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"reinstitute" Definitions
  1. to institute (something) again

137 Sentences With "reinstitute"

How to use reinstitute in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "reinstitute" and check conjugation/comparative form for "reinstitute". Mastering all the usages of "reinstitute" from sentence examples published by news publications.

"We're trying to reinstitute that age of exploration," says Kent.
Reform would reinstitute supermajority requirements but impose consequences for untimely delays.
Absent congressional action now, Mr. Trump could reinstitute family separation tomorrow.
Too bad: Donald Trump wants to reinstitute prohibitive tariffs and trade wars.
There actually is a bill pending in the Senate to reinstitute the act.
A bipartisan push in Congress to reinstitute the ban began in Congress last month.
The other thing that sounds counterintuitive is to reinstitute earmarks or pork barrel legislation.
Officials say they may reinstitute the program if the audit shows it is effective.
The premise of the question -- that the U.S. would have to reinstitute the draft.
Still, the House-passed American Health Care Act would allow big employers to reinstitute lifetime limits.
But some places that followed his lead have decided to reinstitute tipping because of consumer backlash.
Perhaps India's Supreme Court, responding to various legal petitions, could even order him to reinstitute autonomy.
China will also reinstitute tariffs of 25% on cars and 5% on auto parts suspended last December.
Trump's decision to reinstitute and so drastically expand the rule received widespread condemnation from the international community.
During the campaign, Trump also vowed to reinstitute the Glass-Steagall Act, which separated commercial and investment banks.
For instance, the recently reintroduced Social Security 2100 Act would reinstitute the payroll tax on earned income over $400,000.
Now, voters have the chance to overturn that initiative and reinstitute affirmative action in educational, employment or contracting purposes.
On March 2nd Sweden announced that it will reinstitute compulsory military service, which was abolished in 2010 after 109 years.
Pressed by Lesley Stahl on "60 Minutes" whether his administration would reinstitute such a policy, Trump declined to answer definitively.
Critics of the return of the document have expressed fears that President Trump intends to reinstitute the use of torture.
"The pay-go rule is a good rule and we ought to reinstitute it," Hoyer told The Hill last week.
Multiple reports published Monday said the president wanted to reinstitute the policy as he attempts to clamp down on illegal border crossings.
Turkey should immediately withdraw their military forces and America should reinstitute the safe zone concept to keep the peace in the region.
"We're seeing a lot of states go back in the legislative sessions and try to reinstitute different versions of those laws," Brater said.
"Basically, there's been some discussion on whether or not we ought to reinstitute the standing order that limited post-cloture time," he said.
But he notably waded into the GOP primary to rebuke Cruz, who has called on the city to reinstitute patrols of Muslim neighborhoods.
The president on Tuesday said that he was not looking to reinstitute the practice, but argued that it served as an effective deterrent.
Even if the government manages to set a low bar for constitutional review, it still might not be able to reinstitute the ban.
Clinton was "wrong" to oppose his plan to reinstitute the Glass-Steagall Act, which would legally separate commercial banking, investment banking and insurances services.
Guha, the Evercore economist, predicted the Fed will reinstitute the Commercial Paper Funding Facility used during the crisis to provide liquidity in that market.
So farmers are hoping that, if free movement does come to an end, the government will reinstitute the Seasonal Agricultural Workers Scheme, abolished in 2013.
But because it will reinstitute reforms put in place by Democrat Bill Clinton, that will restore incentives to work and remove incentives to not work.
Ellison was praised by progressives earlier this month for vowing to reinstitute a ban on lobbyist donations to the DNC if he is elected chairman.
Biden's plan seeks to protect LGBTQ asylum seekers; reinstitute Obama-era federal prison guidelines to house trans inmates according to their gender identity; reinstitute guidelines banning federally funded shelters from housing homeless trans people according to their assigned sex at birth; put forth efforts to destigmatize and decriminalize HIV transmission; offer protections for LGBTQ seniors; and offer support for a federal ban on conversion therapy.
One official sidestepped a question about whether these measures were being taken in preparation for the administration to reinstitute a family separation policy at the border.
Munster also shot down the idea that Apple's decision to reinstitute Black Friday gift cards was an acknowledgment of the need to offer incentives to boost sales.
They believed that he could reinstitute widespread deportations and immigration raids, and restore the daily fear upon millions of parents that they'd be separated from their children.
The candidates running to be the next Democratic National Committee chairman are debating whether to reinstitute a ban on the DNC accepting donations from corporate lobbyists. Rep.
"  "President Trump made it clear time and again that he wants to reinstitute a process of free trade, no tariffs, no tariff barriers, no quotas and subsidies.
The countries are about the sign a phase one trade agreement, but uncertainty over the impact tariffs the two sides have levied and could reinstitute remain problems.
Yet, if the STLD rule were overturned, states would nonetheless retain the right to reinstitute it, or to prohibit STLD plans entirely (as New York already does).
"I think that when you're talking about draining the swamp, it's very difficult in the same mouthful to suggest that we're going to reinstitute earmarks," Meadows said.
But Kilicdaroglu has stood firm, saying the opposition was successful in bringing all of Turkey&aposs "colors" to parliament and vowing to reinstitute and protect a stronger assembly.
Within two hours of the Supreme Court decision in 2013, Texas's attorney-general said the state would reinstitute a strict voter ID policy that had failed pre-clearance.
One thing is certain: There are about to be fewer of us visiting the island thanks to Donald Trump's decision in June to reinstitute trade and travel restrictions.
The US doesn&apost have a draft and is unlikely to reinstitute one, but if it did, there are number of reasons many Americans wouldn&apost get selected.
She was well out in front on the need to reinstitute the firewall between commercial and investment banking, a cause taken up in the presidential primaries by Bernie Sanders.
Electronic Arts will reinstitute in-game purchases in its "Star Wars Battlefront II" title despite recent wavering by one of its top executives, according to a Wall Street firm.
President Trump on Tuesday said he was pulling out of the multi-party nuclear agreement and will reinstitute U.S. sanctions against Tehran that were suspended under the 2015 accord.
His administration would impose an immediate moratorium on mergers and reinstitute old FCC rules to limit a company's ability to own newspapers and TV stations in the same markets.
The Republican pledged during the campaign to repeal Dodd-Frank, though the party platform also included a provision to reinstitute the Glass-Steagall Act that separated commercial from investment banking.
The Trump administration might not take Kobach's suggestion to reinstitute a database of Muslim immigrants — Kobach simply told Reuters that the transition team was considering a proposal along those lines.
Most Democrats are again willing to push ahead with universal background checks and other limits on gun ownership, though few are talking about trying to reinstitute the assault weapons ban.
" If the federal appeals court upholds the executive order, the plaintiffs in the suit argue, it "would reinstitute those harms, separating families, stranding our university students and faculty, and barring travel.
Biden said he would push for background checks and reinstitute the assault weapons ban that he helped push through in 1994 but was unable to later reauthorize, the Washington Post notes.
Warren, Castro, and Williamson stated that they would reinstitute the annual White House Tribal Nations Conference and White House Council for Indigenous People, which were first established by former president Barack Obama.
That he has nonetheless done less damage than he has threatened—by failing to go to war with North Korea or reinstitute torture, for example—is probably not mostly down to them either.
The third challenge is to reinstitute bipartisanship in the American political fabric, as the fissure between the right and the left has grown even wider in the wake of the U.S. presidential election.
Already, Defense Secretary Jim Mattis, a retired four-star Marine general, has led the president to put aside his desire to reinstitute torture in interrogations of terrorism suspects, at least by the military.
Bills to reinstitute a personal state income tax for the first time since 1980 and proposals from Mr. Walker to raise taxes on motor fuels and on various industries, including oil, fishing and mining.
Still, the couple, who celebrated their fifteenth wedding anniversary in May, plan to reinstitute another mom-and-dad-only activity, aside from their living room rendezvous, as soon as Crew is old enough: date night!
The Republican Party raised eyebrows at its convention in July, a month before Bannon joined the Trump campaign, when it approved a plank to reinstitute the Glass-Steagall law that separated commercial and investment banking.
If Kim continues to balk, the president could sadly inform him of the need to reimpose sanctions, or reinstitute joint military exercises with South Korea that Trump suspended unilaterally over his concern about their expense.
Beijing also will reinstitute a 25% tariff on U.S.-made vehicles and a 5% tariff on auto parts that it had suspended in December at a time when U.S.-China trade negotiations were gaining momentum.
Not only that, those of us who get their health insurance from our employers are going to find that insurance companies reinstitute annual caps on spending just at the very point where we most need help.
He said, for instance, that current law "absolutely" bans waterboarding and the use of other torture techniques against prisoners — even though Mr. Trump promised to reinstitute the practice and Mr. Sessions himself supported it for years.
The Sellout is a blistering satire about the supposedly "post-race" America that centers on a black man who tries to reinstitute slavery and segregation in a California town, landing him in front of the Supreme Court.
With the currency still falling like a stone even after having played the IMF card, Macri might have little option but to reinstitute the capital controls that he too hastily dismantled at the start of his administration.
Some European leaders and human rights groups have criticized the scope of the government's subsequent purge of state institutions as well as calls by many Turks to reinstitute the death penalty to punish those involved in the coup.
That's good news for its economy, and it could make it harder for Donald Trump to reinstitute sanctions against the country should he try to fulfill his promise to rip up President Obama's controversial nuclear deal with Tehran.
Earlier this year, nearly two dozen states and the Federal government moved to reinstitute a requirement that able-bodied food stamp recipients without children must be employed to receive more than three months worth of food stamps each year.
The arguments offered in support of the fuel-economy standards are so weak that it is easy to conclude that there is a deeper political agenda underlying the leftist rage at the decision to reinstitute the mid-term review.
The president on Tuesday said that he was not looking to reinstitute the policy of separating families that crossed the border illegally, something that has been reportedly floated recently, but argued that the practice served as an effective deterrent.
The United States government has another responsibility, beyond humanitarian relief: The Department of Homeland Security should immediately reinstitute temporary protected status for Haitians in the United States, and suspend efforts to deport unauthorized immigrants back to the disaster zone.
I will reinstate the methane pollution rule to limit existing oil and gas projects from releasing harmful gases that poison our air and reinstitute the clean water rule to protect our lakes, rivers, and streams, and the drinking water they provide.
Afterward, she spoke with reporters at the Capitol Building about Trump's decision to reinstitute a U.S. policy—known as the "global gag rule" or "Mexico City policy"—that strips foreign NGOs of federal money if they educate people abroad about abortion.
The Environmental Protection Agency announced on Monday that it and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration would reinstitute the mid-term evaluation of the greenhouse gas (GHG) emission standards — the fuel-economy rules — for model-year 2022-2025 light-duty vehicles.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump's choice for CIA chief is privately assuring senators that she will not reinstitute a detention and interrogation program and will make the pledge publicly at her May 9 confirmation hearing, two sources said on Friday.
Maryland's plan would reinstitute this costly and cruel penalty on lower-income workers but do nothing to improve the underlying problems with ACA health insurance plans: They are too expensive and most lower-income Americans can't afford to use them.
Why not create more opportunities for genuine relationships between younger people and older people that are mutual and that help people have a deeper sense of connection and reinstitute the cycle of life in the context of our longer lives?
So Hawley supports a lawsuit that reverses Obamacare's preexisting conditions protections, and the provisions that make them possible even without an individual mandate, while putting his faith in Congress to pass a brand new health care bill to reinstitute those protections.
While he pledged repeatedly not to be "a mere rubber stamp" for the White House, Democrats asserted that he would not be willing to challenge legally questionable policies like the travel ban or the president's threats to reinstitute the use of torture on terrorism suspects.
Across the 28 member countries of the European Union, there are quiet concerns that should Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan continue his massive political purge and reinstitute the death penalty, it could have grave consequences for EU-Turkey relations, particularly in the area of migrant control.
The agency's inspector general has criticized the oversight of nursing homes that belong to the program, known as Section 22, and last month the chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee asked the agency to reinstitute the property inspections, which were largely discontinued in 237.
The Tories also promised to increase spending on the National Health Service by at least £8 billion in real terms over the next five years and to reinstitute controversial grammar schools, which select students by exams but which many think are damaging the quality of ordinary public schools.
On the heels of Nielsen's resignation, CNN reported that Trump not only wanted to reinstitute the "zero tolerance" policy, but wanted to go further: According to multiple sources, the President wanted families separated even if they came in at a legal port of entry and were legal asylum seekers.
Both people said the automaker is now also mulling another price hike in December after China's commerce ministry last week announced it would reinstitute tariffs of 25% on vehicles and 5% on auto parts which it suspended in December, in the latest tit-for-tat escalation of the trade war.
Here's what she had to say on Facebook about Trump's decision to reinstitute a policy that bans US aid from going to health programs that discuss abortion as a family planning option with patients (taxpayer money already can't fund abortions anywhere): Key context: Sandberg's Democratic personal politics are well known.
The Supreme Court's decision in the Haiti case has been raised as an example of the executive authority Trump used with his travel bans (Barr praised even the earliest, most aggressive version of the travel ban in February 2017) and with the asylum ban his administration is currently fighting to reinstitute.
Finally, to help those already affected by climate change — particularly those affected by flooding and climate-exacerbated natural disasters — Castro wants to expand access to the National Flood Insurance Program, use new technologies to create updated flood maps and to better understand upcoming flood risks, and reinstitute Obama-era flood protection regulations.
And the family has given to entities that espouse non-interventionist foreign policies (more than $0003 million to the Koch brothers' network and $300,000 to the Cato Institute), but also more than $4 million to groups associated with Bolton, the hawkish former diplomat who has called President Barack Obama "one of the most narcissistic individuals to ever hold that job" and who suggested that the Obama administration might "reinstitute blasphemy laws" to limit criticism of Islam.
Second, they should reinstitute their lines of communication by INRO without the stockpile.
The museum will reinstitute an entry fee starting on 2016/7/1. The fee is NT$ 80.
In 2000, he voted in favor of legislation that raised the age requirement for obtaining a handgun permit from 18 to 21 years old. In 1990, he voted against legislation that would have reinstituted capital punishment in New York. In 1993, the Assembly voted 61 to 49, with Gantt voting against, in favor of an amendment to the Constitution of New York that would reinstitute capital punishment, but fell below the 2/3rds requirement. In 1995, he voted against legislation that would reinstitute capital punishment, but it was approved by the Assembly and Senate before being signed into law by Governor George Pataki.
Harvey Klehr, The Heyday of American Communism: The Depression Decade. New York: Basic Books, 1984; pp. 253-254. Following that gathering, Communist participation was formally allowed by the convention's refusal to reinstitute the previous exclusionary rule.Klehr, The Heyday of American Communism, pg. 254.
By 1936, Italian bachelors paid nearly double their normal income tax rate.V. De Grazia, How Fascism Ruled Women: Italy 1922-1945, Los Angeles, 1992, p. 44. In 1999, the mayor of Vastogirardi, Italy proposed to reinstitute a bachelor tax locally."." New York Times 16 Nov 1999. Online.
Radical public meetings are banned and in May 1894 the King abolished the modern 1888 Constitution and reinstitute the one adopted in 1869. The majority of the laws passed under Radical rule are changed or suppressed, King Aleksandar opts for 'neutral' Governments – in other words, he establishes a personal regime.
On August 25, 2019, Arpaio issued a statement saying that he would run for Sheriff of Maricopa County in 2020, saying "Watch out world! We are back!" and promising to reinstitute the severe prison conditions he imposed in the past. He lost the primary election to his former right-hand man, Jerry Sheridan.
Efforts to reinstitute commuter trains, such as the Schuylkill Valley Metro, have been unsuccessful. The station still exists and is currently home to a district justice office. Norfolk Southern Railway provides freight rail service to Pottstown along the Harrisburg Line. The Colebrookdale Railroad is a heritage railway running from Pottstown to Boyertown.
He was first elected in 2012, defeating Kelly Kite. Wheeler told constituents that he would vote to reinstitute slavery if his constituents wanted him to. An ethics complaint was filed against Wheeler, stating that he does not live in the 39th district. Another complaint was filed against Wheeler for failing to disclose a lien.
World events thereafter moved against the Conservatives. Controversial wars in Afghanistan and South Africa undermined his public support. He angered British farmers by refusing to reinstitute the Corn Laws in response to poor harvests and cheap imported grain. With Gladstone conducting a massive speaking campaign, his Liberals defeated Disraeli's Conservatives at the 1880 general election.
First appeared in issue #25. Based in Aspen, Colorado, Helena was unhappy with the leadership of the Trust. She was part of the alliance between the Kotias, Carlito and Vasco families determined to remove Augustus Medici from power. The trio met with Agent Graves, offering him to reinstitute the Minutemen in exchange for his help.
NJT reserves the right to reinstitute rail service. According to the Sierra Club, should NJT opt to restore service it would be the first instance in U.S history where a rail trail reverted to railway usage. Monmouth Battlefield State Park is traversed by the ROW used by the PRR's Farmingdale and Squan Village Railroad/Freehold and Jamesburg Agricultural Railroad.
Unfortunately, this food tends to be nonperishable, heavy on simple starches, and nutritionally deficient, thus contributing to high rates of obesity and diabetes on reservations. Public assistance does not effectively reduce poverty on the reservation. Although it may keep many families from being completely unable to survive, it does not build economies, reinstitute cultural institutions, or create a source of pride for reservation residents.
Proposals to reinstitute the numerus clausus, which would restrict Jewish enrollment to 10 percent of the student body (roughly the percentage of Jews living in Poland) were made as early as 1923. However, the proposals were rejected as they would have violated the Little Treaty of Versailles. In spite of these earlier objections, Poland later renounced the Treaty in 1934. Polish nationalism and hostility towards minorities, particularly Jews, increased.
These leaders assert that they cast their votes for him after he gave them solemn assurance that he would continue the "Parsons Plan." After his installation as Bishop, he announced that he had "changed his mind" and would no longer consider the Parsons Plan. When Bennison elected not to reinstitute the arrangement, several crises arose in the diocese, compounded by theological differences between Bennison and several conservative parishes.
In 2003, Davis became Chairman of the House Government Reform Committee. He served as Chairman until 2007, when Democrats became the majority party in the House of Representatives. Henry Waxman of California replaced Davis at the gavel. Davis had renamed the committee, removing "Oversight" from the title; one of Waxman's first acts as Chair was to reinstitute the name as the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform.
But this all ended when Christophe, ostensibly convinced that Leclerc would not reinstitute slavery, switched sides in return for retaining his generalship in the French military. General Jean-Jacques Dessalines did the same a short time later. On 6 May 1802, Louverture rode into Cap-Français, and negotiated an acknowledgement of Leclerc's authority, in return for amnesty for himself and all his remaining generals. He thus ended hostilities and retired to his plantation in Ennery.
Despite Swiss opposition to joining the EU, voters have accepted bilateral agreements with the union. In a May 2000 referendum, for example, Swiss voters approved such agreements. In a June 2005 referendum, Swiss voters approved joining the Schengen Area. In February 2014, Swiss voters approved a referendum to reinstitute quotas on immigration to Switzerland, setting off a period of finding an implementation that would not violate the EU's freedom of movement accords that Switzerland adopted.
In the past, the farmer had the consolation of higher prices at such times, but with bumper crops cheaply transported from the United States, grain prices remained low. Other European nations, faced with similar circumstances, opted for protection, and Disraeli was urged to reinstitute the Corn Laws. He declined, stating that he regarded the matter as settled. Protection would have been highly unpopular among the newly enfranchised urban working classes, as it would raise their cost of living.
" In 1984, Reagan again raised the issue, asking Congress, "why can't freedom to acknowledge God be enjoyed again by children in every schoolroom across this land?"Ronald Reagan, Address Before a Joint Session of the Congress on the State of the Union. January 25, 1984. In 1985, Reagan expressed his disappointment that the Supreme Court ruling still banned a moment of silence for public schools, and said that efforts to reinstitute prayer in public schools were "an uphill battle.
Board of Education which outlawed segregation. He and Richard Harding Poff of Virginia were the only two Republicans to sign the Southern Manifesto. Broyhill voted against the Civil Rights Acts of 1957, 1960, 1964, and 1968, and the Voting Rights Act of 1965, but voted in favor of the 24th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. As a longtime member of the committee overseeing the District of Columbia he, along with three other members of Congress, recommended that schools in the District reinstitute segregation.
With that position he ran afoul of fellow Republican Bob Dole, who claimed that the purchase requirement had contributed to fraud and administrative difficulties in the program. Helms cited a Congressional Budget Office report which showed that 75 percent of the increase in stamp usage had occurred since the purchase requirement was dropped. When Helms's ally, Steve Symms of Idaho, proposed to reinstitute the purchase requirement, the motion was defeated, 33–66.Congressional Quarterly Weekly Report, August 25, 1981, p.
In 1859 Napoleon III commissioned a statue of Josephine for La Savane Park in downtown Fort-de- France, Martinique. In 1991 it was decapitated and shortly afterwards spattered with red paint. These acts were said to be for Josephine's alleged role in convincing Napoleon to reinstitute slavery in the French colonies.Uncommon Attraction: Beheaded Statue of Empress Josephine (Although in fact Martinique, under first Royalist, then British, rule never accepted the emancipation degree issued by the Revolutionary government.) Statue of Empress Josephine The head has never been found.
The following year, he was one of six MPs who demanded that the government of Mackenzie King reinstitute food subsidies and remove the sales tax from food, to counter the rising cost of living and the emerging power of the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation."Liberals Rap Living Cost In Protest to Mr. King: Polls Mirror Price Trend, MP's Claim". The Globe and Mail, June 18, 1948. In the 1949 election, he shifted to the new riding of Sudbury, which he also represented for a single term.
In 2008, Federal Highway 190 and the main entrance to town were blocked by those protesting the lack of potable water for three months in 2008. The protesters claimed they had running water irregularly only about once a week and sometimes not even that. In 2010, a group of over a hundred residents took over the municipal palace to force the state government to reinstitute Alma Delia Ramos as municipal president. A previous first takeover ended peacefully but without the desired results of the protestors.
At the beginning of 1789, the Society had 141 members. During the five-year period that it operated, it published anti-slavery literature and frequently addressed its concerns on a substantive political level in the National Assembly of France. In February 1794, the National Assembly passed the Universal Emancipation decree, which effectively freed all colonial slaves and gave them equal rights. This decision was later reversed under Napoleon, who tried unsuccessfully to reinstitute slavery in the colonies and to regain control of Saint-Domingue, where a slave rebellion was underway.
In 1992, Phi Mu sorority member Minda Riley (daughter of former Alabama Governor Bob Riley) ran against Machine-backed candidate and Beta Theta Pi fraternity member Neil Duthie. In that election, Minda Riley made claims of harassment and physical assault, even though she belonged to a Machine-aligned sorority. Following the physical assault of Riley, resulting in her fleeing campus, the University nevertheless suspended the Student Government Association altogether, and did not reinstitute it until 1996. Minda Riley's brother Rob Riley was elected president of the SGA as a Machine candidate.
The Mesan Alignment's navy has new technology and conducts a sneak attack on Manticore in 1922 PD during the twelfth mainline novel, Mission of Honor. The Mesans have a 600-year-old secret program to reinstitute purposeful genetic engineering of humans and break up the Solarian League, while taking down all opponents opposing such genetic engineering. This makes the staunchly anti-genetic-slavery star nations of Haven, Manticore, and various associates of the planet Beowulf primary targets of the Mesan Alignment. The "Crown of Slaves" sub-series books and last two mainline Honorverse novels detail the rising extent of this threat.
Semeraro commented: "There is a strong will to dismantle the image of bishops as men of power and to reinstitute the image of bishops as men of service." On 1 October 2004 he was named Bishop of Albano. He is a Consultant to the Congregation for the Clergy and the Italian Episcopal Conference (IEC), and a member of the IEC Commission for the Doctrine of the Faith. On 4 May 2007 he was elected president of the administrative board of the IEC newspaper Avvenire, in place of Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco of Genoa, who had been elected president of the IEC.
He was also in charge of pacification of the Zapatista rebellion in Morelos during the fighting between Emiliano Zapata and Carranza, where he earned a reputation for brutality and ruthlessness. Gonzalez' manifesto of July 19, 1916 explicitly stated that Morelos civilians, including women and children, who were perceived as supporters of Zapata, were going to be massacred (though officially counted among those who died in battle). In his pacification campaigns, Gonzalez reinstitute the practice of Victoriano Huerta and Porfirio Diaz of shipping captured peasants to Yucatan for heavy forced labor.Samuel Brunk, "Emiliano Zapata: revolution & betrayal in Mexico", UNM Press, 1995, pg.
In 1960, the Second National Front was formed, which mostly involved figures from the early 1950s during Mossadegh's time in office. However, in 1961, Mehdi Bazargan, Mahmud Taleghani, Yadollah Sahabi (all prominent liberals) broke away to form a more religious (and radical) counterpart to the National Front. This new group quickly gained a large following exceeding that of their rival and its leaders advocated civil disobedience such as protests, sit-ins and strikes as a way of pressuring the Shah to reinstitute democratic rule. But, after a brief period of reform under Prime Minister Ali Amini, the government cracked down on dissent.
The T. Lawrason Riggs Chair of Catholic Studies was established in 1962 at Yale. The first occupant of the chair was Stephan Kuttner, and it is now known as the T. Lawrason Riggs Professor of History and Religious Studies. An independent member of the Yale community, Riggs resisted an attempt to reinstitute compulsory chapel attendance, and criticised the editor of the Yale Daily News for slanted coverage of religious topics. Riggs also wrote and published a seven-page pamphlet attempting to correct what he saw as an inaccurate and misleading description of the Origins of Christianity given by Professor Edwin Goodenaugh in his Western Civilisation course for Yale freshmen.
Blessed Maria Scrilli (15 May 1825 - 14 November 1889) was an Italian Roman Catholic who was a professed religious who established the Sisters of Our Lady of Mount Carmel - a branch of the Carmelite order. She later assumed the religious name of "Maria Teresa of Jesus" upon making her profession and in dedication to Saint Teresa of Ávila. Scrilli became a noted educator and opened several schools during her lifetime in which she taught a range of religious and secular topics to girls. A period of anti-clericalism forced her to disband her schools and orders until a long while later when she could reinstitute her order and new schools.
While Turkey and Cyprus have been battling over land since 1974 over the Cyprus Problem, this has not stopped Turkey from wanting to benefit from the recent gas discoveries and aiming to become an energy hub. The Mavi Marmara incident in 2010 left Arab-Israeli conflicts at a high, removing the only local alliance Israel had with Turkey. Turkey would not reinstitute the alliance unless the blockade on Gaza were to be lifted. These demands made Israel uninterested in pursuing any further relations with the country, until June 2016, when diplomatic relations were to be normalized for interest of pursuit of a pipeline to export gas into the European market.
In some of his speeches Hitler appeared to be close to Rosenberg's views, rejecting traditional Christianity as a religion based on Jewish culture, preferring an ethnically and culturally pure "Race" whose destiny was supposed to be assigned to the German people by "Providence". In others, he adhered to the Nazi Party line, which advocated a "positive Christianity". After Hitler's assumption of power he moved to reassure the Protestant and Catholic churches that the party was not intending to reinstitute Germanic paganism. He placed himself in the position of being the man to save Positive Christianity from utter destruction at the hands of the atheistic antitheist Communists of the Soviet Union.
In the years following, West Sumatra was like an occupied territory with Javanese officials occupying most senior civilian, military and police positions.Kahin (1999), pages 165–229 The policies of centralisation continued under the Suharto regime. The national government legislated to apply the Javanese desa village system throughout Indonesia, and in 1983 the traditional Minangkabau nagari village units were split into smaller jorong units, thereby destroying the traditional village social and cultural institutions.Kahin (1999), pages 257–261 In the years following the downfall of the Suharto regime decentralisation policies were implemented, giving more autonomy to provinces, thereby allowing West Sumatra to reinstitute the nagari system.
In 1992 the United States Information Agency asked the ACLS to reinstitute the Fulbright Program in Vietnam, operated by the U.S. Embassy in Hanoi. The ACLS Center for Educational Exchange with Vietnam offers fellowship and study opportunities to Vietnamese scholars. In 1966 the ACLS, the Social Science Research Council and the National Academy of Sciences founded the Committee on Scholarly Communication with China, which maintains an office in Beijing to assist American schools with programs in that country. The ACLS has extended its support of research to scholars in the former USSR through the ACLS Humanities Program in Belarus, Russia and Ukraine, and in Africa through its African Humanities Program.
In 2007, speaking as Senate Majority Whip, Durbin went on record as stating that "It's time to reinstitute the Fairness Doctrine." In 2010, Durbin cosponsored and passed from committee the Combating Online Infringement and Counterfeits Act, a bill aiming to combat media piracy by blacklisting websites though many opposed to the bill argue that it violates First Amendment rights and promotes censorship. The announcement of the bill was followed by a wave of protest from digital rights activists, including the Electronic Frontier Foundation calling it censorship and stating that action may be taken against all users of sites in which only some users are uploading infringing material. Durbin was a sponsor of the PROTECT IP Act.
Although it was for a long time preoccupied with the debate of fascism and anti-fascism, the party distanced itself from this in the early 1990s to rather focus on contemporary Italian issues. While both wings of the party agreed after the 1950s that fascism was dead, they nevertheless saw some good things in fascism which they wanted to reinstitute. When the party transformed itself into the AN, it outspokenly rejected fascism, as well as "any kind of totalitarianism and racism." In contrast to other far-right parties in Europe which increased their power in the late 1980s, the MSI chose not to campaign against immigration, because Italy was less concerned about the topic at the time versus other European countries.
On March 9 Ferré and Zuviría, who had been sent to negotiate with the revolved porteños, made a pact to reinstitute the deputies of Buenos Aires to the Convention, with representation according to population. The negotiations though didn't finish positively, and after a long wait the sessions were restarted on April 15 as requested by Urquiza, who pretended to have the full text by May. The similarity of the constitutional text with that of the United States was not welcomed by all the congressmen; Zuviría read, at the inauguration of the sessions of April 20, a long speech against the indiscriminate application of foreign principles to a country whose organization, he said, was not habituated to it. He proposed instead to make a study of local institutions and use it as a base.
The Marmion Academy was created in 1933 when the monks of St. Meinrad Abbey combined Jasper Academy (Jasper, Indiana) with the Fox Valley Catholic High School, which the Augustinians had just returned to the diocese of Rockford. During the Great Depression era it was difficult for students to pay their tuition as well as uniforms, so the monks, in 1935, associated with the JROTC program and changed its name to Marmion Military Academy. At the time, all JROTC uniforms were provided for by the US government. In the 1990s in order to provide more options for its student body and a return to the original spirit of the school, the monks of Marmion Abbey decided to make JROTC an optional program and to reinstitute the original name of the school, Marmion Academy.
Shapiro served as U.S. ambassador to Venezuela from 19 March 2002 to 21 August 2004. Weeks before the 2002 Venezuelan coup d'état attempt against Hugo Chávez and only days after assuming his position, Shapiro met with a Venezuelan trade union organization that openly pursued involvement in the coup, with the ambassador stating that the United States would not assist with the plot and only supported a change of government by democratic means. Shapiro was accused of participating in the coup, with some stating that a meeting with interim president Pedro Carmona Estanga one day after the coup.Duncan Campbell, The Guardian, 29 April 2002, American navy 'helped Venezuelan coup' Shapiro and other U.S. sources have denied this and claim that he urged Carmona to reinstitute the dissolved National Assembly.
Die Welt. a right-wing Polish website, , ran a piece with the headline, "Sieg Heil, Mr. Grabowski", accompanied by a photograph of Joseph Goebbels; Grabowski successfully sued the website's owner for libel. Reviewing the book in April 2016, Michael Fleming, a British historian specializing in Polish history, wrote in support of Grabowski, describing criticisms of the book as attempts to "reinstitute the old, discredited heroic narrative of unimpeachable Polish conduct". Arguing that these tales of heroism are common in Europe, he wrote that Grabowski's book is part of a "growing body of corrective scholarship" that discusses the indifference or complicity of European populations; but he also warned readers and reviewers not to "reinforce orientalist narratives about 'Eastern' Europe" or the idea that only populations close to the genocide could stop it, which he calls "fetishiz[ing] spatial proximity".
He maneuvers the Supreme Court into striking itself out of existence, provokes the black minority toward rebellion with race riots, creates farm machinery to root them out of their livelihoods so he could incarcerate them in concentration camps, and repeals the single term limit so he could run multiple times. In the meantime, the black rebellions give the CSA a plausible excuse to reinstitute conscription and arm itself. He manipulates Socialist US President Al Smith into allowing the states of Kentucky, Houston, and Sequoyah (all formerly part of the Confederacy) to hold plebiscites to determine their futures. Kentucky and Houston vote to rejoin the Confederacy with Houston also rejoining Texas, while Sequoyah, which had been saturated with settlers from other parts of the north, voted to remain part of the US. By 1941, Featherston is ready for war.
The outbreak of World War II was marked with the Japanese Empire's invasion of Malaya and Singapore in 1941 and 1942, which saw the entirety of the FMSR network falling under Japanese control. The system suffered minimal damage during the initial invasion and bombing runs, but saw the dismantling and closure of minor branch lines during the occupation for construction materials for the Thailand-Burma Railway. Similarly, several FMSR locomotives were transferred for use at the Thailand- Burma Railway during the period, but were eventually returned after the war. Following the end of the war, the FMSR continued to operate as an entity for three years under the British Military Administration and Malayan Union, before it is renamed in 1948 as the Malayan Railway Administration (also known simply as the Malayan Railway, or MR) as the Malayan Union is reinstitute as the Federation of Malaya.
The phrase "Era of Silence" describes the silencing of all opposition to Päts' governing circle. However, it also reflects an apparent "national conspiracy" to go along with the suppression of civil and political rights in the interests of "order" after a decade of political turmoil. His rule was not an unduly harsh one: nearly all of those jailed in 1934 were released in 1938, and none of the former heads of state (Ants Piip, Juhan Kukk, Jaan Teemant and Jaan Tõnisson) who issued the Four State Elders' Memorandum in a Finnish newspaper in October 1936, calling on Päts to immediately end the curtailment of civil and political rights and to reinstitute democratic government, were ever harassed by the government. When elections were held in 1938 under the new constitution of 1937, the opposition gathered more votes than the government, but only managed to secure 16 seats to the government's 64.

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