Ms Sandbach argued the delivery of the 3% annual reduction target may only be possible at present by the virtue of the economic downturn.
Nor did the trustee prove that the amount of interest in the homestead increased in value by virtue of the HECM transaction.
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We have come 180 degrees from 1968, when Kevin Phillips in his landmark political study of that election, "The Emerging Republican Majority, " noted that by virtue of capturing the loyalty of the anti-civil rights whites of the South along with a majority of voters from the nation's heartland, Republicans put themselves in a position to be the dominant party in the country after decades of Democratic rule.
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The First Amendment claim was similarly an argument that his right to freedom of association was unconstitutionally infringed by virtue of the threat of criminal prosecution for mere non-criminal membership.
But there will be larger implications of the suit, just by virtue of the fact that this job happens to be on television.
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Notts clinched the title on the final day of the season by virtue of winning more games after they and Somerset finished level on points.
Half of them were appointed by the governor, while the others served by virtue of their senior government positions.
The omnipresent obligations associated with the law are already addressed throughout all phases of military planning and mission execution, by virtue of the DoD Law of War Program, the Law of Armed Conflict, the Uniform Code of Military Justice, and Rules of Engagement.
We're separated from the public by virtue of the security, they make it quite quiet in the back stretch, and all of those things suit me.
For English fans, persistent failure on the sport's greatest stage, with the exception of the country's home triumph in 1966, will always be tainted by the idea that English football once ruled the world -- even if only by virtue of the fact that no other country outside the British Isles had yet to discover the sport.
You might say that a graduate of Montclair State University, a school that admits 55% of its applicants, is in the 94th percentile of all American adults by virtue of being in the 81st percentile of the 30% of adults with a college degree (taking enrollment size into account).
But the thing about governors is that by nature, and if not by nature then by virtue of the position, you end up having to be pragmatic, because you have to figure out what works.
The president of CNPC also mentioned that Cuba, by virtue of a resolution of the Minister of Culture, created in 2004 the Commission for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage, which proofs the importance the country grants to the protection of these manifestations of identity.
The arbitration provision found in the Zappos.com Terms of Use purportedly binds all users of the website by virtue of their browsing.
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Mr. Greenberg is an outsider by virtue of not being a psychiatrist but an insider by virtue of serving as one of the investigators involved in field-testing some proposed diagnoses on actual patients.
The management company, by virtue of the HMA, acquires a leasehold interest in the hotel.
The remaining supermajors qualify by virtue of the fat wads of cash they are all sitting on.
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And we really have fundamentally altered the landscape of the United States by virtue of putting so much emphasis and so much power behind the national security establishment that is located in the Washington area.
What is indeed astonishing is that, in this context, nobody seems to be ready to try the straightforward device to trim the public debt by virtue of selling the huge Italian state holdings or severely cutting public spending.
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The Robins, who were only ahead of Cas in the table before the match by virtue of a better points difference, have now moved above city rivals Hull FC to finish in seventh place.
I'm saying that our preference here is to go ahead and seat the delegates who have been selected by virtue of the vote - a record turnout vote I should add, January 29th - and have those votes not be disenfranchised but rather be counted as they should be in a democracy.
Would he feel the same way, if as a result of the perjury committed as to the rate of speed, that someone's rights were erased from the case by virtue of that perjury?
Sierra Leone, Liberia and Ghana qualified for the biennial tournament by virtue of finishing in the top three places at the first African Amputees Nations Cup in Freetown earlier in the year.
An example in the business world might be a higher corporate officer authorizing or even simply knowing of the filing of a tax return, or, for that matter, merely occupying a position in the hierarchy where by virtue of that position he is technically in charge of the operation that produced the return.
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ExxonMobil is also working in the Permian Basin again, in part by virtue of the XTO deal.
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Quite unlike taxes on income that are paid no matter what, with a consumption tax individuals would be able to limit the amount of money handed to the government by virtue of spending less.
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Well, we had the chance to shrink banks by virtue of letting the substitution effect take place whereby institutions outside of finance would take their place.
In our CEO succession work, we find that organizations often assume that the COO or even the CFO, by virtue of their knowledge of the business and their familiarity to the board, are best positioned to take on the top role.
The idea that Representatives automatically are absolved of their campaign promises by virtue of their election is both the height of elitism and unspeakably cynical.
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Though the Front is still unlikely to gain more than a handful of seats at most, no fewer than 134 of its candidates have got through to second rounds by virtue of winning the first-round votes of at least 12.5% of registered voters in their constituencies.
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