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  • .... They were commonly referred to as Loblolly Boy, a term borrowed from the British Royal Navy, and a reference to the daily ration of porridge fed to the sick ...ill authorizing establishment of the U.S. Navy Hospital Corps, signed into law by President William McKinley on 17 June 1898. Three rates were created the
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  • ...rier]]-based squadrons among that number came from 23 ships, including the British fleet carrier [[HMS Formidable (67)|HMS ''Formidable'']]. ...]] data and engaging in [[search-and-rescue]] and [[Law enforcement agency|law-enforcement]] operations. During the [[Vietnam War]], ''Bering Strait'' par
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  • ...aircraft and vessels in distress, and engaged in [[Law enforcement agency|law enforcement]] operations. In February 1966, ''Absecon'' stood by the disabled [[United Kingdom|British]] merchant ship ''Parthia'' while waiting for a commercial [[Tugboat|tug]].
    13 KB (1,891 words) - 21:42, 2 July 2010
  • ...aircraft and vessels in distress, and engaged in [[Law enforcement agency|law enforcement]] operations. On 19 February 1964, ''Coos Bay'' rescued survivors from the [[United Kingdom|British]] [[merchant ship]] ''Ambassador'' in the [[North Atlantic]].
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  • ...377, 1965<br/>[[High endurance cutter]], WHEC-377, 1 May 1966<br/>Offshore law enforcement vessel, WOLE-377, 23 September 1971 ...aircraft and vessels in distress, and engaged in [[Law enforcement agency|law enforcement]] operations.
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  • ...pplies and men from decommissioned U.S. Navy patrol plane squadrons in the British Isles, and was engaged in these activities when the war with [[Germany]] en ...ssachusetts. She was used primarily for fishing patrol, but also conducted law enforcement and search and rescue operations, during her second period in c
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  • ...aircraft and vessels in distress, and engaged in [[Law enforcement agency|law enforcement]] operations. ...er home port for the remainder of her Coast Guard career. She was used for law enforcement and search and rescue duties in the [[Pacific Ocean]].
    13 KB (1,787 words) - 21:43, 2 July 2010
  • ...]] data and engaging in [[search-and-rescue]] and [[Law enforcement agency|law-enforcement]] operations. ...ref> 1970 to N. W. Kennedy of [[Vancouver, British Columbia|Vancouver]], [[British Columbia]], [[Canada]].
    19 KB (2,664 words) - 21:48, 2 July 2010
  • ...aircraft and vessels in distress, and engaged in [[Law enforcement agency|law enforcement]] operations. She also served on the [[Bering Sea Patrol]], too ...olulu]], [[Hawaii]]. On 9 September 1949 she assisted the [[United Kingdom|British]] [[merchant ship]] [[SS Pacific Enterprise|SS ''Pacific Enterprise'']], wh
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  • ...on stores in preparation for the expected invasion of [[Brunei Bay]] in [[British North Borneo]]. ...]] data and engaging in [[search-and-rescue]] and [[Law enforcement agency|law-enforcement]] operations. In 1967, with the formation of Coast Guard Squadr
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  • ...eling, began patrolling the southern approaches to [[Liverpool]] and other British ports on the coast of the [[Irish Sea]].<ref name=DANFS /> ...reported location, and began a search for the U-boat in conjunction with a British [[dirigible]] and other surface units. Near the end of the second dog watch
    25 KB (3,748 words) - 19:31, 2 July 2010
  • ...er'' arrived at about 16:00 and stayed with ''Cassin'' until dusk when two British sloops, {{HMS|Jessamine|1915|2}} and {{HMS|Tamarisk|1916|2}}, took over for ...y 1920, [[Prohibition in the United States|Prohibition]] was instituted by law in the United States. Soon, the smuggling of alcoholic beverages along the
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  • ...ptember 21, 2009, a federal court ruled that the USDA had violated federal law in deregulating Roundup Ready sugar beets without adequately evaluating the There are plans by BP and Associated British Foods to use agricultural surpluses of sugar beet to produce [[biobutanol]]
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  • |number= 600,000+ <ref name="kemp2006">Kemp, Ian. "The law gets tougher: the shoulder-launched light anti-armour weapon has evolved to ...osest to meeting all the major requirements established to replace the M72 LAW,<ref>The French APILAS was the only tested weapon which had the maximum pen
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  • The '''Main Battle Tank and Light Armour Weapon''' ('''MBT LAW''') is a disposable, man-portable, short range [[fire-and-forget]] [[anti- The MBT LAW was developed by [[Saab Bofors Dynamics]], using technology derived from th
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  • ...the High court of Delhi dismissed the Bofors case allegations against the British business brothers, Shrichand, Gopichand and Prakash [[Hinduja brothers|Hind ...out USD $4.6 million, in the two accounts have already been withdrawn. The British Government released the funds based on a request by the Indian Government.<
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  • ...nchrc.org/law-enforcement/us-law-enforcement-who-carry-naloxone/ |title=US Law Enforcement Who Carry Naloxone |website=North Carolina Harm Reduction Coali ...= 1 February 2016}}</ref> It comes in single use filled syringe similar to law enforcement kits.
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  • ...y zone of the patent, and thus could not be redressed by federal antitrust law,<ref>{{cite web |author=United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circ ...cessdate = 29 January 2009| publisher = The American Academy of Optometry (British Chapter) }}</ref>
    88 KB (11,930 words) - 16:46, 27 September 2010
  • ...en L, Kingdom D |title=Akathisia as a risk factor for suicide |journal=The British journal of psychiatry: the journal of mental science |volume=188 |issue= |p ...=1 Antidepressants and Violence: Problems at the Interface of Medicine and Law], David Healy, Andrew Herxheimer, and David B. Menkes, PLoS Med 3(9): e372
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  • ...clopramide]] or [[prochlorperazine]]).<ref name="BNF">{{cite book | author=British National Formulary | title="BNF" | edition=45 | year=2003 | month=March | c ...ning about IV-push administration" without acting in opposition to federal law.<ref name="NYTimes">{{cite news |last=Stout |first=David |url=http://www.ny
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  • ...s", primarily arranged for the [[Social structure of Britain#Upper classes|British upper class]], became an immediate success beginning in 1799. While the eff ...to cause euphoria and slight hallucinations, began as a phenomenon for the British upper class in 1799, known as "laughing gas parties". Until at least 1863,
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  • [[Image:Pound-coin-floating-in-mercury.jpg|thumb|left|A [[One pound (British decimal coin)|pound coin]] (density ~7.6 g/cm<sup>3</sup>) floats in mercur ...oorly screens the nuclear charge that increases the attractive [[Coulomb's law|Coulomb interaction]] of the 6s shell and the nucleus (see [[lanthanide con
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  • The poppy straw methods predominate in Continental Europe and the British Commonwealth, with the latex method in most common use in India. The latex ...his day, poppy farming is legal in Hungary, but poppy farms are limited by law to {{convert|2|acre|m2}}. It is also legal to sell dried poppy in flower sh
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  • ...Formulary Committee. [[British National Formulary]], 47th edition. London: British Medical Association and Royal Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain; 2004 ...]'' as an amendment to the renewal of the [[USA PATRIOT Act]]. Signed into law by president [[George W. Bush]] on March 6, 2006, the act amended the [[US
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  • ...08|author= BNF|authorlink=British National Formulary|year= 2008|publisher= British National Formulary }}</ref> ...3 |issue=29 |pmid=41539 |pmc=1429628 |format=PDF |pages=23S–29S |journal=British journal of clinical pharmacology}}</ref>
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  • ...Order|KCVO]] (11 November 1841 – 10 January 1919) was a [[United Kingdom|British]] public servant, editor and foreign correspondent of [[The Times]] (London ...nd [[University of Heidelberg|Heidelberg]], graduating with a doctorate in law from Heidelberg in 1867.
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  • ...the ''[[Encyclopædia Britannica]]''<nowiki>'</nowiki>s transition from a British to an American publication. Some of its articles were written by the best-k ...e eleventh edition. Though it is generally perceived as a quintessentially British work, the eleventh edition had substantial American influences, not only in
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  • The '''''Encyclopædia Britannica''''' ([[Latin]] for "British Encyclopaedia") is a general English-language [[encyclopedia|encyclopaedia] ...nnica'' has maintained [[American and British English spelling differences|British spelling]].<ref name="kister_1994" />
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  • ...umes. The first number appeared on December 6, 1768 in Edinburgh, priced [[British sixpence coin|sixpence]] or 8 [[pence]] on finer paper. The ''Britannica'' ...n (continued to this day) of dedicating the ''Britannica'' to the reigning British monarch, then [[George III of the United Kingdom|King George III]]; calling
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  • ...size and density of the sphere, and the [[density]] of the liquid, Stokes' law can be used to calculate the [[viscosity]] of the fluid. A series of steel ...of the piston are used to calculate the viscosity according to Newton’s Law of Viscosity. [http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:OPvisc1.JPG alternate
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  • In [[British English]], the word 'asphalt' refers to a mixture of mineral aggregate and The first British patent for the use of asphalt was 'Cassell's patent asphalte or bitumen' in
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  • ...ref> This made it clear, in paragraphs 54, 55 and 56, that [[international law]] on poisonous weapons—the Second Hague Declaration of 29 July 1899, Hagu ...onal Court of Justice]] considers this rule binding customary humanitarian law.}}
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  • :[[Fiber]] or '''fibre''' (see [[American and British English spelling differences|spelling differences]]) is a class of [[materi ...ionary of Traded Goods and Commodities, 1550-1820|date=2007|url=http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=58820|accessdate=11 April 2010}}.</ref><re
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  • |url= http://books.google.com/books?id=bCLNX8_a4WQC&pg=PA248&dq=Law+for+the+Preservation+of+Ancient+Shrines+and+Temples&client=firefox-a&sig=UB ...definition, and have been designated national treasures according to the Law for the Protection of Cultural Properties that came into effect on June 9,
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  • ...ag.jpg|[[Mortar (firestop)|Firestop Mortar]] seal at a [[paper mill]] in [[British Columbia]], [[Canada]]. ...is compromised. For any deviations from this principle, one is required by law to contact the [[Authority Having Jurisdiction]] (AHJ) to gain acceptance o
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  • ...items that include the seed oils, whole hemp grain (which is sterilized by law), dehulled hemp seed (the whole seed without the mineral rich outer shell), ...ercially in cannabis, hemp, or marijuana. It was repealed by an overriding law in 1970.
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  • *'''Identification cane ("Symbol Cane" in British English)''': The ID cane is used primarily to alert others as to the bearer ...tober 6, 1964, a joint resolution of the Congress, HR 753, was signed into law authorizing the President of the United States to proclaim October 15 of ea
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  • ...ctim. One example was in 2006 at the decommissioned [[Sullivan Mine]] in [[British Columbia, Canada]] when one initial victim and then three rescuers all died ...n compliance with the Regulations and has evidentiary status in a court of law.
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  • This changed when the British dry-cleaning equipment company Spencer introduced the first in-shop machine ...d water. This material should then be disposed of in accordance with local law.
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  • ...s M, Lennmarken C|title=Carboxyhaemoglobinaemia and pulse oximetry|journal=British Journal of Anaesthesia|volume=66|issue=5|pages=625–626|year=1991|month=Ma ...the United Kingdom in the late 1950s.<ref name="Anderson-NYT"/> After the British government phased out coal gas in favor of natural gas in the 1960s, the su
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  • ...ower sold in the US since 1982 has an "operator-presence" device, which by law must stop the blades within 3 seconds after the user lets go of the control ...om being defeated by the above circumstances, and is a standard feature on British DSD systems.<ref>http://locodocs.co.uk/brmanuals/DSD-33056-4-Issue1.htm</re
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  • ...ch not actionable in itself may be evidential towards a claim for [[common law]] [[negligence]]. In particular, a criminal conviction may be given in evid ...rthern Ireland) 1965''' which consolidated earlier Acts there. As with the British Act, as of 2008 most of the provisions have been repealed and superseded by
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  • ...anese to iron made it harder, without making it any more brittle. In 1837, British academic [[James Couper]] noted an association between heavy exposures to m [[File:M1917helmet.jpg| thumb|right|British [[Brodie helmet]]]]
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  • | publisher =British Geological Survey ...th were afflicted with a sickness of the lungs.<ref>P. Brodeur, "Annals of Law, The Asbestos Industry on Trial, 1-A Failure to Warn", ''[[The New Yorker]]
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  • ...turing process to ensure compliance with the relevant or corresponding BS (British Standard Code of Practice) for that type of appliance.{{Citation needed|dat British law (the [[Health and safety regulations in the United Kingdom|Electricity at W
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  • ...erpinned the recommendations for more stringent airborne dust standards in British coalmines and the PFR was ultimately used as the basis for many national du ...5-166.</ref>. This work was awarded the prestigious Bedford Prize by the [[British Occupational Hygiene Society]].
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  • ...yre-inadequate/ Hiding requirements = suspicion they're inadequate], Nolan Law Group, January 18, 2010</ref><ref>[http://www.lightningtech.com/pdfs/A_PROP * [[British European Airways Flight 548]], June 18, 1972
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  • There is not a federal law requiring paid sick days in the United States. At least 134 countries have American workers average approximately ten paid holidays per year while British workers average twenty-five holidays and German employees thirty. Americans
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  • * [[British Standard]] BS 5499: Graphical symbols and signs [[Category:European Union law]]
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  • ...and controlling the risks".<ref>[http://www.bohs.org/standardTemplate.aspx British Occupational Hygiene Society (BOHS)]</ref> The International Occupational :[[British Occupational Hygiene Society]] (BOHS)
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  • The coining of the term Ergonomics, however, is now widely attributed to British psychologist Hywel Murrell, at the 1949 meeting at the UK's [[Admiralty Hou * [[Rohmert's law]]
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  • ...ay be reinforced in [[civil law (common law)|civil law]] and/or [[criminal law]]; it is accepted that without the extra "encouragement" of potential regul ‘The main influence on the Dutch law on the job of the safety professional is through the requirement on each em
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  • ...and its compounds may be toxic in certain forms and concentrations, the [[British Pharmaceutical Codex]] from 1907 states that [[cadmium iodide]] was used as ...|accessdate=2009-07-07|title=World Mineral Production 2002–06| publisher=British Geological Survey|chapter = Cadmium|page=15|url=http://nora.nerc.ac.uk/3260
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  • ...been found in old Roman mines and some examples are now preserved in the [[British Museum]] and the [[National Museum of Wales]].<ref>[http://www.romans-in-br ...And Corporate Responsibility]. In: ''International and Comparative Mineral Law and Policy:
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  • ...ogy |volume=22 |issue=1 |pages=107 |year=2008 |month=Fall |url=http://jolt.law.harvard.edu/articles/pdf/v22/22HarvJLTech103.pdf|format=PDF}}</ref> | publisher = Northern Illinois University Law Review, Volume 30, Number 3, Summer 2010
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  • * [[Xenophobia]] – fear/dislike of [[alien (law)|foreigners]]. *''Robophobia'' – a novel by [[Richard Evans (British author)|Richard Evans]]
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  • * [[Abney effect]], [[Abney's law of additivity]] — [[William de Wiveleslie Abney]] * [[Accot–Zhai steering law]] — [[Johnny Accot]] and [[Shumin Zhai]]
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  • ...sity in 1979 with the opening of [[Norman Adrian Wiggins School of Law|its law school]]. | Founded in 1818 by Ramsay, the British Lieutenant-Governor of Nova Scotia
    106 KB (14,441 words) - 21:06, 21 September 2010
  • ...-Marie Ampère]] — [[ampere]] — unit of electric current, [[Ampère's law]] * [[Amedeo Avogadro]] — [[Avogadro's number]], [[Avogadro's Law]]
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  • * [[Charles Lindbergh]], pilot — [[Lindbergh Law]] anti-kidnapping law * [[Charles Lynch (jurist)|Charles Lynch]] — [[lynching]], lynch law
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  • ...There are also laws ascribed to individuals by others, such as [[Murphy's law]]; or given [[eponym]]ous names despite the absence of the named person. * [[Scottish Vowel Length Rule|Aitken's Law]] — describes how [[vowel length]] in [[Scots language|Scots]] and [[Scot
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  • *[[Alcester, South Dakota]] &ndash; Colonel Alcester of the British army ...Maine]] and [[Appleton, Wisconsin]] &ndash; [[Samuel Appleton]] (father-in-law of [[Amos Lawrence]], founder of [[Lawrence University]])
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  • | Outstanding body of work by a [[United Kingdom|British]] citizen writing in [[English language|English]] | Outstanding non-fiction book by a British writer
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  • *[[Marshall Islands]] &ndash; [[John Marshall (British captain)|John Marshall]] *[[Bermuda]] &ndash; [[Juan de Bermúdez]] (British overseas territory)
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  • ...of [[teratogenicity]] greater if more than one drug used<ref name="BNF">[[British National Formulary|BNF]] (March 2003) '''45'''</ref> ...verdict and the judge's rulings are not consistent with the facts and the law," he added, according to Reuters (3/26, Berkrot).
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  • ...ecies, Mitragyna javanica, is often used as a substitute to get around the law, but it is not considered as effective. The dominant alkaloid in this speci ...eutics 1932, 46:251-71 und K. S. Grewal, The Effect of Mitragynine on Man, British Journal of Medical Psychology 1932, 12: 41-58
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  • ...tle=Reefer madness--the federal response to California's medical-marijuana law |journal=N. Engl. J. Med. |volume=337 |issue=6 |pages=435–9 |year=1997 |m | journal = The British Journal of Psychiatry
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  • ...sold in government shops (along with [[opium]]) in the early days of the [[British Empire]]<ref name="commission">''Report of the Indian Hemp Drugs Commission ...he 1980s and severe sentences were introduced. Even the mere [[Possession (law)|possession]] had a mandatory ten year prison sentence. These [[laws]] have
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  • ...ly [[20th century]]. Since then, some [[countries]] have intensified the [[Law enforcement agency|enforcement]] of cannabis [[prohibition (drugs)|prohibit ...addition to marijuana. The reasons that [[hemp]] was also included in this law are disputed. The Federal Bureau of Narcotics agents reported that fields w
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  • ...06. In the [[Netherlands]], Buprenorphine is a List II drug of the [[Opium Law]], though special rules and guidelines apply to its prescription and dispen [[United Kingdom|British]] firm Reckitt & Colman (now [[Reckitt Benckiser]]) first [[marketing|marke
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  • In the United States, federal law was changed in 2001 to eliminate some restrictions imposed on patients dose ...er="The College Of BC Pharmacists" | journal=The College Of Pharmacists Of British Columbia}}</ref>
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  • ...bal Marijuana March|GMM]]{{·}} [[Legalise Cannabis Alliance|LCA]]{{·}} [[Law Enforcement Against Prohibition|LEAP]]{{·}} [[Marijuana Policy Project|MPP
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  • ...orgia]] family sent into the Creek Nation to recruit them to fight for the British during the Revolutionary War. Captain McIntosh's mother, Jennet (or Janet i On April 30, 1825, the Law Menders, led by the Red Stick leader Menawa, set McIntosh's house on fire.
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  • which violated Texas state law{{Citation needed|date=July 2010}}<!--if one of the cites at the end of this ...ure a federal officer while he was acting in the line of duty.<ref>[http://law.onecle.com/uscode/18/372.html 18 U.S.C. 372].</ref><ref>[http://www.aarclib
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  • ...rdcities/Palestine/terror-against-british.htm Jewish Terrorism Against the British]</ref><ref>[http://hansard.millbanksystems.com/commons/1947/jan/28/jewish-t ...nder certain circumstances be allowed within the limits of [[international law]] and [[civil disobedience]].
    16 KB (2,254 words) - 21:56, 26 September 2010
  • ...e range of [[Manhunt (Military)|military]] and [[manhunt (law enforcement)|law enforcement]] operations. ...force. The [[Prevention of Terrorism Act 2005]] was drafted to answer the Law Lords ruling and the [[Terrorism Act 2006]] creates new offences related to
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  • ...Evangelism|evangelist]]s working among poor and poorly educated Muslims in British India.<ref name=USIoPeace> [[Bazer Azmy]], a Law Professor at [[Seton Hall University]], and one of Guantanamo captive [[Mur
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  • ...=Goldstein-63> Goldstein, Erik; McKercher, B. J. C. ''Power and stability: British foreign policy, 1865-1965'', Routledge, 2003 ISBN 0-7146-8442-2, 9780714684 ...awfulness by virtue of not being authorized by or in accordance with the [[law]] of the land, its use is neutral. However when it is used by a state or an
    43 KB (6,255 words) - 21:56, 26 September 2010
  • ...nal Law-the Response to the Terrorist Attacks of 11 September], Australian Law and Bills Digest Group, Parliament of Australia Web Site, February 12, 2002 ...d/FW1434_Keystage2_07.pdf</ref> and the [[Boston Tea Party]], an attack on British property by the [[Sons of Liberty]] in 1773, three years prior to the [[Ame
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  • ...s further than ever and declares [[terrorism]] as [[kufr]] under [[Islamic law]].<ref>[http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/sheikh-issues-fatwa- ...el questioned the credibility of the Fatwa and asks if it was not by the [[British government]] due to the fact that senior [[counter-terrorism]] officials fr
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  • ...vent of a [[Operation Sealion|German invasion]].<ref>{{cite web | author = British Resistance Organisation | title = History | url = http://www.parhamairfield ...nimal Rights Militia]] (ARM) in 1982. Letter bombs were sent to the then [[British Prime Minister]], [[Margaret Thatcher]], with two years later the name [[Hu
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  • ...nal Law-the Response to the Terrorist Attacks of 11 September], Australian Law and Bills Digest Group, Parliament of Australia Web Site, 12 February 2002. Some definitions also include acts of [[Law|unlawful]] violence and war. The history of terrorist organizations suggest
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  • ...rder to compel another party such as a [[kinship|relative]], [[employer]], law enforcement, or [[government]] to act, or refrain from acting, in a particu ...risis|Julius Caesar's hostage crisis in Armorica]] in 56 BC.</ref> and the British who had colonial [[vassal]]s, would especially receive many such political
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  • ...to exist, you must take it... the policeman arrested me in the name of the Law, I struck him in the name of Liberty". * '''1970-1972'''. The British [[Angry Brigade]] group carries out at least 25 bombings (police numbers).
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  • ...s well as by [[Pazhassi Raja]] of [[Kerala]] to fight the [[United Kingdom|British]]. ...unded the [[Maratha Empire]] which lasted until it was superseded by the [[British Empire]].
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  • ...es]] - Britain's 200-year jihad. It envolved also forced conversion of the British [[Christians]] into [[Islam]].<ref> ...d in the suppression of this revolt vary: the Ottoman figure is 3,100; the British, 12,000: the American, 15,000: and the Bulgarian, from 30,000 to 100,000.<r
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  • ...y based, used violence and intimidation, and adhered to their own codes of law."<ref name="ReferenceA"/> ...if the society lacks strong and established institutions and the [[rule of law]]. The [[collapse of the Soviet Union]] and the [[Revolutions of 1989]] in
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  • ...wer, the Taliban enforced one of the strictest interpretations of [[Sharia law]] ever seen in the [[Muslim world]],<ref name="Harvnb|Rashid|2000|p=29">{{H ...ng005.htm JNV briefing].</ref> that operated according to Islamic [[Sharia law]], but [[Pakistan]] blocked the offer as it was not possible to guarantee h
    104 KB (15,254 words) - 21:58, 26 September 2010
  • ...ews Islamic law and decides if particular courses of action conform to the law. As a matter of law, the [[United States Department of Justice|U.S. Department of Justice]] nee
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  • ...ies, drug traffickers have taken advantage of local corruption and lack of law enforcement to establish cartels turning in millions if not billions of dol ==[[United Kingdom|British]] crime 'firms'==
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  • ..., a joint venture formed specifically between Reston-based [[DynCorp]] and British-based [[Porton International]], to develop and store a warehouse of vaccine *February 25, 2002: "Federal law enforcement officials denied a newspaper report that the FBI had a identifi
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  • '''Feroz Abbasi''' is one of nine British men who were held in [[extrajudicial detention]] in the [[United States]] [ ...ental welfare and, by his release, had not heard from him since late-2003. British officials last saw him in April 2003, although he kept silent for an hour.
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  • | citizenship = [[United Kingdom|British]]/ [[Pakistan]]i ...egg''' ({{lang-ur|مواززم بغع}}), born 1968, is a [[United Kingdom|British]]/ [[Pakistan]]i [[Muslim]] who was held in [[extrajudicial detention]] in
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  • ...the UN convention, which would be a violation of the treaty and thus [[US law]]. British Prime Minister [[Tony Blair]] said that the report "added absolutely nothin
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  • On 17 August 2005, French [[Vice Admiral]] Jacques Mazars replaced British [[Royal Navy]] Commodore Tony Rix as commander of CTF-150. At the time, it ...e vessel in the Indian Ocean as part of an ongoing effort to help maintain law and order in the region.<ref name=SUSPECTED-PIRATES-CAPTURED-OFF-SOMALI-COA
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  • *'''November 22, 2008:''' British Al-Qaeda operative [[Rashid Rauf]] and 4 others including [[Abu Zubair al-M ...Faqir Mohammed]]'s nephew, Zahid and another was Mohammed's unnamed son-in-law. The meeting was apparently being held to decide on whether to reinforce S
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  • | title=Torture by proxy: International law applicable to ‘Extraordinary Renditions’ ...http://london.usembassy.gov/forpo916.html Interview of Secretary Rice With British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw] on [[BBC]] [[BBC Radio 4|Radio 4's]] [[Today
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  • ...ried out the act, thereby placing the victim outside the protection of the law. ...f>[http://hrw.org/english/docs/2005/04/14/algeri10485.htm Algeria: Amnesty Law Risks Legalizing Impunity for Crimes Against Humanity (Human Rights Watch,
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  • *'''March, 2008''': Kidnapping of British journalist [[Sean Langan]] was blamed on the network.<ref>[http://www.guard ...mong 23 people killed was one of Jalaluddin's two wives, sister, sister in law and 8 of his grandchildren.<ref>[http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/09/world/as
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  • ...wk|Tomahawk cruise missile]]s launched from both U.S. and [[United Kingdom|British]] ships and submarines signaled the start of Operation Enduring Freedom - A ...role of government from 1996-2001. Their extreme interpretation of Islamic law prompted them to ban music, television, sports, and dancing, and enforce ha
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  • ...fy, Helen (2005). ''The 'War on Terror' and the Framework of International Law''. Cambridge University Press. p. 157.ISBN 978-0521547352</ref> ...Sofaer. On the Necessity of Pre-emption. European Journal of International Law, Vol. 14 No. 2, 2003, p.220 [http://ejil.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/abs
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  • ...[United Nations]] is illegal under the modern framework of [[international law]],<ref>{{cite |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=UQajT7Bqf-MC&pg=PT97&lp ...d open the floodgates to all preventive wars, reducing the world to "the [[law of the jungle]]".{{Citation needed|date=February 2010}} Critics argue this
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  • ...itarian Law]] (IHL) and may be detained or prosecuted under the [[domestic law]] of the detaining state for such action.<ref name=ICRC-210705>[[Internatio ..."Unlawful Combatants" in the United States: Drawing the Fine Line Between Law and War] [[Human Rights Magazine]] Winter 2003, published by the [[American
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  • ...ahbubur Rahman, “Combating Terrorism under Human Rights and Humanitarian Law Regime”, Mediterranean Journal of Human Rights, Vol. 12 (Double Issue), 2 ...st the Taliban regime. On October 7, 2001 the official invasion began with British and US forces conducting [[airstrike]] campaigns.
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  • ...er story is that the term derived from the name "egg-and-grog", a common [[British Empire|Colonial]] term used to describe [[rum]]. Eventually the term was sh Under U.S. law, commercial products sold as eggnog may contain milk, sugar, modified milk
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  • ...hcheese.com/ | title = British Cheese homepage | year = 2007 | publisher = British Cheese Board | accessdate = 2007-07-13}}</ref> [[France]] and [[Italy]] hav ...tested were found to induce nightmares. However, the six cheeses were all British. The results might be entirely different if a wider range of cheeses were t
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  • ...tories. Some sources say that the sundae was invented to circumvent [[blue law]]s, which forbade serving sodas on Sunday. Towns claiming to be the birthpl [[Category:British cuisine]]
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  • ...sbn = 0006391044}}</ref> but the Supreme Court struck down New Hampshire's law and overruled these measures.{{Citation needed|date=May 2010}} ...ame=cana/> Nevertheless, bootleg margarine was produced in the neighboring British colony of [[Newfoundland and Labrador|Newfoundland]] from whale, seal and f
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