be those times when we long for God to intervene. |
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Least of all would it be permissible for this Court to intervene in respect of the initiation of proceedings by a House of Parliament against a federal judge. |
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But if what it overwhelmingly finds is smallness, spiritual squalor, it would seem to be required of the affirmer to intervene and raise the tone of the world. |
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Government has been implored to intervene in the labour stand-off between the company and its workers following failure by management to pay gratuity to over 400 employees. |
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Deism is the belief in a Supreme Being who is a creator who does not intervene in the universe. |
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Earlier, the Supreme Court refused to intervene in the matter on the ground that the President was seized of the matter under Article 72 of the Constitution. |
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The American Depression worsened when banking panics swept undiversified and overextended rural banks and the Federal Reserve failed to intervene. |
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Please, Your Excellencies, consider my case with justice and intervene on my behalf. |
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When a lead character is put in real jeopardy, there can be no question that some circumstance will intervene and preserve the order of right and wrong. |
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The USA claimed that Latin America was its inviolable sphere of influence and claimed the right to intervene whenever American interests were threatened. |
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In one story in this collection, a sheltered young boy witnesses the abduction of his neighbor and decides whether to intervene. |
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On October 24, the Soviets threatened to intervene in the fighting. |
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Regardless, we must remember that, while we are at war with no democracy, we have had to intervene in a lot of autocracies in the last twenty years. |
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Maybe most importantly, the app includes interactive features to intervene before a relapse occurs. |
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They have no idea how to intervene politically in global politics. |
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Moreover they know that if they become too flagrant in their suppression of opposition and commit atrocities, the United Nations stands ready to intervene to overthrow them. |
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When the U.S. did intervene militarily, such as in the balkans, air power was the only real approach considered palatable. |
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Jackson threatened a boycott, and NBA commissioner David Stern was at one point reportedly contacted in hopes that he would intervene. |
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However, he claimed the government can intervene if any content on Google or Yahoo, or any other network, can conflagrate tension in India. |
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Johansen grabbed the ball to take the penalty after he was decked in the box, only for sub Leigh Griffiths to intervene and pull rank. |
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Senator Labras O'Murchu has pledged to lobby Brian Cowen to intervene with the British Government over the case. |
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When the war does intervene, it serves as a source of dramatic irony. |
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In 1994, the United Nations Assistance Mission for Rwanda failed to intervene in the Rwandan Genocide in the face of Security Council indecision. |
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Subcortical structures seem to intervene bilaterally invoicing, for only bilateral subcortical lesions lead to lasting loss of voice. |
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Workers had to intervene when two pupils from Colaiste na Sceilge in Co Kerry pushed a classmate over railings towards the endangered bongos. |
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It has been proven that making someone self-aware of the situation significantly increases the likelihood that a bystander will intervene. |
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It is beneficial for tenants to intervene because they would be able to stay and MCI increase until the case was decide. |
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Simms also admitted assaulting Samantha Morris by beating when she tried to intervene against the punches and kicks raining down on her husband. |
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Soon after, the US president, Woodrow Wilson, attempted to intervene as a peacemaker, asking in a note for both sides to state their demands. |
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It is true that when political philosophers have tried to intervene directly in political life, they have usually come unstuck. |
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Following Jugurtha's usurpation of the throne of Numidia, a loyal ally of Rome since the Punic Wars, Rome felt compelled to intervene. |
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Louis took no action to intervene as Henry steadily increased his power in Brittany. |
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The system of spheres of influence by which powerful nations intervene in the affairs of others continues to the present. |
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The Federal Reserve, Treasury, and Securities and Exchange Commission took several steps on September 19 to intervene in the crisis. |
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Globally, the International Monetary Fund can take certain steps to intervene to prevent anticipated defaults. |
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This allowed the US to intervene in activities related to illegal drug transport in Latin America. |
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The hope was the government would intervene to reorganize and rationalize the industry, and raise the subsidy. |
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Wells was a friend of many years, and tried to intervene when Barrie's marriage fell apart. |
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However, Saudi Arabia condemned the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in 1990 and asked the US to intervene. |
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In May 1991, EPRDF forces advanced on Addis Ababa and the Soviet Union did not intervene to save the government side. |
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To avoid the catastrophe of open warfare between the Bruce and Balliol, the Guardians and other Scots magnates asked Edward I to intervene. |
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Gladstone, a prime minister in retirement, called on Britain to intervene alone. |
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This time, Pembroke made his excuses and declined to intervene, and war broke out in May. |
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Bartholomew's wife, Margaret, took the bait and her men killed several of Isabella's retinue, giving Edward an excuse to intervene. |
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The King appealed for his son to return, and for Charles to intervene on his behalf, but this had no effect. |
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Parliament gained the upper hand in England, however, and by 1646 its armies were able to intervene in North Wales. |
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However, his case was marked by controversy about whether and how to intervene, and in 2006, Luna was killed by a boat propeller. |
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In 1794, he invited British forces under Lord Hood to intervene to free Corsica from French rule. |
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Napoleon was forced to intervene personally, defeating several Spanish armies and forcing a British army to retreat. |
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In cases in which a third state's interests are affected, that state may be permitted to intervene in the case and participate as a full party. |
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For the English, the inability of their navy and nearby coastal forts such as Deal Castle to intervene was a humiliation. |
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He attempted to convince Pope Innocent III to intervene in the conflict, but Innocent's efforts were unsuccessful. |
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He refused William's request for the earldom of Northumbria, but did not intervene in Scotland itself and focused on his continental problems. |
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In the hours following the liberation, members of the British liberating forces were obliged to intervene to prevent revenge attacks. |
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Haakon IV made an effort to intervene from afar, inviting all the chiefs of Iceland to a peace conference in Norway. |
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The Imperial Chamber Court could only intervene in criminal cases if basic procedural rules had been violated. |
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Concerned that other Greek states might intervene, Alexander made it look as though he was preparing to attack Illyria instead. |
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It is widely believed that by showing respect for ancestors in these ways, they may intervene on behalf of the living. |
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This conditions allowed the Portuguese Navy to intervene in virtually all the territory, including in its hinterland regions. |
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These new systems greatly increase the Navy's capacity to intervene in the high seas and the shores. |
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Some claim that he was invited to intervene by the heirs of the Visigothic King, Wittiza, in the Visigothic civil war. |
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Letters of complaint and pleas to intervene were exchanged between the Duke of Braganza and Queen Isabella I of Castile. |
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The ruling Zamorin of Calicut refused to intervene, prompting the frustrated factor Aires Correia to take matters into his own hands. |
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Montevideo rewarded Brazil's support by signing treaties that confirmed Brazil's right to intervene in Uruguay's internal affairs. |
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The syndic Henri Aulbert tried to intervene, carrying with him the baton of office that symbolised his power. |
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The bishop of Constance tried to intervene in defending the mass and the veneration of images. |
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This is an approach that allows the court to try to intervene in helping the parties to agree with one another in sorting out the case. |
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Gorbachev rejected the Brezhnev Doctrine, which held that Moscow would intervene if socialism were threatened in any state. |
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If any irregularity chanced to intervene and to cause misapprehensions, he gave them not leave to root and fasten by concealment. |
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Where Henry did intervene personally in the running of the country, Elton argued, he mostly did so to its detriment. |
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In 1882, ongoing civil disturbances in Egypt prompted Britain to intervene, extending a hand to France. |
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Another of Eisenhower's concerns was the possibility of a wider war with the Soviet Union after it threatened to intervene on the Egyptian side. |
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He immediately went on the offensive, hoping to defeat the forces of Piedmont before their Austrian allies could intervene. |
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By late March 1941, following Bulgaria's signing of the Tripartite Pact, the Germans were in position to intervene in Greece. |
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The Lord President of the Privy Council then advised that lay members should not intervene after the Law Lords had announced their opinions. |
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Two prominent Canadian authors argue that government at times has to intervene to ensure competition in large and important industries. |
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The market might be efficient in allocating resources but not in distributing income, he wrote, making it necessary for society to intervene. |
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As a result, the pope was often called upon to intervene in quarrels, affirm monarchs, and decide jurisdictions. |
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In addition to territorial disputes, the League also tried to intervene in other conflicts between and within nations. |
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The League members, however, would not intervene in the Spanish Civil War nor prevent foreign intervention in the conflict. |
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In 1994, the UN Assistance Mission for Rwanda failed to intervene in the Rwandan Genocide amid indecision in the Security Council. |
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Henry took this opportunity to intervene personally in Ireland. |
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The allegiance of Burgundy remained fickle, but the English focus on expanding their domains in the Low Countries left them little energy to intervene in the rest of France. |
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Before Moody can kill Harry, Dumbledore, McGonagall and Snape intervene. |
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Did God intervene when Arius suddenly took ill and died while waiting for an anti-Arian bishop, under orders of the Emperor, to readmit Arius to the church? |
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This force is intended to act as a naval element of power projection, able to intervene in any place of the national interest strategic space of Portugal. |
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When William Rufus became king of England after his father's death, Malcolm did not intervene in the rebellions by supporters of Robert Curthose which followed. |
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China's nuclear test of 1964, as well as its repeated threats to intervene in support of Pakistan in the 1965 war, convinced India to develop nuclear weapons. |
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Nelson kept the Jacobins imprisoned and approved of a wave of further executions, refusing to intervene despite pleas for clemency from the Hamiltons and the Queen of Naples. |
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He did not believe Britain or France would intervene in the conflict. |
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His bedside manner had improved, and likely so had his diagnostic skills, but his ability to intervene was still limited to leeches, hacksaws, pliers, and a few tonics. |
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The agent's end desires are not in question, but if the agent is acting in a way inconsistent with those end desires, then a weak paternalist would be willing to intervene. |
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However, in many countries around the world, governments seek to intervene in the free market in order to achieve certain social or political agendas. |
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In his book The White Man's Burden, the economist William Easterly created two broad categories for those who intervene in the problems afflicting developing countries. |
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However, Milan refused to host French representatives fearing espionage and that the French representatives would intervene in its internal affairs. |
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Cars will use a fusion of all these technologies using sensors and cameras on rural and semirural roads initially, with passengers who will have the choice to intervene. |
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Such was Kipling's popularity that he was asked by his friend Max Aitken to intervene in the 1911 Canadian election on behalf of the Conservatives. |
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George spent the summers of 1740 and 1741 in Hanover, where he was more able to intervene directly in European diplomatic affairs in his capacity as elector. |
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The British government referred the problem to the League's Council, but Finland would not let the League intervene, as they considered it an internal matter. |
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This effectively crippled William's power north of the border, and by 1212 John had to intervene militarily to support the Scottish king against his internal rivals. |
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Hitler told them that the British had no hope of survival, and ought to negotiate, but were hoping to get Russia to intervene and halt German oil supplies. |
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The presence of extremist groups in Mali prompted the French to intervene in January 2013, when the mostly Al Qaida affiliated militants were making their way towards Bamako. |
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As protector of public interest, the department may apply for judicial reviews and may intervene in any cases involving the greater public interest. |
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Paleonymy stands in Takeuchi's text as a device to think such older words or concepts anew, therebv allowing them to effectively intervene in critical discourse. |
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Possessing nuclear superiority, for example, allowed Eisenhower to face down Soviet threats to intervene in the Middle East during the 1956 Suez Crisis. |
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All five cases returned to the High Court after judges at the European Court of Human Rights refused to intervene and stop the Home Secretary extraditing them. |
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A civil war in Northern Ireland would cause many deaths there and severe consequences for the Republic, as the public would demand that it intervene to protect nationalists. |
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The promulgation of a common constitution for Denmark and Schleswig in November 1863 prompted Otto von Bismarck to intervene and Prussia and Austria declared war on Denmark. |
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Section 30 strengthens the EHRC's ability to apply for judicial review and to intervene in court proceedings, through giving explicit statutory provision for such action. |
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The Second Constitutional Settlement was completed in part to allay confusion and formalize Augustus' legal authority to intervene in Senatorial provinces. |
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However, in the cases of administrative acts or decisions under judicial review, the court can only intervene on the grounds of ultra vires, hence making the judgment void. |
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After years of negotiation, three Great Powers, Russia, the United Kingdom, and France, decided to intervene in the conflict and each nation sent a navy to Greece. |
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Meanwhile, the city of Amphissa began to work lands that were sacred to Apollo near Delphi, a sacrilege that gave Philip the opportunity to further intervene in Greek affairs. |
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But when his mother, Jayne Hines, who suers from multiple sclerosis and is paralysed from the waist down, tried to intervene, he pushed her against a wall. |
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Venice did not intervene to help its ally Pisa in its crisis. |
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Forced to intervene personally, Henry carried out an effective, if expensive, campaign with the help of the Lusignans and stabilised the province. |
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He had no choice but to rely on local warlords' military power, and gradually lost his interest in politics and ceased to intervene in political struggles. |
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A consequential belief is that God takes no notice of everyday events on earth and will not generally intervene until it is meet to bring the world to an end. |
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