April 2001 Sample Clauses

April 2001. The new National Negotiating Committee issues the terms of the Local Framework Recognition and Procedure Agreement.
AutoNDA by SimpleDocs
April 2001. Ed. by X.X. Xxxxxxx. Oriens et Occidens 15. Stuttgart: Xxxxx Xxxxxxx, pp. 45–53. Xxxxxx, U. and X.X. Xxxxx (1986). “Ein safaitischer Xxxxxxxx vom Ǧebel Qurma”. In: Zeitschrift des Deutschen Palästina‐Vereins 102, pp. 110–112.
April 2001. Ed. by X.X. Xxxxxxx. Oriens et Occidens 15. Stuttgart: Xxxxx Xxxxxxx, pp. 25–44. Xxxxxxxxx, X.X. (1860). Reisebericht Über Hauran und die Trachonen: Nebst Einem Anhange Über die Sabäischen Denkmäler in Ostsyrien. Berlin: Xxxxxx. Xxxxxxx, X.X. (1937). A study of the Lihyanite and Thamudic inscriptions. University of Toronto Studies 3. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. — (1957). Safaitic inscriptions from Jordan. Near and Middle East Series 2. University of Toronto Press. Xxxxxxx, X.X. and X.X. Xxxxxxx (1978). Inscriptions from Fifty Safaitic Cairns. Near and Middle East Series 6. University of Toronto Press. Xxxxxxx, X.X. and X.X. Xxxx (1970). Ancient records from North Arabia. Near and Middle East Series 6. Toronto: Toronto University Press. Xxxxxxxxx, X. (2000). “Safaitische Inschriften aus dem Ǧabal al-⏴Arab”. In: Damaszener Mitteilungen 12, pp. 265–289. Appendices Appendix A The Lineage of ḍf This Appendix is divided in three parts. The first part describes the structure of the ʾl ḍf, discussing the information which can be gleaned from the genealogies, the evidence for the various sub-groups, and the texts showing ancestors beyond ḍf. The second part presents my reconstruction of various genealogical trees which show the position of the authors of the texts relevant to Chapter 4 and to §A.1 below. The third part contains the data of the compression measurements of the b’s across generations within the ḥmyn branch of the ḍf, which was employed for the palaeographic study in §4.1. This Appendix follows the sigla convention used in Chapter 4, i.e. the inscriptions sigla are followed by ‘/[generation number]’ instead of ‘/[script]’, which is the convention used in the rest of the thesis. The generations are counted considering ḍf as the first generation. As in Chapter 4, if the genealogy of the text stops at the patronym, the generation number is followed by a question mark.
April 2001. Roma: Istituto Italiano per l’Africa e l’Oriente, 227–234. XXXXXXXX, Xxxxxx X. and Xxxxx X. XXXXXXXXXXX 1993 A Chinese Text in Central Asian Brāhmī Script. (Serie Orientale Roma 69) Rome: Istituto Italiano per il Medio xx Xxxxxxx Oriente. XXXXXXXX, Xxxxxx X. and Prods X. XXXXXXX 1982 Studies in the Vocabulary of Khotanese I. (Veröffentlichungen der iranischen Kommission 12.) Wien: Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. 1987 Studies in the Vocabulary of Khotanese II. (Veröffentlichungen der iranischen Kommission 16.) Wien: Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. 1997 Studies in the Vocabulary of Khotanese III. (Veröffentlichungen der iranischen Kommission 27.) Wien: Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. XXXXXXXX, Xxxxxx X. and Xxxxxxxxx X. XXXXX’XXX-XXXXXXXXXXXXX
April 2001. If the task involves the proceesing of confidential or sensitive data, the Consulta nt shall respect the enhanced security measures stipulated in chapter 3 of the Danish Order on Security Measures for the Processing of Personal Data by Public Authorities. At the request of the Customer, the Consultant shall immediately provide full information, such that the Customer can assess and determine that the necessary security measures have been set up and are being obeyed. The Consultant shall clarify any possible doubt as to the fulfillment of the security measures, including contacting the Customer. The Consultant shall inform the Customer of detected infringement of the security. Particular notice should be paid to the following: • The information must not be stored longer than necessary in view of what is necessary for the purposes for which the infomation is collected, and the information must be deleted […] • The information must not be disclosed to a third-party, unless the obligation arises from applicable law or from the instruction of the Customer. • The Consultant shall ensure that only persons authorised by the Consultant have access to the personal data being processed. • The Consultant shall ensure that the processing of personal data takes place in accordance with the rules in the Danish Order on Security Measures for the Processing of Personal Data by Public Authorities including processing of data via the Internet or other open or wireless networks. • The Consultant shall ensure that the processing of personal dat a outside of The Consultant’s premises, including home offices, takes place in accordance with the rules in the Danish Order on Security Measures for the Processing of Personal Data by Public Authorities. • The transfer of personal data to third countries shall take place in accordance with section 27 in the Danish Act on Processing of Personal Data.
April 2001. 100.00000000 October 2001.... 51.
April 2001. 118.32645223 May 2006........ 112.65846910 May 2011........ 18.26800254 May 2001........ 118.99203853 June 2006....... 110.25182901 June 2011....... 17.29795521
AutoNDA by SimpleDocs
April 2001. For as long as the Security Assignment (as defined in the Agreement) is effective and not enforced, (i) all amounts payable by us in respect of the Loan may only be paid to the Trustee or order, unless and until we are otherwise notified by the Trustee, and (ii) the terms of the Loan may only be amended or varied with the consent of the Trustee. This loan note and the Agreement are governed by Swedish law. Date: [DATE] PREEM PETROLEUM AB --------------------------- ------------------------ Name: Name:
April 2001. The Borrower will pay the Facility Agent's Fee and Security Agent's Fee within seven (7) days from the Effective Date of this Agreement and every anniversary thereof and shall be paid by using similar method as the payments of other fees to the Creditor under Clause 5.1.1 of this Agreement.
April 2001. Professor Gordon Lister, Director of the Australian Crustal Research Centre at Monash University, was reported in June 2001 as commenting with regard to the tectonic movements along the line of impact between north-west Australia and the Sunda archipelago that the geological trend was for Timor to be ultimately absorbed by the Australian continent: 'Timor is pretty well on board now, it'll be further on board as time goes by. As Java rides over the Australian plate it will push the sediments up, and that's why we have oil in the Timor Gap now' (Simon Grose, 'Australia adrift in global shift', The Canberra Times, 8 June 2001). 207 'According To Cabinet Member, “East Timor Flexible On Timor Sea”', UNTAET News Briefing, Dili, 12 April 2001. 208 'Australia, E Timor To Resume Timor Gap Treaty Talks In May', Dow Jones Newswires, 11 April 2001. almost invariably have lower levels of social capital. Rising expectations for the better days of 'black gold' are seldom met. In politics, the corrupting effects of rentier economics perverts governance as elites succumb to paternalism. Even where intentions remain pure and structures exist to promote the transparent use of revenues, public pressures link government spending to the highest commodity prices: when these fall, governments run deficits and incur mounting debt. World Bank research has linked resource dependence to violent conflict. States dependent on commodity exports with large numbers of unemployed young males and low levels of education—all prominent in East Timor—are especially conflict-prone. East Timor's capacity to manage the risks could be enhanced by policies such as: long-term planning to determine the allocation of future surplus; a stabilization fund to guard against commodity-price volatility; and support for the private sector, as well as investments with high social returns, particularly those in human capital and infrastructure. More important than prudent economic management is support for democratic, transparent and accountable governance. Capacity-building in public administration, promotion of the rule of law, entrenchment of norms against corruption and support for a robust civil society are all imperative.209
Time is Money Join Law Insider Premium to draft better contracts faster.