Cuneo passed at will, dribbled at will, and more or less scored at will.
|
|
The only thing I remember from it is Captain Picard saying "fire at will!" and everyone shooting at Will Riker.
|
|
We're moving in and out of the camp at will.
|
|
Men, who are strong and active, should speak at will.
|
|
You can switch between these views at will extremely easily.
|
|
Now managers couldn't just choose a category at will, however.
|
|
Once he rapped, mumbled, growled, and changed voices at will.
|
|
The president may dismiss or reappoint cabinet members at will.
|
|
The prosecutor should be removable at will by the President.
|
|
We have confirmed one victim shot at Will Rogers Airport.
|
|
A creative mind, surely, cannot be shut down at will.
|
|
These were the types of questions eating at Will Hamilton.
|
|
They have been able to divorce and marry at will.
|
|
Sometimes Andrew Wyeth conflated his sitters, merging identities at will.
|
|
Smith applies shocks to the language, twists tenses at will.
|
|
Countries would discriminate at will against American products and services.
|
|
The phrase "Ni hao!" is being shouted out at will.
|
|
He knew that people cannot change their beliefs at will.
|
|
Success teachers are not unionized and can be fired at will.
|
|
In exchange, Rossello said Puerto Rico would adopt at-will employment.
|
|
I only want it to be given to me at will.
|
|
He could insert odd elements at will without fear of disruption.
|
|
The message was clear: We can still hit you at will.
|
|
Allowing the user to travel through dimensions and space at will.
|
|
These friends can be summoned at will through special mobile phones.
|
|
Here's the kicker: The president cannot fire these people at will.
|
|
Not everyone, of course, can leave the assembly line at will.
|
|
Others are political appointees who the president can fire at will.
|
|
But it still reserved the right to silence players at will.
|
|
The players took turns scoring at will against the Detroit defense.
|
|
Against the Celtics on Wednesday, James got to the basket at will.
|
|
Being a US attorney is definitely "at will" employment, in a sense.
|
|
That proxy can be changed at will as a voter's interests change.
|
|
At that point, Mr Modi will be able to legislate at will.
|
|
Another option is to prevent investors from taking money out at will.
|
|
Adjectives, nouns and verbs are "open": they can be coined at will.
|
|
This isn't the first time scientists have positioned individual atoms at will.
|
|
You can also manually create points of interest or zoom at-will.
|
|
Whole passages could be moved at will, and chapters or sections reordered.
|
|
Look out Mars, Curiosity now has the authority to laser at will.
|
|
The House Ethics Committee would be able to end investigations at will.
|
|
And how other people aren't yours to touch and grab at will.
|
|
Mr. Erdogan can now dismiss Parliament and call new elections at will.
|
|
Carry a few in your back pocket and use them at will.
|
|
Arguably, that means that President Trump can now fire Cordray at will.
|
|
I need a contract so that I can't be fired at will.
|
|
If he doesn't, Yoo reminds him that his employment is at-will.
|
|
At all events you can turn the feature on or off at will.
|
|
Like the vast majority of private sector employees, Hubbuch was employed at-will.
|
|
They are able to turn their "emotion chips" on and off at will.
|
|
They clog lanes, move on a string, and, of course, switch at will.
|
|
Amazon can't allow merchants to nix all resales of their items at will.
|
|
Luckey added that California, where Facebook is headquartered, is an at-will state.
|
|
He went to the hospital at will under the advise of his physician.
|
|
"Grope at will, doctor," she says, as he places his arm around her.
|
|
That's chiefly because he could move back to hearing criminal cases at will.
|
|
Israel wants to preserve its freedom to strike targets in Syria at will.
|
|
Cards to be flipped through in an idle moment and discarded at will.
|
|
Or they would be, if Monopoly players could plunder the bank at will.
|
|
ISIS soldiers killed at will and forcibly converted minorities to Islam, Aboush says.
|
|
He went to the hospital at will under the advice of his physician.
|
|
Trump has effectively used social media to change the media narrative at will.
|
|
They talked through the camera and they turned the camera on at will.
|
|
Guinevere-like, she is the one who commits adultery at will—not George.
|
|
Mr. Green said the governor had the right to end at-will contracts.
|
|
Other agency heads who answer to the president can be fired at will.
|
|
Nope. The FBI director is an at-will employee, as are most Americans.
|
|
Surely any president has the authority to remove his political appointees at will.
|
|
Borrowers can draw down, repay, and re-borrow these funding lines at will.
|
|
Or you can just lean into the gag and use JIZZ at will.
|
|
"Every industry you look at will potentially be touched by drones," Siegel says.
|
|
Mr. Trump will also be able to tap into company profits at will.
|
|
At-will employment gives a significant upper hand to the country&aposs employers.
|
|
He remains under "administrative control," and the police enforce the order at will.
|
|
My brother got us free tickets that we pick up at will call.
|
|
Puerto Ricans are American citizens and can move to the mainland at will.
|
|
TO DISTROY [sic] AT WILL A WORLD OF MY OWN TO EXPERIMENT IN .
|
|
It'll even share the save files, allowing you to switch platforms at will.
|
|
These kinds of positions allow the governor to hire or fire employees at will.
|
|
The bill would also allow the president to remove the CFPB director at will.
|
|
That allows its clients to scale their support teams up or down at will.
|
|
Canadian carrier customers will be able to unlock their phones at will come December.
|
|
Banks usually detect cyber-thieves in their systems before they can burgle at will.
|
|
I was like, 'I'm not going to throw shade at Will Smith right now.
|
|
If it gets to be too much, you can dismiss upcoming events at will.
|
|
If hackers are able to take down the internet at will, what happens next?
|
|
We give studios total transparency, consistent quality, and the ability to scale at will.
|
|
Gmail allows users to add or subtract periods in their email addresses at will.
|
|
Trump's volatility is so predictable, it can be summoned at will by third parties.
|
|
Trump does have the power to hire and fire executive branch officials at will.
|
|
Alexander is an at-will employee, meaning he could be fired at any time.
|
|
Migrants from the EU, by contrast, are currently free to enter Britain at will.
|
|
I can refuse work, and take off hours, days, or even weeks at will.
|
|
A subsequent update gave the driver the ability to change the clearance at will.
|
|
"Legislative reform is protected by law, whereas administrative reform can be reversed at will."
|
|
The court's suggested fix: Allow the president to fire the agency's director at will.
|
|
He was too fast, too active, and was able to bloody Nikitin at will.
|
|
Green Bay continued to move the ball at will, however, especially on the ground.
|
|
Then she points a nanoparticle laser at whatever lights up and fires at will.
|
|
In Photoshop, it's possible to shift the layers of an image around at will.
|
|
The CIA can now kill at will, unaffected by the need for public disclosure.
|
|
There's power in the ability to assume many positions along the spectrum, at will.
|
|
It does not say anything about for cause or at will or anything else.
|
|
Recently, America is brandishing the trade war big stick, smacking other countries at will.
|
|
The film's director, Masaaki Yuasa, uses Lu's powers to manipulate the narrative at will.
|
|
Able to teleport cats at will and lord it over the entire Jellicle realm?
|
|
I thought about closing my laptop and leaving the files to multiply at will.
|
|
CAIRO — The gunman stalked through a Tunisian beach resort in Sousse, firing at will.
|
|
Make ahead, put a pan in your fridge or freezer, then bake at will.
|
|
The gadgets can be pulled out at will to fight back against government overreach.
|
|
Most employees work under the so-called "at-will" standard despite signing employment agreements.
|
|
They're actually centrally controlled by the miners, who can basically rewrite history at will.
|
|
The risk of ending at-will employmentGiven that at-will employment is largely the default through the US and Sanders hasn&apost outlined the precise reasons he&aposll allow for layoffs, assessing the magnitude of his proposed just-cause law is impossible.
|
|
Drivers travel at will, as long as they have money for gas and road snacks.
|
|
Dolores, at least, achieved full sentience and developed the ability to murk humans at will.
|
|
Several airlines canceled afternoon and evening flights at Will Rogers World Airport in Oklahoma City.
|
|
They treat the robots as playthings, abusing them at will and for their own pleasure.
|
|
Nothing says holy like a squad of gunmen firing at will without fear of prosecution.
|
|
The government could then alter the money supply at will, for example by causing inflation.
|
|
You can't ramp them up and down at will like you can fossil fuel plants.
|
|
And everyone knows at Barcelona that when Messi is fit, he scores almost at will.
|
|
It also says whatever this video is hinting at will be announced on February 26th.
|
|
I, for one, can't wait until we're all zapping drones from the sky at will.
|
|
In fact, an at-will employee can be fired for taking an unpaid sick day.
|
|
The one thing we can manipulate at will to tell the world who we are.
|
|
And let's not forget why -- Pippas butt stole the show at Will and Kate's wedding.
|
|
Her victories entrenched her existing support, since those super delegates can switch support at will.
|
|
Judo-practicing Putin can yank NATO's chain at will, putting pressure on West-leaning allies.
|
|
The shooting occurred in a parking lot at Will Rogers World Airport around 1 p.m.
|
|
Now here we are, spouting it off at will like a quote from Mean Girls.
|
|
They allow him to aim more easily and to fire at will onto the crowd.
|
|
Like most independent agencies, its director is protected against removal at will by the president.
|
|
Whether the Federal Reserve, which has the power to create money at will, is solvent.
|
|
You have now established your moral superiority, cost-free, and can trumpet it at will.
|
|
Today, the destitute North is able to bully and censor the affluent South at will.
|
|
Some fear that Beijing is also indicating a willingness to change the constitution at will.
|
|
Some analysts argue that the key numbers to look at will be the growth forecasts.
|
|
He's playing with confidence, slicing through defenders, and getting to the bucket seemingly at will.
|
|
But if you could simply summon a private, robot car at will, utilization would increase.
|
|
The most important source of employers' power is the default rule of employment at will.
|
|
In video footage posted online, inmates could be seen roaming through the prison at will.
|
|
However, this doesn't mean that you can just toss the S220 Ultra around at will.
|
|
The legislation also expands the areas where the police can set up checkpoints at will.
|
|
Please do that today, if you haven't already, so you can browse them at will.
|
|
A few signs that the company you're looking at will help support your future growth?
|
|
This allows him to fume at will, nitpick unreservedly and, most of all, curse freely.
|
|
And Terry Rozier is their undersized and unheralded guard, who can seemingly score at will.
|
|
But the important point is that they would also be able to quit at will.
|
|
In which case, serve the salt on the side and let people season at will.
|
|
Putin seemingly has the ability to enter sensitive systems, poke around and lurk at will.
|
|
"It's not true that policemen just kill at will, they cannot do that," he added.
|
|
For three decades, the at-will doctrine stymied legislation that would have protected labor rights.
|
|
I want to be able to be all of those women simultaneously and at will.
|
|
Do they score at will or does Anthony further impede what's been an unusually static offense?
|
|
Still, even if Damore was hired at will, it doesn't mean he has no legal protections.
|
|
The state courts have also challenged at-will firings if they violate a company's workplace policies.
|
|
Bolton's philosophy is to extinguish all threats to the US by extending military force at will.
|
|
But the endowment is not like one big bank account, to be drawn down at will.
|
|
But when it comes to the right to die at will, Paris is far more critical.
|
|
When Mr Zaid was writing Mexican presidents (all of them priistas) removed governors almost at will.
|
|
Now the President can rule by decree, bypassing parliament altogether and expanding the crackdown at will.
|
|
For centuries, black women's magnificent, strong bodies have been coveted, used and then abused at will.
|
|
Naturally you have a nearly limitless "library" of these functions that you switch between at will.
|
|
First look at Will Smith as the Genie in the up coming live action Aladdin pic.twitter.
|
|
That means free to camp, to hike, and explore, and to use natural resources at will.
|
|
One major complaint was that the characters seemed to be able to travel instantly at will.
|
|
Unlike Russia, the United States pumps at will via its commercial energy sector, led by shale.
|
|
AD is in the post and finding the right people, and scoring pretty much at will.
|
|
Investors in the DAO can also withdraw money not yet committed to a project at will.
|
|
Scientists discovered that those with stronger quantitative abilities are more likely to twist data at will.
|
|
For weeks Clay had played the fool and been tagged at will by unworthy sparring partners.
|
|
They seek not so much a seamless fusion as the freedom to move around at will.
|
|
A recent court ruling gave the president the power to remove the CFPB director at will.
|
|
In essence, the court demoted Director Cordray so that he could now be fired at will.
|
|
That means it will work with any wireless carrier, and you can switch providers at will.
|
|
There's her anger at Will, too, and the heady experience of the cult's group-confession rituals.
|
|
Among other things, it would make the Director removable at will, unlike other financial institution regulators.
|
|
But employment is at-will, which the company argues allows it to respond to market conditions.
|
|
It's a baggy t-shirt to be slung on and off at will—not a corset.
|
|
Episode 'DPO' is about a Gen X that conducts lightning and can electrocute people at will.
|
|
The president has the constitutional authority to appoint and, by implication, fire those folks at will.
|
|
The justice overseeing the trial, Melissa Jackson, has allowed him to come and go at will.
|
|
If I could give them the power to execute their captors at will, I probably would.
|
|
We mostly poor black and brown folks were left to simply kill one another at will.
|
|
James scored at will in the first half as the Cavs built a 24-point lead.
|
|
The big picture: The CFPB has a single director whom the president cannot fire at will.
|
|
But it doesn't matter when they continue to penetrate government and private sector networks at will.
|
|
He's able to humiliate and disrupt his democratic rivals at will and get away with it.
|
|
Sen. Bernie Sanders has made ending at-will employment a part of his 2020 presidential platform.
|
|
Ending at-will employment would also not be devastating to employment if it was implemented nationwide.
|
|
Maybe that's the transition — you never end up where you started, just look at Will Smith.
|
|
In the Soviet Union, Stalin was certainly no progressive; he murdered his political enemies at will.
|
|
"Trump's banter belies a willingness to use and discard other human beings at will," they continued.
|
|
Apple Watch bands are on display and available for customers to try on their wrists at will.
|
|
"Accustomed to the undomesticated life, Balto frequently urinated and defecated at will throughout Theranos headquarters," Bilton writes.
|
|
"In general, employment is at will and the employer can fire you for any reason," he says.
|
|
But the truth is companies that hire employees at will have far more leeway in firing decisions.
|
|
It has a semi-open-world feel, allowing players to explore the space station largely at will.
|
|
At its previous meeting in December 2015, OPEC effectively allowed its 13 members to pump at will.
|
|
The big picture: Facebook hasn't changed its policy allowing political candidates to lie at will in advertisements.
|
|
Fear becomes a go-to feminine trait, something girls are expected to feel and express at will.
|
|
Allowing manufacturers to program the cars at will presents a kind of ethical quandary itself, Millar noted.
|
|
Also off the "bump at will" list are the premium customers who make airlines the most money.
|
|
Russia, China and others have invested in their cyberwar capabilities to exploit our systems almost at will.
|
|
It was not designed to be a modular component that could be inserted and removed at will.
|
|
Using subsidised electricity, farmers pump groundwater at will, drawing up more annually than China and America combined.
|
|
That's why I like being able to summon the software keyboard at will; I get to choose.
|
|
During that stretch, Utah slashed to the rim at will and scored 270 points in the paint.
|
|
They can also be withdrawn at will, whereas Goldman's debt has an average duration of seven years.
|
|
We have come to see ourselves as her lords and masters, entitled to plunder her at will.
|
|
Can commission-based "bounty hunters" now enter any business at will seeking access to books and records?
|
|
That's why I like being able to summon the software keyboard at will; you get to choose.
|
|
Trump threatens that balance by firing directors at will and publicly bullying its upper ranks into submission.
|
|
And of course, Devin Booker dominated, scoring 25 points at will to hand Philadelphia its first loss.
|
|
It is an irrelevant argument anyway, since all confirmed and appointment officers can be fired at will.
|
|
It can affect oil prices at will in ways no other player in the oil market can.
|
|
The only thing that prevents him from changing the Mexican constitution at will is the Mexican Senate.
|
|
Hackers were still able to hack into that and blow up the centrifuges pretty much at will.
|
|
Today's species can outswim the fastest Olympians, change color at will, escape through the tiniest of holes.
|
|
You'll have fun tonight, but the party you end up at will likely not what you expected.
|
|
If you comply with these requirements, your employment at Uber will continue on an at- will basis.
|
|
You can set it to automatically mute notifications at specific times or turn it on at will.
|
|
And also I can cry to "Sometimes it Snows in April" on the bus at will now.
|
|
The Tarnhelm, a dwarf-made magic helmet, allows its wearer to disappear or change shape at will.
|
|
It had no camera or microphone, and it could not be used to download apps at will.
|
|
For the most part, Israel has been able to strike Syrian, Iranian and Hezbollah targets at will.
|
|
It is cheap and fast, and you can break the laws of the gridlocked traffic at will.
|
|
Employees came and left at will, while strangers wandered into the party looking for food and drinks.
|
|
They're on a strict planting and harvesting schedule and cannot ramp up or decrease production at will.
|
|
Mr. Fairhurst also stressed that inmates at Berwyn could not lock and unlock their cells at will.
|
|
She has subscribed to the Trump stance that she could be removed by the President at will.
|
|
At-will employment gives companies the power to fire employees for virtually any reason aside from discrimination.
|
|
Trump called on reporters at will, often taking time to malign or praise their respective news outlets.
|
|
In many ways, they're more archetypes than people, jumping in and out of the action at will.
|
|
Those laws and other measures, including modern exceptions to the at-will rule, offer workers some security.
|
|
The past trans ban was a medical regulation that let commanders discharge trans troops almost at will.
|
|
He's attacking the basket at will, driving right and left off picks and staying level after contact.
|
|
This administration seems to think that America is a piggy bank that can be tapped at will.
|
|
An at-will employer is not limited to firing people only for breaking written, or even unwritten, rules.
|
|
Under US labor law, at-will workers can be fired with no warning and without a stated reason.
|
|
A playable Barret suggests the ability to switch between characters either at will or when the story demands.
|
|
Called the "command center," the tool lets you watch games from multiple viewpoints, switching between them at will.
|
|
Legally speaking, Google was within its rights to fire Damore as an at-will employee under California law.
|
|
His 2007 work Harry Totter is a meandering story that moves at will from one protagonist to another.
|
|
In this sense it costs too little to sink tubewells and pump up the precious stuff at will.
|
|
At the same time, until the late 20th century men were permitted to rape their wives at will.
|
|
The rest he tried to brush off and ignore, which left Kaine free to attack Trump at will.
|
|
In order to do that Israel wants to preserve its freedom to strike targets in Syria at will.
|
|
Emboldened racists will target people of color; sexual abusers have been given tacit permission to predate at will.
|
|
It also can adapt more easily to changing demand patterns, since the fleets can be redistributed at will.
|
|
But the fact that the Russian authorities can tighten and loosen the screws at will is not new.
|
|
Paul Polydoris is a 22-year-old bartender with a secret: he can change his body at will.
|
|
The ability to regulate your body temperature easily and at will (ocean soak, air conditioning, do it again).
|
|
Davis does not use moves and counter-moves so much as switch at will between entire tactical modes.
|
|
Driving to the hoop at will, the Mavs also produced a season-high 239 points in the paint.
|
|
Elton John himself signed off on Martin's involvement, giving Martin carte blanche to reconstruct his music at will.
|
|
It'll also come with swappable silicon bands, so you can change the color of your tracker at will.
|
|
Entering the ball into the lane at will, Louisville rolled up a 50-20 advantage in paint points.
|
|
"There are also Russian and Chinese hackers that can make money on our market at will," he messaged.
|
|
Now, having had a cloistered training, Ligeti could dip at will into the full range of modernist styles.
|
|
He can, however, revoke the trust at will and, as its sole beneficiary, remains linked to it financially.
|
|
You're free to dip in and out at will, to craft a narrative that works best for you.
|
|
I had always thought I could end my habit, which I refused to consider a habit, at will.
|
|
The rest is similarly Vintage Kobe, slashing to the rim, contorting himself like MJ, and scoring at will.
|
|
But to the game's credit, it's skilled at slipping between tones at will, and it never feels forced.
|
|
Wind and solar are not "dispatchable," which means grid operators can't turn them on and off at will.
|
|
Executive-branch drone operators killed, openly and at will, in wars spreading in concentric circles outward from Iraq.
|
|
He has an essentially unlimited war chest that allow his campaign to produce rapid-response ads at will.
|
|
Once they give someone a present, they figure it's the recipient's right to dispose of it at will.
|
|
There were several dozen teenagers, many of whom the birthday girl didn't know, coming and going at will.
|
|
The online interface let us feed him at any time, or adjust the feeding schedule at will, remotely.
|
|
Netflix, like many tech companies, has "at-will" employment, which means it can fire employees at any time.
|
|
One area of life that you aren't excelling at will eventually drag down your other areas of life.
|
|
They appear able to strike at will, often at night, denying the troops rest and rattling frayed nerves.
|
|
The ruling also had said the president should have the power to fire the agency's head at will.
|
|
Most Americans with jobs work "at-will": Employers owe their employees nothing in the relationship and vice versa.
|
|
Mr. Cordray is not the only agency head with statutory protections from removal at will by the president.
|
|
Trump's supporters say he has an inherent right to reduce monuments, since he can create them at will.
|
|
But he said Iran could exit the deal "at will" if it determined it was in its interests.
|
|
Then there's Forsyth's Solar Motel bandmate, guitarist Nick Millevoi, whose resume skips between genres and sounds at will.
|
|
This should not be an option to be accepted or rejected at will by a potentially duplicitous individual.
|
|
The functionaries of every government have propensities to command at will the liberty and property of their constituents.
|
|
The series, which has been in development for about a year, is being co-produced by At Will Media.
|
|
All of that can break down and someone go into a gun-free zone and just kill at will.
|
|
This feature can be turned on or off at will, and works between speeds of 25 and 90 mph.
|
|
What is more, China has a history of stealing intellectual property even as it blocks foreign investment at will.
|
|
China's pretensions to being a superpower will look hollow as long as America can throttle its firms at will.
|
|
Places you set your Status at will be added to your Passport along with who you were there with.
|
|
Then his team starts putting extra players on the court, fouling at will, and pelting your team with refuse.
|
|
But it lets armed forces operate as they do in conventional war zones and hit terrorist targets at will.
|
|
For some reason, language seems to be fair game the piece of culture that anyone can extract at will.
|
|
True, it abandons much-derided plans for an army-led "crisis panel", empowered to topple elected governments at will.
|
|
"If an employee is at will, an employer can fire the employee for any lawful reason," she tells Broadly.
|
|
That way, the child's experience is consistent across devices, and the parent can bestow or revoke permissions at will.
|
|
The CFPB would lose its independent agency status, and its director would be fireable at will by the president.
|
|
Oh, and did we mention that Paul is a shapeshifter who can change from Paul to Polly at will.
|
|
The director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau could be removed "at will" by the president under another change.
|
|
It would allow the president to remove the CFPB director at will, without needing a specific cause for firing.
|
|
The Samsung Galaxy Fold was supposed to be a classy smartphone that unfolded into a full tablet at will.
|
|
The family it focuses on learns that their house grows and shrinks at will, adding new terrifying new rooms.
|
|
Dolphins, he came to realize, are actually intergalactic beings who have the ability to travel through dimensions at will.
|
|
Drones are now en vogue as battlefield assets, allowing militaries to strike and surveil at will without risking pilots.
|
|
DHB spokesman Dr Peter Bramley disputed claims that the agency wanted to move doctors around the country at will.
|
|
The Rams got punched in the mouth last week by a Tampa Bay Buccaneers offense that scored at will.
|
|
Viewers can then choose the camera position and angle they want — and zoom in on a moment at will.
|
|
He has always treated race as a kind of Duchampian ready-made, to be defined and deployed at will.
|
|
There's also a mesh pouch hidden like the laptop area that you can pop out or stow at will.
|
|
The Trump administration had insisted that the president should have the authority to remove the agency's leader at will.
|
|
And if you're indecisive, you can buy several pillow covers for a single insert and change them at will.
|
|
In other words, it would become a monopoly, a company that could control consumers and raise prices at will.
|
|
Most senior government officials are subject to political control by Mr. Trump because he can fire them at will.
|
|
Because he is not convinced that Mexico's institutions are democratic, he may be tempted to change them at will.
|
|
As a result, it's smaller and less obtrusive, allowing the sleeper to open or close the jaw at will.
|
|
But even in the looking-glass world of 2017, the meaning of words can't simply be chosen at will.
|
|
He found tens of thousands of host computers are infected with the tool, which attackers can use at will.
|
|
He was on base all the time, and while on base, he was stealing the next one at will.
|
|
Sen. Bernie Sanders has made an end to at-will employment part of his 4.83 Democratic presidential primary platform.
|
|
Likewise, the president has the power to hire and fire the officers of the Department of Justice at will.
|
|
"I was your soldier, ready to kill at will / But you left me wounded, on love's battlefield," he sings.
|
|
Illinois dominated the first 26 minutes, scoring at will and using pressure defense to knock Ohio State off-balance.
|
|
Under the GATT America acted as global trade sheriff, launching investigations at will and bullying disputatious countries into submission.
|
|
We've spent generations regarding the wilderness as a bottomless box of Kleenex, to be used and discarded at will.
|
|
Pacquiao attacked at will, winning round after round before the fight started to heat up in the middle rounds.
|
|
The old days, when insurers in the individual market could discriminate against those people at will, are not forgotten.
|
|
Even Mr James, a more versatile player than Mr Durant, does not have the same ability to score at will.
|
|
Whatever's written on the ePaper display can be saved to a mobile device-based central library and retrieved at will.
|
|
Here, the show appeals to our smartphone-primed abilities to summon engagement at will, a skill still far from universal.
|
|
To Trump, that seemed to mean having complete control over his employees and the ability to fire anyone at will.
|
|
A 10-year-old Finnish boy named Jani discovered a flaw in Instagram, allowing him to delete comments at will.
|
|
Trump, however, did not have his Android secured against malware or hacking, as far we know, and tweeted at will.
|
|
The post-imperial pride and insecurity that motivated the Brexit vote is not hers to deploy or withdraw at will.
|
|
Self-employed workers create their own hours, work from home when it suits them and schedule vacation time at will.
|
|
From there, he could see all the traveler's personal details (including frequent flier number) and reschedule booked flights at will.
|
|
The big sell behind Project Ara was that users could upgrade or switch out components of their phone at will.
|
|
So perhaps Facebook isn't comfortable about giving North American users that kind of autonomy to revoke specific consents at will.
|
|
In its brief, the Justice Department argued that the president should be able to remove the CFPB director at will.
|
|
America does have a rich history and heritage that can be mined for moments of nobility and emotion at will.
|
|
However, the contract stated that if neither side gave that notice, then either one could terminate the deal at will.
|
|
That could change, however, if Uber follows through on its promise in the settlement to stop deactivating drivers at will.
|
|
Puerto Rico "must not be allowed to continue to breach its constitutional and contractual obligations at will," the lawsuit said.
|
|
With a couple of exceptions, its local and state governments do not publish budgets, so they can spend at will.
|
|
Let's not assume that this has been a very peaceful country that is starting to fire off rockets at will.
|
|
I think if you have a controlled craziness and you can deploy that at will, that can be really powerful.
|
|
All of the samples are coded by keywords and musical key, allowing you to mix and match samples at will.
|
|
A mercurial creature who aspires to be a painter herself, she swans in and out of his life at will.
|
|
Mr. Tolentino recalled armed rebel groups entering the city at will, and criminal gangs engaging in shootouts in broad daylight.
|
|
Because of this at-will relationship between employers and employees, the US does not mandate companies to give compensatory pay.
|
|
It also said the president should be able to fire the director at will, but stayed the decision pending appeal.
|
|
Clay's jabs were slipping through at will now, bouncing off that rocklike face, opening the cut under the left eye.
|
|
The actress attended the Veuve Clicquot Polo Classic at Will Rogers State Historic Park in Los Angeles, California, on Saturday.
|
|
To hold the political branches have the power to switch the Constitution on or off at will is quite another.
|
|
Using 3D modelling the researchers can project designs onto various objects, which can be erased and re-designed at will.
|
|
The offense was surgical, punting just three times in the game and seemingly advancing at will against the Steelers defense.
|
|
The Nittany Lions showed last week that they have an offense that can score at will against an overmatched opponent.
|
|
That process begins with high list prices, and drug companies are still free to jack up those numbers at will.
|
|
It showed that 643% of the cities it looked at will experience a striking change in climate conditions by 2050.
|
|
Because it can return to its polyp phase at will, the Turritopsis dohrnii jellyfish is thought to be theoretically immortal.
|
|
The animals roam the streets at will, uprooting plants from pots, leaving trails of dirty handprints and peering through windows.
|
|
Trump's sudden and open-ended tariff increases, almost at will, are effectively building a similar structure of trade isolation today.
|
|
"If you comply with these requirements, your employment at Uber will continue on an at-will basis," Ms. Yoo wrote.
|
|
Because to these men, women have been deemed weak creatures, to be pampered, possessed -- or denigrated and destroyed -- at will.
|
|
Nearly all tech employees are at-will employees who may be terminated with or without cause for any lawful reason.
|
|
Virginia is an at-will state, meaning employers can freely fire an employee at any time and for any reason.
|
|
Under the proposed law, the president could fire the agency's director at will and its oversight powers would be curbed.
|
|
And that suggests to some that whatever strategy the Trump administration eventually arrives at will be dominated by the military.
|
|
Vaughan improvised extravagantly melodic lines; she heard all the harmonic choices in a chord and breezed through them at will.
|
|
For a typical at-will employee, that could easily translate into looking for a new job much sooner than expected.
|
|
As an initial matter, Damore almost certainly was an at-will employee (meaning, he probably doesn't have a special contract).
|
|
Because of Clinton's ability to change viewpoints at will, ignoring prior rhetoric, Sanders is poised to win the Democratic nomination.
|
|
You play as two of the four horse riders, War and Strife, and you can switch between them at will.
|
|
The customer could create and delete posts at will and view the contact information for all of the forum's users.
|
|
Even Smith, who&aposs not known for taking off at will, scrambled for a season-best 56 yards on the Redskins.
|
|
We've also culled the best options at two price points for each category, so you can save or splurge at will.
|
|
Just plug the portable drive into your computer and you're already set to store and transfer your favorite files at will.
|
|
They used to have this theory that memories are stored in your brain, and you could just trigger them at will.
|
|
If James continues to have his way and get to the rim at will, this may be a very quick series.
|
|
The Sudanese air force drops bombs at will that devastate the Nuba people, another population that today is subject to genocide.
|
|
The decision that the bureau appealed also said the president should have the power to fire the agency's head at will.
|
|
Shooting matters, but so does top-notch perimeter defense, the ability to get to the rim at will, and intelligent passing.
|
|
"For too long, hotels have had nearly unchecked power to raise rates and price gouge consumers at will," the report states.
|
|
If you have kids, they can just text anyone at will while you're in the bathroom and you can't stop it.
|
|
In fact, the study revealed a simple method allowing scientists to tinker, at will, with the genomes of animals and plants.
|
|
For years, countries have spoken in vague terms about creating domestic internets that could be isolated from the world at will.
|
|
With 317 seats in the Grand National Assembly, Turkey's unicameral 103-seat parliament, the party can now again legislate at will.
|
|
The director, meanwhile, could be fired "at will" by the president—turning the agency into a lapdog rather than a watchdog.
|
|
She challenged gender norms with her explicit sexuality and her powers—she could smash mountains or change someone's gender at will.
|
|
The ruling, that the president should be able to remove CFPB Director Richard Cordray at will, has been stayed pending appeal.
|
|
Take back control – for a plastic and pliant world you can reorganise at will; for a world that works like Lego.
|
|
Steinberg's exchange was simple enough: Obama can kill Americans at will with drones but waterboarding is not allowed—only in America!
|
|
It started with a third quarter in which the Thunder seemed to score at will, cutting Golden State's lead to 260.
|
|
That means putting companies like Huawei out of business, and imposing strict oversight of contractors who are getting pilfered at will.
|
|
During the third, Ali was content to lay on the top rope and permit Foreman to pummel him almost at will.
|
|
Political appointees can be removed at will, but civil appointees can be removed only after going through a fairly elaborate process.
|
|
He caught 9 of the 10 passes thrown his way, and seemed able to get open at will against the Packers.
|
|
Illinois is already an "at-will" state, meaning an employee can be dismissed for any reason, without cause, at any time.
|
|
His service game is powerful, his trick shots can be spectacular, and he can dominate many top tier opponents at will.
|
|
Another key element is that GrubHub had the right to terminate Lawson at-will, which is an indicator of employment status.
|
|
Climate disasters are plundering the nation at will, taking life and property like marauding armies of raiders from the middle ages.
|
|
While initially reluctant, she became fascinated with the way that these keyboards allowed her to bend or stretch notes at will.
|
|
They can promise allegiances or switch at will, operating with no constraints binding them to the outcome of a statewide primary.
|
|
Brown started scoring at will in the second half with 20 points over the first eight-plus minutes of the half.
|
|
The presumption that we must ban any method of digital communication the government cannot access at will is a dangerous one.
|
|
The ruling made it so the president can remove the CFPB director at will, at any time and for any reason.
|
|
In another, I'm a god floating through the air, hurling buzzsaw blades and turning invisible at will among mutant, neon flora.
|
|
The bill essentially provides Trump a license to raise U.S. tariffs at will, without congressional consent and international rules be damned.
|
|
It will hop from being to being, size itself up or down, and skip and roam around the world at will.
|
|
By analogy, a Mexican with a clean record could always work at will in the U.S. if it makes economic sense.
|
|
By college, young women told me, drunken party boys felt free to kiss, touch and rub up against them at will.
|
|
The opposite is true now, as the Trump administration reclassifies employees from furloughed to essential or excepted from furlough at will.
|
|
Many employees are considered "at will," meaning they can be terminated at any time as long as the reason isn't illegal.
|
|
Much of Quang Nam was a "free-fire zone," where United States troops were authorized to use their weapons at will.
|
|
The Warriors' offense is so relentless that they can seemingly erase leads at will, but Toronto is not giving an inch.
|
|
Holyfield opened up the fight by throwing some effective combos -- and essentially landed at will for the rest of the fight.
|
|
Norman Aragon is a son of a white British colonizer and a Maroon slave from Jamaica who can disappear at will.
|
|
Chief among this book's pleasures are the crisp, cleareyed registrations of Greece that seem to trip off Bollen's fingertips at will.
|
|
If Scalia and Barr's theory prevails, for example, the president would gain the power to fire Federal Reserve governors at will.
|
|
CFPB, which asks whether the president is allowed to fire the head of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) at will.
|
|
Leaving these bulbs vulnerable might be more dangerous than simply letting a hacker flick on and off your lights at will.
|
|
As a practical matter, the president lacks the power to supervise, direct, or remove at will the director of the CFPB.
|
|
If he could, he would sympathize with every animal, and yet he can't expand, at will, the scope of his imagination.
|
|
Courts began to enshrine the at-will doctrine in the 19th century, making exceptions only for employees with fixed-term contracts.
|
|
The notion of at-will employment and its associated lack of job protections soon rose to the level of constitutional mandate.
|
|
Because the stratollite is at the mercy of the wind, the ability to change altitude at will is critical for navigation.
|
|
The country's draconian internet laws allow the government to access user data and censor content on social media platforms at will.
|
|
"We're in an era where people can get the latest Drake album or Infinity War at will," he told VICE News.
|
|
It goes like this: We find the worst villains or institutions in the past and make comparisons at will. Hitler. Mussolini.
|
|
Early on, Wilmore fired at will at Obama, who preceded him onstage (and to whose routine we'll come in a few tics).
|
|
If Mexican immigrants with clean criminal records could enter at will for a fee, then the entire need for a wall disappears.
|
|
I aspire to be someone who has ideals, someone with standards regarding a company's business ethics, someone who could boycott at will.
|
|
You can buy your own beer, keep it in your fridge and grab it at will without visiting a lengthy bar queue.
|
|
And since Trump has said his net worth depends on his mood, he's free to raise or lower the estimate at will.
|
|
Then they made sure they were protected by passing the new law that allows the government to cut payments almost at will.
|
|
What would individual identity mean if people could change their DNA (and, alongside it, nearly every aspect of their bodies) at will?
|
|
Decades after emancipation, that old Massa privilege of white men raping black women at will had been forced on my great-grandmother?
|
|
The suspension prompted questions as to whether employees could access user information and take action to suspend or ban users at will.
|
|
You can also use your original remotes at will; because the Caavo knows what's going on on-screen, it never gets confused.
|
|
The city guard can seize them all, at will, and someone who refuses to recognize that fact will forfeit each in turn.
|
|
For new players debating which version to play, starting with a version you can pocket at will is the way to go.
|
|
Trump's tweeting does indeed allow him to present a very clear and honed message to his supporters and potential supporters at will.
|
|
But the newest trailer shows Newt and Jacob hopping in and out of the briefcase at will and exploring whole magical worlds.
|
|
The hackers are to the point where "they could have induced blackouts on American soil at will," as WIRED's Andy Greenberg writes.
|
|
The difference is that they also possess genuine facts about issues and detailed policy ideas, which they can draw upon at will.
|
|
Mayweather then came into his own and by the time the fight was stopped, he was landing heavy blows almost at will.
|
|
Dolphins were technically Earth-born, but in Hitchhikers lore they can relocate to another planet at will using nothing but their minds.
|
|
Indiana, like North Carolina, is an "employment at will" (or "right to fire") state where employers can dismiss employees for any cause.
|
|
Here, you'll be able to plan out your next move, choose your next target at will, and even scan enemies for weaknesses.
|
|
When the Fireman first figures out that he can smolder and ignite at will, he doesn't feel like a comic-book character.
|
|
Countryman, as is customary for Assistant Secretaries, had submitted a letter of resignation, which the White House could act on at will.
|
|
So it's not like someone will be able to go around removing comments at will or adding profane subtitles to others' videos.
|
|
Julia Roberts attended the 10th annual Veuve Clicquot Polo Classic at Will Rogers State Historic Park in Los Angeles, California, on Saturday.
|
|
The game became infamous for letting players steal cars at will, commit violent crimes against civilians, and hire prostitutes to recover health.
|
|
The panel had also said the president should be able to fire the director at will but stayed the decision pending appeal.
|
|
But it was Kanter's ability to come off the bench and score at will in the paint that really disrupted Philadelphia's defense.
|
|
"The downstream investments that we're looking at will occur because the resources are here and we have ethane in abundance," Brinley says.
|
|
The materials could be produced cheaply and distributed at will, transforming art in the age of mass reproduction into a marketing tool.
|
|
He got to the rim at will (again), and forced Stevens to insert Al Horford into the game about one minute later.
|
|
The regulations banned carriers from blocking and slowing down sites at will, or from charging sites extra fees to reach people faster.
|
|
VLC is also now a unified package across phones, tablets, and Android TV devices, so you can swap between interfaces at will.
|
|
The right to leave Under current freedom of movement rules EU citizens are able to move between any member state at will.
|
|
The court ruled that the director is now removable at will, as is the case with cabinet secretaries and other agency heads.
|
|
But the court proposed a simple remedy, which was to give the president the power to fire the agency's director at will.
|
|
Employee advocates, meanwhile, warn that the ability to fire workers at will could cripple a government that's run by career civil servants.
|
|
That young white pop stars take on persona associated with people of color and shed them at will should not surprise us.
|
|
Ms. Adams compared her own process to "catching a virus," one that she can feel inside her body but suppress at will.
|
|
The bureau's leader, who serves a five-year term, is one of the few federal officials the president cannot fire at will.
|
|
Querrey was in intimidating form, hitting 55 winners against only eight unforced errors, seeming to pass the net-rushing Zverev at will.
|
|
The bill would end the CFPB's rulemaking ability and allow its director to be fired at will (currently disallowed), among other provisions.
|
|
And I think the [Iranian] regime now understands that they cannot attack America at will and expect to get away with it.
|
|
Under the revised version of the CHOICE Act, the agency will have a single director that the president may remove at-will.
|
|
First, it gave rise to their unique, outlandish bodies — in the octopus, a body that can take on any shape at will.
|
|
In fact, when you finish reading this manual, you will be able to control every tracing on the polygraph chart at will.
|
|
While Sanders&apos plan to end at-will employment has an admirable goal — protecting workers — it would also create negative economic consequences.
|
|
But Sanders&apos idea to abolish at-will employment goes too far and will hurt the job prospects of inexperienced workers significantly.
|
|
What if people had a microchip embedded in their necks that recorded their lives and allowed them to replay memories at will?
|
|
House vote Impeachment articles reported by the Judiciary Committee are considered privileged, allowing Nadler to stage a floor vote virtually at will.
|
|
But then in terms of the way Star Wars tends to tell its stories, these things can become weightless at will, right?
|
|
The big twist in Wattam is that you can control each and every one of these characters, swapping through them at will.
|
|
The Taliban have the military initiative in Afghanistan, striking targets in Kabul seemingly at will and seizing important territory around the country.
|
|
The Heat slashed to the rim at will for four quarters against the Utah Jazz, getting high-percentage shots time after time.
|
|
Moreover, the catalogue of marks and processes Iribarren employs exist as a toolbox of freestanding geometries and gestures to disassemble at will.
|
|
The ability to score at will, regardless of the defense's game-plan, remains the single most important gift any prospect can have.
|
|
The body, for all intents and purposes, is beside the point, an accessory that can be swapped out or modified at will.
|
|
Professionals who use emotional intelligence, which women tend to excel at, will be at a much lower risk of being replaced by automation.
|
|
Fostering unity, not division; working for the interests of all Americans, not just one's political base; being honest, not inventing truth at will.
|
|
Critics of the pharmaceutical industry have long argued that drugmakers unfairly raise prices at will, making their products increasingly less accessible to patients.
|
|
The demo itself was quick, maybe 10 minutes, and consisted of a series of static VR environments that I could examine at will.
|
|
Here are some examples: SLAVERY Before abolition, children of black slaves were born into slavery and could be sold by owners at will.
|
|
"The stick-holders would beat us at will," said Zeyar Lin, an ex-convict released from Kaung Hmu Labour Camp in early June.
|
|
Most financial institutions have revelatory spending information available on-demand throughout the year, which can be downloaded and sliced and diced at will.
|
|
What's happened is on the web, of course the software becomes routinized, don't get me started how they change the software at will.
|
|
However, the Hoyas found some traction as the half went on, working their way back into contention even though Powell scored at will.
|
|
We turn on lights and plug in devices without even thinking about the complex electrical grid that supplies us with juice at will.
|
|
The new draft of the bill would largely defang the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's supervisory powers and make the director removable at will.
|
|
If someone takes a photo of it, or hacks your PC or phone and grabs it, they can spend your cryptocoins at will.
|
|
Why it matters: Mark Zuckerberg has total control of Facebook and its board, and he isn't afraid to wield that control at will.
|
|
Then, after a bit of loading, you're presented with a fully textured 3D model of your head that you can rotate at will.
|
|
But that number will likely grow, under presidents who are now empowered to wage covert wars at will, with little or no oversight.
|
|
The new rules are meant to "curb stock suspensions at will and to regulate suspensions", the Shanghai Stock Exchange said in its announcement.
|
|
While the party leaders are not bound and can change their minds at will, the huge lead gives Clinton a significant safety net.
|
|
Another group, the exercise group, also was able to eat at will, but these animals were provided with running wheels in their cages.
|
|
Golden State's defenders switched at will, regardless of who was on the court, shutting down virtually every tactic the Rockets sought to use.
|
|
A nation that can land humans on the moon and communicate at will, can certainly find a way to fish without killing whales.
|
|
The films are always muted as to not disrupt work, and passersby can select a film from the library to play at will.
|
|
The Dodd-Frank bill authorizes the president to name a director, who serves a five-year term and cannot be fired at will.
|
|
"At-will" contracts are those that allow employers to fire subordinates for any reason at any time, so long as it's not discriminatory.
|
|
Survivors called it the stuff of nightmares: glass doors shattering, a lone shooter stalking through the office, firing at will on terrified employees.
|
|
The commonwealth status gives the illusion of autonomy while empowering the federal government to yank at will: a pet on a long leash.
|
|
The real test of where her game is at will come in the next round when she faces Romanian seventh seed Simona Halep.
|
|
From Sanger and McCormick's perspective, men already had condoms; women needed their own way to prevent their husbands from impregnating them at will.
|
|
The End Is Nigh is technically separated into stages, but you can pass between them at will, and upon return, the levels reset.
|
|
The bureau once took the opposite position, but it changed its stance last year, agreeing that its director could be fired at will.
|
|
I heard wealthy businesspeople in Delhi speak of him with audible fear in their voices, as if he could damage them at will.
|
|
" A few minutes later, another reporter asked a similar question: "So there's no responsibility beyond that on the Israeli authorities — kill at will?
|
|
She wasn't merely pleased to see her team score goals seemingly at will; she wanted as many players as possible to experience it.
|
|
It said that the attorney general may remove the special counsel only for cause, like misconduct of some kind, rather than at will.
|
|
Lygia Clark, with her hinged-metal sculptures you can fiddle with at will, filled the top floor of the Museum of Modern Art.
|
|
That long-lost internet, Snowden writes, offered its inhabitants a "reset button for your life" that could be pressed every day, at will.
|
|
Most federal agencies are led by a single individual, such as a cabinet secretary, who can be fired at will by the president.
|
|
But a likely middle ground could be simply declaring that the president may fire the CFPB director at will, not just for cause.
|
|
The bureau would be restructured as an executive-branch agency with a single director who could be removed at will by the president.
|
|
The bureau once took the opposite position, but it changed its stance in September, agreeing that its director could be fired at will.
|
|
Williams-Goss scored at will, piling up 25 points, and the lanky junior forward Johnathan Williams slashed his way to a double-double.
|
|
" While troops can eat what they want, healthy foods, including fruits, vegetables and whole grains, get a green label for "engage at will.
|
|
He also wanted to know if the officer would have a set tenure or if he or she could be fired at will.
|
|
Maybe not a rocket scientist, but not someone who likes to think that the laws of physics can be played with at will.
|
|
That is a perfectly acceptable number for the best paint finisher in the league, and Antetokounmpo can get to the rim at will.
|
|
"Trump's criticisms may have less bite than Sanders' since Trump attacks people and businesses at will and multiple times per day," Dishart said.
|
|
Every organization charged with a child's care should, in policy and practice, allow parents to observe their kids at will, experts say. Period.
|
|
Once laid off, don't let at-will employment (where an employer can dismiss you for any reason) stop you from seeing a lawyer.
|
|
In at-will employment states, a worker can be fired anytime, without just cause, no matter how many snacks they eat for lunch.
|
|
Many tech workers are likely at-will employees, meaning they don't sign contracts and can be fired at the discretion of their employers.
|
|
For three rounds, the Japanese veteran took his opponent down at will, where he amassed just shy of 10 minutes of control time.
|
|
The remedy would allow the CFPB to remain in operation without new legislation, subject to the president's power to terminate the director at will.
|
|
Residents said the gunmen arrived in two cars and a motorbike and set upon the villages, shooting at will and setting fire to homes.
|
|
The company just introduced a new feature that is able to let drivers know exactly when the traffic light they are at will change.
|
|
As suspected, Harry asked his older brother William to serve as the best man at his wedding, as he did at Will and Kate's.
|
|
Danny Manning's team was much-improved from its first two games until late in the second half, when the Bulldogs scored seemingly at will.
|
|
Parker then suddenly turned back the clock a few years, driving to the basket at will and flinging in mid-range jumpers with ease.
|
|
The goal of clinical hypnosis is to help you learn how to access that natural hypnotic state at will and focus it, Ginandes says.
|
|
A mess-up of illegal genetic modification, Stitch (aka "Experiment 626"), is blue and can grow extra arms out of his abdomen at will.
|
|
Being able to make your phone smaller is useful, but it's not as exciting as having a phone transform into a tablet at will.
|
|
In America, many workers are employees at-will, meaning that the employee can be dismissed by an employer or leave the company without warning.
|
|
She also notes that black cabs are regulated on the price they can charge — so can't impose surge pricing at will as Uber does.
|
|
Asus envisions I/O moving to Mini-PCIe modular components, so features like USB and Ethernet ports could be easily hot-swapped at will.
|
|
"There's a real danger of stepping on the landmines, as companies seem to be able to change their accounting treatment at will," Dai said.
|
|
And Peru's constitution, unusually for Latin America, contains parliamentary elements: congress can oust ministers and cabinets almost at will, and proceeded to do so.
|
|
In California, like most states in America, people are employees "at will", so they can be rapidly dismissed if their conduct breaches company policies.
|
|
Folding brings with it the ability to collapse, flex and unfurl structures at will, which has huge potential for a variety of engineering applications.
|
|
Even if they come from this planet, octopuses are smart, confident cephalopods that can open jars, escape fishing boats, and change color at will.
|
|
In the meantime, Sobral said, a new government could change the federal police team at will and even dismiss the head of the force.
|
|
The advantage to this, of course, is that you're in control of how much storage you have available and can expand that at will.
|
|
But many Spirit contracts contain "termination for convenience" clauses that mean they can be ended at will, according to the sources and industry consultants.
|
|
That means no bullhooks (a steel tool traditionally used to dominate elephants), no chains, no trekking saddles, and ample space to roam at will.
|
|
The grazing, mining, and lumbering industries chafed at the small fees they were required to pay for the resources they once took at will.
|
|
Right now, this only works with Gmail, but you can also copy all the info to the clipboard and then paste it at will.
|
|
"Without these rules, ISPs could use and disclose customer information at will," a coalition of public interest groups recently wrote to Capitol Hill leaders.
|
|
From there, a customizable control panel shows you what's connected and allows you to sort through at will, and control them with your voice.
|
|
The plan is to allow children to strew the stuff across 15,000 square feet this summer, building little worlds — and destroying them — at will.
|
|
While children's daemons change animal form at will, upon puberty the creature "settles" into one shape, a metaphor for adulthood's closing off of possibilities.
|
|
And he still is able to score apparently at will — or at least he was able to with Paris St.-Germain, his last club.
|
|
This is a very explicit opt-in type of system, not one where developers could change the icon at will, without an app update.
|
|
The red priests and priestesses, who serve the god R'hllor, Lord of Light, seem to be able to call back the dead at will.
|
|
Chile, for once, is deep enough to overcome the absence of a star like Vidal against a Colombian team that can attack at will.
|
|
At its most recent meeting, in June, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries made no change to its pump-at-will output policy.
|
|
Its sole director would be removable at will by the president, and its budget would be controlled by Congress through the traditional appropriations process.
|
|
Kavanaugh also ruled that the bureau's director must be fireable at will by the president to restore executive branch authority limited by Dodd-Frank.
|
|
Unlike Peter Parker, whose teasing, could-it-be-me act has worn thin, T'Challa is super and proud, turning at will into Black Panther.
|
|
Otherwise, Wadler's lawyers argued, Bio-Rad and companies like it could fire whistleblowing in-house lawyers at will and then hide behind client privilege.
|
|
In 2013, Mr. Lima was stopped while traveling outside the prison, a capture that revealed he had been able to leave almost at will.
|
|
At least at Sacai, Chitose Abe has never fallen into the trap of literalism, recombining elements at will to transform their points of origin.
|
|
Kavanaugh also authored a 2016 ruling for the D.C. Circuit finding the CFPB's structure unconstitutional and its director fireable at will by the president.
|
|
That said, unlike the iPhone's slo-mo, which can be adjusted at will, you have to choose beforehand which moment will be slowed down.
|
|
This is an administration that struggles mightily to stay on message, in part because the president insists on tweeting about major issues at will.
|
|
The white artist again gives us a fragmented portrayal, breaking bodies apart, removing their features, and rearranging them at will in a formal way.
|
|
Companies free of competitive pressures, with the power to set prices more or less at will, squeeze them from their customers and their workers.
|
|
All rummage around in design history at will, not in the spirit of postmodern quotation, but associatively, like a Pinterest page sprung to life.
|
|
Is it somehow more realistic to accept the status quo of Iran exporting sectarian violence at will and creating a Shiite corridor of control?
|
|
Paid sick leave should be a universal right, enforced by law – not subject to the decisions of employers to give and take at will.
|
|
Singapore's government has designated a security zone around the entirety of the island, giving police the right to stop and search people at will.
|
|
And he exerts a deeper level of control simply through his ability to bait hostile media at will with his every seemingly nutty utterance.
|
|
Each day, I'd set out for a drive on the left side of the road, with horses and cows and dogs crossing at will.
|
|
Others began running at will on wheels in their cages; mice seem to enjoy running and these eagerly covered about three miles a day.
|
|
Assuming there are no local laws or community rules on the subject (which many places have), you are technically free to blow at will.
|
|
Mr. Comey was aware that he was an at-will employee who could be fired by the president at any time, for any reason.
|
|
" But Schumer noted that the acting AG is "still in the President's chain of command and could be fired at will by the President.
|
|
"We can pick off his equipment at will," said Andrew J. Tabler, an expert on Syria at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.
|
|
Mr. Lopez opts for an amplitude of feeling, but Mr. Neilson prefers to titillate, to tease and to flit among moods, seemingly at will.
|
|
On April 16, Turks will vote on a referendum that would give the president vast powers, including the ability to dismiss Parliament at will.
|
|
It had an alluring, tough shape and was just pliable enough to take on and off at will (though it was difficult to button).
|
|
The agency's sole director would be fireable at will by the president, though Mnuchin also suggested installing a bipartisan commission to lead the CFPB.
|
|
The Washington County police department made these regulations at will, in part it says because of conversations it had with members of the community.
|
|
They used the cover of thick fog to scale the campus' rear walls, before storming student dormitories and classrooms and executing people at will.
|
|
Mnuchin wants to make the OFR director accountable to him alone and eliminate the director's six-year tenure in favor of removal at will.
|
|
United States, the Supreme Court seemed to hold that all federal officers exercising executive power have to be removable at will by the President.
|
|
The ruling Communist Party can influence private companies at will, and foreign companies face a variety of forms of discrimination that advantage Chinese firms.
|
|
He's promised to allow police "to go and counter-attack" and to allow border patrol and immigration enforcement agents to deport immigrants at will.
|
|
Instead, the couple intended to confine the girl to the attic of their Abington home, where she'd be available for Sullivan to rape at will.
|
|
" He went onto say he feared future targeting, "Certainly, some people think I'm not a human being and I can just be attacked at will.
|
|
In the United States, a Southwest Airlines employee was shot and killed following a shooting in November at Will Rogers World Airport in Oklahoma City.
|
|
McCabe was a "career employee" – not a political appointee, who can be removed at will – and had substantial job protection because of his high rank.
|
|
The Dell's cheap plastic mouse is borderline unusable, while the HP's wireless keyboard likes to pick and choose which keystrokes it will register at will.
|
|
Under the new changes, Mr Erdogan would manage his own cabinet from his 1100-room palace in Ankara, appointing and dismissing senior officials at will.
|
|
You can change your Top 8 at will as your Enemy ranking changes, and no one will likely ever see it to suspect anything. Why?
|
|
Banks with more than $250 billion in assets are automatically considered systematically important, but a federal panel of regulators can apply those standards at will.
|
|
But it offers a 360-degree, at-will view of what's happening to the characters and lets the creators develop them so readers can connect.
|
|
The border between Hong Kong and mainland China operates much like an international one and mainlanders are not free to enter the city at will.
|
|
So the real goal is to figure out how to preserve what we have in deep reading and be able to exert that at will.
|
|
Of people who support the transgender community's right to use public bathrooms at will, less than a third report feeling "sympathy" for their ideological opponents.
|
|
However, for the first time it recognizes the market as a fact of economic life, though it can be countermanded at will by the government.
|
|
The past leaves scars, but this is still a scab – something that can be picked at and undone at will, setting the healing process back.
|
|
Social media Trump-style also offers an unprecedented ability to control the agenda at will, without requiring a sympathetic editor to run a puff piece.
|
|
A hacker's detailed chronicle of a successful breach sheds new light on the ways criminals exploit technology to get into nearly any system at will.
|
|
The CHOICE Act would improve accountability by restructuring the bureau as an executive branch agency and making its director removable by the president at will.
|
|
You can even change the feel of the entire piano at will, switching from a grand piano to a church organ, or even a synthesizer.
|
|
The judge laid down a cell phone policy in which Brad can call and text the kids at will, and Angelina can't monitor the conversations.
|
|
The agency's sole director would be removable at will by the president, and its budget would be controlled by Congress through the traditional appropriations process.
|
|
Some of the documents were misinterpreted as suggesting the CIA had the ability to hack into your Internet-connected big-screen TV virtually at will.
|
|
Hulu also records each game automatically, so you can pause and rewind at will, and go back to watch full replays when you're feeling nostalgic.
|
|
Caveat: Most employment is "at-will," meaning an employer can fire an employee for whatever reason, so long as it isn't forbidden by a statute.
|
|
Before lunch, he prowled at will around the reception room, free from the assistants who are usually on hand with members of the royal family.
|
|
Barr said during his hearing and in his written responses does not plan to overhaul Justice Department regulations so Mueller could be fired at will.
|
|
He took out the provision that CFPB's director could be removed for "inefficiency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance in office," allowing for at-will dismissal.
|
|
The key point is that I no longer have the ability to nap at will—to recover, in nickels of unconsciousness, a lost hypnotic legacy.
|
|
"There can be no path to principled immigration reform if the executive branch is able to rewrite or nullify federal laws at will," Trump said.
|
|
In one way, it was great; I was able to be right there living in my control able to record or make music at will.
|
|
Instead, the Trump administration is asking Beijing to change Chinese laws and regulations, even though the Communist Party can override all of these at will.
|
|
While the court did not halt the agency's operations, it gave the president the ability to supervise, direct and fire the agency's director at will.
|
|
A U.S. appeals court is weighing a case involving whether the president should be allowed to fire Cordray at will, and not just for cause.
|
|
Burn up the nests and you're free to fast-travel along that route at will (fuel permitting — you've got to keep your bike filled up).
|
|
Many dresses simply floated around the body, like haute peasant smocks, with drawstrings at the waist and sides so they could be shaped at will.
|
|
Changed libel laws that, in essence, allow the rich to sue at will could even endanger criticism of the majority party by the minority party.
|
|
He can now appoint ministers, officials and judges at will, can dissolve parliament, intervene in the country's judicial system and impose a state of emergency.
|
|
Vast petroleum reserves and untapped production allowed the kingdom to play an outsize role as swing producer, filling or draining the global system at will.
|
|
The new version, which features an updated redesign for 2016, also, mercifully, can be put to sleep at will, thanks to a sleep mask accessory.
|
|
Disney dropped a new trailer for the live-action Aladdin movie on Sunday, finally giving us our first look at Will Smith's Genie in action.
|
|
He played just 25 minutes, but he energized the crowd by fighting for rebounds and scoring at will against the Heat's backup center, Bam Adebayo.
|
|
It's an amiable and permeable symbolic barrier through which people come and go at will — to work, to buy and sell, to hide, to disappear.
|
|
The Saints, who had seemingly scored at will throughout their long winning streak, had a harder time moving the ball against the Rams' underrated defense.
|
|
"Practically every animal you look at will avoid AITC," said Gary Lewin, a molecular physiologist at the Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine in Berlin.
|
|
Sanders said his platform could double union membership by ending "at will" employment and forming wage boards for entire industries, as Vox's Tara Golshan covered.
|
|
Mr. O'Brien was a management-level employee who could be fired at will and could not challenge his firing in the city's administrative trial system.
|
|
"Just to decide this, to eradicate their identity and history and culture and rename them at will, is not only preposterous, its unconscionable," Ashrawi said.
|
|
Harley has joined that group, and now that she no longer has the immunity of being Joker's moll, Roman can dispose of her at will.
|
|
Part death squad, part criminal enterprise, their ranks are filled with retired and off-duty police officers who kill at will, often with total impunity.
|
|
"There are efforts to turn the immigration judge position into an at-will position and erode the independence that the judges have," Judge Tabaddor said.
|
|
Favors showed up to play for the Jazz during the third quarter, scoring seemingly at will as he tried to keep Utah in the game.
|
|
Instead of settling for contested jumpers, Berry and Pinson got to the basket at will, either getting fouled or leaving easy put-backs for Maye.
|
|
The CFPB is currently requesting a review of that ruling, but if it stands, it would give Trump the power to remove Cordray at will.
|
|
Esparza controlled every aspect of the fight, taking Namajunas down at will and landing plenty of ground strikes to comfortably take the first two rounds.
|
|
He will have complete control of the military and budget, can appoint judges to the court at will, and can dissolve parliament at any time.
|
|
Once I got both devices (you have to buy one for each breast) latched and pumping, I could stand up and walk around at will.
|
|
Every type of food added food from pinto beans to grilled corn to the type of sauce involved can be removed and added at will.
|
|
This new skin is a step toward squishy robotic overlords that can spy on us at will — but that future is still a long way off.
|
|
In this one, ABIR let's someone (sounds like a narcissist) who is insisting they're needed in her life know that she can tango away at will.
|
|
The legend of the Native American "skin walker"—an evil witch or wizard that can transform into an animal at will—has its basis in fact.
|
|
Tesla's platform, which is not yet operational, will give customers the ability to "offer their car, add or subtract to the fleet at will," Musk said.
|
|
The traits comedians pick at will be the things that linger in voters' minds and could be important factors shaping their ultimate decision come Election Day.
|
|
In a connected car, kids could pick and choose and stream at will without the parent in the driver's seat needing to monitor their every choice.
|
|
On the other hand, in states like New York, where employees and employers are "at-will," either side can end a working relationship for any reason.
|
|
Related: Taiwanese Dancers Bend Light Projections at Will Trapeze Performance Matches Aerial Acrobatics With Light And Sound Battling Dyslexia With Interactive Visuals, Lights, Sounds, and Dance
|
|
Even so, Seila Law and the Trump administration have asked the Supreme Court to settle the constitutional issue by making the CFPB director fireable at will.
|
|
And employers' general freedom to fire at-will workers means the question of whether to fire Damore was likely more about public relations than employment law.
|
|
The standalone app is launching this summer and will feature 400 comedians and allow a way for up-and-comers to upload their comedy at will.
|
|
The update means Google Home owners can stream local music, podcasts, and streaming services that may not be supported by Home to their speakers at will.
|
|
"If you're an at-will employer, you can just tell someone goodbye," she said, noting that 72 state employees in Arizona had recently been fired indiscriminately.
|
|
Mr Orban, whose party had a majority big enough to change the constitution at will, interfered with the central bank, the constitutional court and the media.
|
|
Trump wants us to believe that a bunch of mega-millionaires and billionaires who literally own the teams are afraid of their at-will, contracted employees?
|
|
Bloggers can grab them and remix them at will, as well as shop owners, which is not something you'll often find from a stock photography site.
|
|
Because government email servers are managed and archived by the State Department, they can be searched at will and a record of official business be kept.
|
|
As the Free Basics program is part of a partnership between Facebook and local mobile providers, the latter can terminate access to the app at will.
|
|
The land in question is imbued with a nice physicality: grass sways as you move through it, and many objects can be pushed around at will.
|
|
After tomorrow's vote, incumbent telephone companies will be able to discontinue copper services at will, with no notice or analysis of its impact on its customers.
|
|
He (no women have held the post) can even withdraw a case from a bench after it has been assigned, or reconstitute a bench at will.
|
|
Wimbledon said in October that this year's Championships at will feature a tiebreak when the score reaches 12-12 in the final set of all matches.
|
|
With no one watching over them, and with increasingly sophisticated methods of identifying optimal maps to warp elections, legislators are now empowered to gerrymander at will.
|
|
Using high-quality batteries and being mindful of what voltage they should be charged at will greatly reduce instances of e-cigarettes exploding in your pocket.
|
|
Handmaids — women assigned to high ranking, infertile married couples and forced to act as surrogates for their children — are raped, beaten, and generally mistreated at will.
|
|
You play a guy in a wheelchair who's able to transform into one of seven assassins at will, taking on their various attributes to solve puzzles.
|
|
The game is played on the TV screen, and you can switch between each vehicle at will by putting a Joy-Con "key" into their controls.
|
|
It would also move the agency's funding from the Federal Reserve to the congressional budget and allow the president to fire a CFPB director at will.
|
|
But the fact that tools will be there at all, and the fact that banned phrases can be updated at will, is a big step forward.
|
|
It sounds innocuous right now, and in most cases having a data-saving tool you can toggle on and off at will is a good thing.
|
|
Rather than form a new party each game session, a club is essentially a voice and text chatroom that can be entered and exited at will.
|
|
This both insulates it from outside interference and enables the signals that are required inside it to be created and controlled accurately, and terminated at will.
|
|
At the heart of the Imperial Presidency is the "thermonuclear monarchy" enjoyed by the president, who has the ability to launch a nuclear war at will.
|
|
That provision runs contrary to the president's general power to remove top executive-branch officials like the secretary of state or the FBI director at will.
|
|
The appeals court's initial opinion, written by Judge Brett Kavanaugh, sought to fix the issue by ruling that the CFPB director could be fired at will.
|
|
Here's why it matters: We live in a world where Taser is considering arming the police with a autonomous drone that can electrocute someone at-will.
|
|
There's a drip-stop outlet, which can quickly be flipped open or closed so you can start or stop the torrential downpour of juice at will.
|
|
Far more troubling is Barr's view that the president can shut down investigations at will so long as he asserts that they're based on false accusations.
|
|
Just as if you were a job candidate looking for a new gig, you don't know if the first place you interview at will work out.
|
|
He campaigns against political opponents and leading law enforcement agencies by claiming they should be investigated and prosecuted by agencies he seeks to command at will.
|
|
You can add cooling or camera and audio systems, hyper-realistic eyes that follow people around, eyelids controlled by magnets, or jaws that move at will.
|
|
They are fielding a video game-like offense in which Patrick Mahomes can seemingly score at will with any number of receiving options on every play.
|
|
Chihiro is ultimately helped by a magic boy with blue hair named Haku who can turn into a dragon at-will (a pretty dope Halloween costume).
|
|
They warn that it would let a stalker, domestic abuser or suspected terrorist from a low-regulation state tote concealed weapons at will around the country.
|
|
Haid's entire pitch to consumers is that cities and countries today can be refashioned as backdrops behind a laptop screen to be swapped smoothly at will.
|
|
Speaking to Axios, Amazon says that its speakers and cameras can be turned off at will and come with lights that signal when they are recording.
|
|
S Mode can be disengaged at will, too, so the tablet becomes even more useful once you decide it's time to take off the training wheels.
|
|
"Quads" are free to move between the two areas, but full citizens — "pats" — are taught to kill quads at will in the cities by gassing them.
|
|
Doing so would generate revenue for low-income countries while sending an unambiguous message to U.S. adversaries that they cannot hide ill-gotten gains at will.
|
|
In those days, Agnes said, she had a sense of her charisma as a sort of magnet, a hidden mass that she could summon at will.
|
|
It has paddle shifters mounted to the steering wheel so the driver can, if he wants, take control of the transmission and change gears at will.
|
|
A three-story bookshelf runs along one side of the house; Lemoine was able to raise and lower the platform to reach any volume at will.
|
|
For example, it doesn't address the legitimate creation of millions of fake accounts and trolls that are activated at will with the sole objective of deception.
|
|
Political parties are free to spend at will while parliamentary candidates are only allowed to spend up to 7 million rupees (about $100,000) in this election.
|
|
Apparently he wanted to make a mold of his head, envisioning some kind of microwave hat he could take off and put back on at will.
|
|
Still, for the first time there it recognizes the market as a fact of economic life, though it can be countermanded at will by the government.
|
|
The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), the conservator of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, is also an independent agency whose sole director cannot be removed at will.
|
|
The promise of cloud computing, after all, is that you can just spin machines up and down at will — and never really have to think about availability.
|
|
By contrast, the governments and central banks that control so-called fiat currencies like the U.S. dollar can issue more at will, diminishing their value over time.
|
|
Third seed Federer tied the American in knots with a sumptuous array of drop shots, angled volleys and winners conjured seemingly at will from behind the baseline.
|
|
The corner of Andromeda selected for initial colonization — the Heleus Cluster — is laid out on a galaxy map, allowing you to hop between solar systems at will.
|
|
They spoke of an environment in which the drug was handed out at will, without prescriptions or supervision, and revealed the existence of a thriving black market.
|
|
Buyers, at least in this case, own their own millions of tokens and, because they are liquid, can move them in and out of Bancor at will.
|
|
The same goes for other at-will employees, including white-collar ones, many of whom expressed fear and worry about losing their jobs ahead of the storms.
|
|
He could be a gay Hitler or Manson, should the opportunity arise, and, unlike Julianne Moore, he may not be able to shut it off at will.
|
|
We're beginning with the Right to Due Process at Work, which will end at-will employment, and guarantee that no employee can be fired without just cause.
|
|
Kirson unleashes an arsenal of characters (Jewish and otherwise), recalls sexual escapades aplenty and derives a devilishly unfettered pleasure from letting her frayed nerves fire at will.
|
|
Yet, as he has done in every debate so far, Mr. Trump steamrollered over the moderators, seemingly at will, and constantly interrupted and talked over his opponents.
|
|
The Americans required a chameleon star, who, like her character, could shed her own skin at will, disappearing into the various nuances and complexities of the role.
|
|
Ownership of physical collectibles is straightforward: When a collector buys a physical collectible, the collector has complete ownership and can sell or trade the collectible at will.
|
|
NFTs allow for the complete ownership of tokenized goods: Collectors own their tokenized goods in perpetuity and can buy, sell and trade their tokenized goods at will.
|
|
And the blackness that this song and video articulates is not some kind of abstract, cool, costume that can be put on and taken off at will.
|
|
Its code ensures that no more than 21m coins can ever be created; that sets bitcoin apart from fiat money, which central banks can create at will.
|
|
With no way to get to the east coast, the group was stuck at Will Rogers World Airport — until Delta ground agents reached out with a solution.
|
|
They could cast spells and manipulate the laws of physics at will, but these men were not happy about being "second class citizens" to more powerful witches.
|
|
He's more akin to a Cheshire Cat, appearing and disappearing across the pop music spectrum at will, identifiable only by the sly grin that permeates his work.
|
|
According to the Washington Post, he signed an order for the NSA to place destructive implants in Russian infrastructure, to be triggered at will from the outside.
|
|
Segregating and protecting memory spaces prevents applications from accidentally interfering with one another's data, or malicious software from being able to see and modify it at will.
|
|
The board suggested that Rossello make Puerto Rico an at-will employer and make severance and Christmas bonuses optional, both of which are norms among U.S. states.
|
|
If the body is a machine, if the brain is a computer, if muscles are simply pulley systems, then we can go in and tinker at will.
|
|
The duo scored at will against a UCLA defense which gave up 258 percent field goal shooting, plus 10-of-23 accuracy from the 3-point line.
|
|
Perhaps your watch could become a universal remote for the smart home, letting you point it at your TV or kitchen appliances and activate them at will.
|
|
If insurers were required to maintain the same formulary over time, pharmaceutical manufacturers could simply raise prices at will and insurers would lack leverage to stop them.
|
|
In any case, it's hardly surprising that many of these same thinkers developed a life hack to induce hypnagogic consciousness at will to reap its creative benefits.
|
|
Unlocked versions not only allow you to change carrier at will, but they also come free of the carrier apps that Samsung customers are so familiar with.
|
|
To make way for cars, literally and figuratively, wealthy drivers and the U.S. auto industry set out to stigmatize lower-class pedestrians who crossed streets at will.
|
|
Unlike European countries, employment in the US is "at will," meaning companies can let go of their workers at any time, so long as it's not discriminatory.
|
|
The bill would require that the special counsel be fired only "for cause" as opposed to "at will," and provide for expedited judicial review of any firing.
|
|
I think of the blend as conceptually good for everyone, a natural way of underscoring the pleasures and advantages of migrating at will along the Kinsey scale.
|
|
Cousins was hot from the start but truly hit his stride in the second quarter, seemingly realizing that his receivers could burn the Eagles defense at will.
|
|
That ruling, which is now pending for review before the full D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, would give the president the power to remove Cordray at will.
|
|
As part of the new process, testers will be able to turn off features that aren&apost working properly by default and re-enable them at will.
|
|
The people traveling have joined and left at will, CNN has reported, and say they are traveling in search of jobs and to escape hate and persecution.
|
|
The college iteration of Jamison lived inside the arc, at the elbows and on the low block, and he scored at will with touch, footwork, and finesse.
|
|
Suddenly, everyone's looking to you for answers — and now that you've got the power to fire or demote at will, some people may be terrified of you.
|
|
The alternative to at-will employment is "just cause," which is the principle that an employee can be fired only for a legitimate, serious, work-performance reason.
|
|
Alas, crime rates mean not every stretch of town can be explored at will, but dirt-cheap ride-share services make it easy to get around safely.
|
|
The app was designed to be "a remote control for your city" that allowed you to have food and other services delivered to your door at will.
|
|
Lanky, left-handed and able to unleash bat-incinerating sliders at will, Miller did not allow a run in the first 24 postseason appearances of his career.
|
|
That decision overturned a 2016 ruling from a panel of the court's judges, which ruled that the CFPB director must be fireable at will by the president.
|
|
Abolishing at-will employment entirely could make firms less likely to take on workers who are young and inexperienced, particularly when their performance is difficult to observe.
|
|
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit made the ruling in a battle over whether the president could remove the director at will.
|
|
But I'd still— JOE KERNEN: Will you look at—will you look into it maybe – WARREN BUFFETT: I'd still feel I've led I've led a satisfactory life.
|
|
That gives you tacit permission to cycle through baskets of chips and bowls of salsa at will until your tamales arrive and you already want to die.
|
|
To be treated as something to avoid but also something to be touched at will creates an odd juxtaposition that is unique to the black disabled experience.
|
|
Fund managers offering funds that allow investors to withdraw money at will can run into problems when assets cannot be sold fast enough to cover exit requests.
|
|
The alternative to stronger sanctions presents a bleak picture: more of the same means resigning ourselves to a North Korea that can strike the U.S. at will.
|
|
How to disable the touchpad in Windows 10 through the keyboardSome Windows 10 keyboards have shortcuts that allow you to disable and enable the touchpad at will.
|
|
But after college, while interning at Will Ferrell's production company in California in 2012, she — like many interns — had a lot of free time on her hands.
|
|
But it also takes us through its contradictions: a big brain, much of it in limbs that "think" independently; able to change color at will, but colorblind.
|
|
As of today, the company will no longer sell the magical plastic buttons that let you summon refills of laundry detergent, paper towels, and Trojan condoms at will.
|
|
It's believed that some traders are manipulating the price of cryptocurrencies through illegal tactics like issuing fake orders, causing the price to go up and down at will.
|
|
OPEC sources and analysts say they expect the group's meeting next Thursday simply to roll over output policy, which OPEC lacks anyway as its members pump at will.
|
|
Thus, undocumented immigrants might be willing to pay $6,000-$8,000 in visa fees and taxes per year if they could enter the U.S. on short notice at will.
|
|
Knockdown attacks are so devastating in BattleTech that the Grasshopper's ability to execute them at-will means that I can basically destroy an enemy mech every single turn.
|
|
"If you are bashing your company publicly, most employers are at will, and don't have to continue employment if they don't like that kind of thing," said Deem.
|
|
At its previous meeting in December 2015, OPEC failed to set any production policy including a formal output ceiling, effectively allowing its 13 members to pump at will.
|
|
SPENDING RULES Political parties are free to spend at will while parliamentary candidates are only allowed to spend up to 7 million rupees (about $100,000) in this election.
|
|
In case you're think we're throwing too much shade at Will and Grace, the show's namesakes and main characters, don't worry, we're pretty thrilled about their shake, too.
|
|
"It's very important for us to have the ability to produce almost any part on the car at will because it alleviates risk with suppliers," Musk told analysts.
|
|
The Left Hand of Darkness (20183), a truly revolutionary novel about a race of aliens that changes gender at will, which holds up better than ever in 2018?
|
|
We see an insurgent Maeve Millay (Thandie Newton) in her desperado best, Dolores shooting at will atop a speeding horse, and even a buffalo tearing up the joint.
|
|
Spain's two titans have raided English clubs at will: Real Madrid pinched both of its Ballon d'Or winners, Michael Owen from Liverpool and Cristiano Ronaldo from Manchester United.
|
|
When the agreement ends at the end of the year, and the cartel's members are again allowed to pump at will, supply will jump and prices will fall.
|
|
But he soon discovers that Ford has left The Cradle and hitched a ride inside his mind, able to appear to Bernard at will — and give him commands.
|
|
They have driven men and women into hiding and they have given the trolls weapons they never had before, including the ability to destroy media organizations at will.
|
|
Letting students download things at will is most likely a recipe for chaos, malware and, well, all sorts of things you'd rather not introduce into a classroom setting.
|
|
Half the rats were then given unlimited water and rat kibble, while the other half received kibble, water, and a sugary drink that they could consume at will.
|
|
For the first time in history, people have a way of securing their communications quickly, automatically, and at will from any threat, be it hackers or government snoops.
|
|
Importantly, however, data isn't in real time, and rangers can turn trackers on and off at will, mainly so enterprising guests don't endanger themselves or any hibernating bears.
|
|
Instead, two "phase shifts"—one near the beginning of the experiment, one toward the end—serve the role of experimental dials that the researcher can adjust at will.
|
|
Whereas most games would simply make this part of the story, Titanfall 2 gives players an item that lets them swap between the past and present at will.
|
|
The Justice Department on Friday, for example, backed a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau because the president can't fire its director at will.
|
|
But if we've learned anything from Trump's behavior over the past year at all, it's that he's basically addicted to tweeting blustery thoughts and quasi-threats at will.
|
|
The second is a rotting estate where time is permeable, and your character can shift between past and present at will, with some decisions permanently changing the level.
|
|
My entire precious ego of video game player being is centered on never being abandoned by these things that I can dip in and out of at will.
|
|
"With the for-cause provision severed, the President now will have the power to remove the director at will and to supervise and direct the director," Kavanaugh wrote.
|
|
He does it by going technical, finding variations on his patterns within bars, stopping on a dime and shifting the points of emphasis backward and forward at will.
|
|
With Trump promising bold action along the U.S.-Mexico border, the judiciary has a duty to ensure that he cannot turn the Constitution on or off at will.
|
|
She can change her appearance at will and uses it for espionage, and she's easily the youngest and coolest adult Harry has ever met (sorry, older Weasley brothers).
|
|
ET, ABC ABOUT THE CAVALIERS: James has operated at will against the Raptors by averaging 36.3 points and shooting 218 percent from the field in the three victories.
|
|
"There can be no path to principled immigration reform if the executive branch is able to rewrite or nullify federal laws at will," Trump wrote in a statement.
|
|
But the performance is thickly layered in the mannerisms of a spoiled man-child who assumes that his unruly subjects are toys to be tossed about at will.
|
|
Their official statement at the time was that Khashoggi, a frequent critic of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman on the pages of The Washington Post departed at will.
|
|
Perhaps inevitably, the novelty of the action sequences -- that ability to grow and shrink at will -- has lost some of its freshness compared to Ant-Man's previous outings.
|
|
"The number of fanatical supporters who will take her word for anything and can be deployed almost at will is unique," Stipanovich, the strategist and lobbyist, told me.
|
|
And yet, despite having access to expensive flagships that I can use at will, I tend to keep my SIM card in OnePlus smartphones for my daily drivers.
|
|
This God is a monstrous being that jumps from body to body at will in order to perform arcane operations on the world, cheating death with every leap.
|
|
He said lawmakers need to take control of the agency's funding, make his successors fireable at will by the president and install an inspector general, among other things.
|
|
You can turn it off and on at will and even route the sound to a line-out in the endpin next to the double AA battery pack.
|
|
The McGill scientists wanted to know why that is, so they deprived one group of animals of fluids before bedtime and let another other group imbibe at will.
|
|
The ruling made it so the president could remove the CFPB director at will: at any time and for any reason, which stripped the bureau of its independence.
|
|
When the unflattering parliamentary results were announced — ZANU-PF's two-thirds majority allows it to change the constitution at will — it accused ZANU-PF of stealing the election.
|
|
For 10, 103, 20 passes at a stretch, Spain worked the ball around the field at will — a game of keepaway disguised as a World Cup elimination match.
|
|
She said the order was meant only to apply to "at will" appointees because it was designed to prevent employees from feeling pressure to donate to the governor.
|
|
Courtney Williams soars through the air and creates her own shot at will, Jasmine Thomas runs the show, and there's more depth here than on any other roster.
|
|
Sanders's plan calls for the end to "at-will" employment, aims to double union membership in his first term in office, and advocates for industry-wide collective bargaining.
|
|
" He added, in the March 2016 interview, "They do that at will because they have no respect for our president and they have no respect for our country.
|
|
That's a good thing, as were the slinky ribbed knit dresses with a buttoned-in waist that could be unbuttoned at will to expose various bits of flesh.
|
|
In the context of employment at will, your boss has no legal duty to keep you on, and absent a contract, you have no legal duty to stay.
|
|
Juventus's defense, its pride and joy, a grizzled, hard-boiled unit that had seemed able to stifle any opponent, was torn apart, time and again, almost at will.
|
|
Now fewer than a dozen lawmakers, heavily funded by the very industries they are defending, are blocking it, at will, using an anachronistic quirk of the state constitution.
|
|
The campaign's website says seats for the performances are assigned at will call on the day of the show and will be given out upon order of arrival.
|
|
Even simple requests to the federal state or local government for approval or clarifications of requirements can extend project completion schedules at will, leading to increased delay costs.
|
|
There are the obvious stores, like Walmart and Best Buy, but chances are every other store that you like to shop at will have some sort of sale.
|
|
Whitaker "can either revoke the regulations altogether or amend the order ... and therefore make Mueller an at-will prosecutor ... meaning he can be fired without cause," Kamenar said.
|
|
He frustrated Wawrinka with his ability to flick the ball around the court at will, going up a set and a break while remaining untouchable on his serve.
|
|
After reverse-engineering Voatz's Android app, the researchers concluded that an attacker who compromised a voter's phone would able to observe, suppress, and alter votes nearly at will.
|
|
"There can be no path to principled immigration reform if the executive branch is able to rewrite or nullify federal laws at will," Trump said at the time.
|
|
"Once they have the checking account number, they can reach in with checks they generate and take money out of a consumer's checking account at will," he said.
|
|
In the narrowest sense, Seila Law is a case about whether a federal agency can be led by a single director that the president cannot remove at will.
|
|
The court concluded that because the president must have the power to supervise and direct the CFPB's director, he should be able to remove the director at-will.
|
|
The remedy, the court held, is not to take away any of the powers of the CFPB, but to make its director terminable at will by the President.
|
|
While most executive branch officials can be fired at will, the special counsel leading the Trump-Russia investigation, Robert S. Mueller III, is protected by Justice Department regulations.
|
|
Even studios that plan out scenes with performers and pride themselves on checking in throughout and giving talent the option to stop a shoot at will, like kink.
|
|
If players access a seven-minute clip, for example, a keyword will drop them into that specific moment — but they'll be able to scrub back and forth at will.
|
|
But on Tuesday, the head of oil giant Rosneft, Igor Sechin, said Russia should pump at will and he would seek compensation from the government if cuts were extended.
|
|
Resisting the core instincts of any coach, he has let the reins on the Huskies go slack on offense and essentially green lights his players to shoot at will.
|
|
The cartel not only murdered, kidnapped, and extorted at will, it also ran a kind of de facto government that municipal, state, and federal forces did little to stop.
|
|
Inundated by calls and emails demanding protection from internet service providers that may seek to block or throttle online traffic at will, even legislators flush with telecom contributions relented.
|
|
The woman likely didn't even think she spoke English, regarding her as just another sexless Asian dotting her periphery — someone who could be ignored at will, like a houseplant.
|
|
I feel like although the exhibit is nicely crafted, it suggests to people visiting that nature need not be explored, as it can be simulated by humanity at will.
|
|
At-will employment is promoted by the Heritage Foundation and American Legislative Exchange Council, which disseminates model bills to state legislators benefiting its corporate members and conservative private backers.
|
|
Others have been enshrined in a constitution that tightens Mr Erdogan's grip on the executive, allowing him to appoint and replace senior officials at will, and weakens parliamentary oversight.
|
|
Mario loses his ability to just swing his hat around at will, but the second player can move Cappy freely, collecting coins and attacking enemies for his plumber friend.
|
|
Algorithmic machine learning, however, can mimic an entire stylistic mode, generating new examples at will or overlaying a pre-existing object with a new style unrelated to its origins.
|
|
You decide how many cores and how much memory you want to buy in bulk for those years, but you can then distribute that allotment between machines at will.
|
|
Depending on your region, it may also be helpful to be able to switch between carriers at will in order to get the best coverage in a specific location.
|
|
Earlier this year, Mr Kavanaugh wrote that because the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau had a single director shielded from at-will removal, it unconstitutionally interfered with the president's power.
|
|
While Twitter can be a platform for dialogue and community, it has gained a reputation for being a space where misogynistic trolls roam free — tweeting their hatred at will.
|
|
"But that doesn't mean it's fair game for anybody, anywhere, to just pick up that term and start using it at will to make a political point," Rothman said.
|
|
It had argued that it should be allowed to produce at will to make up for three and a half decades of disruption due to oil wars and sanctions.
|
|
You can't actually fiddle with your car's internals to that extent — it would be a serious safety hazard if anyone could tweak their car's engine control unit at will.
|
|
That meant, essentially, that anyone could crash Wardle's Taiwanese friend's phone at will, simply by sending her any text message that triggered a notification and included the Taiwanese flag.
|
|
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit is reviewing a recent court decision that the president should be able to fire the director at will.
|
|
Other additions, such as a minimap, mini-bosses, and the ability to switch Samus's abilities on and off at will, fell into place over the course of several years.
|
|
In October, the D.C. Circuit excited CFPB critics when it ruled that for the agency to be constitutional, the president must be able to remove the director at will.
|
|
Participants can jump in and out at will just by hitting the big green "Join" button after tapping on the group, in either the Messages or the FaceTime app.
|
|
The app tracks your investment performance, tells you about your latest round-up amounts, the overall size of your account and lets you deposit and withdraw funds at will.
|
|
You can wander in and out of the movies at will, finding something to laugh at and then going and doing something else until your attention is piqued again.
|
|
But then came an unexpected blow: Using mind control caused this weird living computer-thing mini-boss to appear, teleporting across the map and cloning itself at will. Pants.
|
|
The update covers modular controllers, showing diagrams of a central pad unit that could be tweaked by the user, switching out buttons, D-pads, and analog sticks at will.
|
|
In Europe, Russia may soon be able to choke off energy supplies at will, thanks to the Nord Stream 2 pipeline that conveys Russian natural gas straight to Germany.
|
|
The shape-shifting protagonist of this sex-filled magic-realist novel, twenty-two-year-old Paul Polydoris, belongs to "all the genders," able to change his body at will.
|
|
"I don't think it's respectful to the interests of state governments to say that they will infringe at will if damages liability is taken off the table," Park said.
|
|
And as the ability of majorities to change the Senate's rules at-will becomes routine, the remaining super-majoritarian provisions that periodically frustrate them are placed in greater jeopardy.
|
|
It owns no cars, its drivers are at-will contractors who can easily switch to rival services, and its customers are just one tap away from some other service.
|
|
Although the eight-times Copa America champions appeared to take their foot off the pedal in the second half, they still created chances at will against 74th-ranked Haiti.
|
|
Other times the Urbana tennis teammates smoked or drank in hotels or on the road when they drove to tournaments around Illinois, which they entered at will, coach-free.
|
|
It is disturbing to think that bad times could be imposed at will, needlessly, by a governor who seems hostile to the city's needs and Mr. de Blasio's agenda.
|
|
The surface-level ripple effect of Teague's injury is that Minnesota will need to replace a dangerous pick-and-roll presence who can get into the paint at will.
|
|
A macro is a kind of cheat that allows players to program complicated button combinations and deploy them at will with the click of one button rather than several.
|
|
In this case, two people using an end-to-end encrypted messaging app would be joined by a third, invisible person — the government — which could listen in at will.
|
|
Workers like Uber and Lyft drivers are not technically employees but "independent contractors," or people performing work for a company at-will without getting benefits like healthcare or overtime.
|
|
Yet on a planet that previously only the richest could cross at will, the 19913's most lasting impact may have been on everyday notions of distance and difference.
|
|
How can it be possible that a member of Parliament in 2018 still believes that Ireland is nothing but a resource to be drawn from and discarded at will?
|
|
Top U.S. policymakers appear convinced they have achieved "escalation dominance", allowing them to dial-up and dial-down pressure on Iran at will and precisely without too much risk.
|
|
Steel magnates like Andrew Carnegie resented any incursions on their freedom to set wages and working conditions at will; they wanted the right to squeeze labor to maintain profitability.
|
|
While the president possesses the ability to declassify material at will, security experts warned that publishing the material could give adversaries valuable information about the US' intelligence gathering capabilities.
|
|
The players would automatically qualify for a United States work visa and would also have the right to take family members with them and return to Cuba at will.
|
|
It raided homes, deployed spies and taunted them with whistles at dusk, a constant reminder that the enemy was right around the corner, able to charge in at will.
|
|
When you are raised in two cultures at once — when people see in you two heritages at odds, unresolved, in abeyance — you learn to shift at will between them.
|
|
Etienne scored on runs of 2 and 3 yards in the third and fourth quarters as Clemson moved the ball at will, amassing 527 yards and 30 first downs.
|
|
Gonzalo Higuain: Higuain is Argentina's enigma, a player who seems to score at will for his club Juventus but labors to hit the target when wearing the national shirt.
|
|
The performance is classic early Stanwyck: the slouching walk, the acetylene voice, the eyes that lock onto a man in contempt and then soften at will into mock-desire.
|
|
Even so, the Department of Justice filed a brief against the CFPB, arguing the panel's decision means CFPB Director Richard Cordray can be fired by the president at will.
|
|
The wheels then were unlocked and for nine days, the mice could run at will, while also eating and moving around off the wheels as much as they chose.
|
|
This illustrates how these systems rely on forcing workers to have a 7-day "open availability," a common aspect of at-will employment contracts used in the service industry.
|
|
"Anything can happen, and teams that are built for instant offense usually have a good result in the playoffs because they can score at will," starter Jake Odorizzi said.
|
|
We tend to treat everything as a story: a piece of content, a commodity, one to pick up and discard at will, rather than the events of people's lives.
|
|
But, because the Special Counsel regulations are executive branch regulations, the President can rescind or modify them unilaterally, thereby allowing him to fire the Independent Counsel at will. 7.
|
|
This is how we get 97-percent election victories in a country seven years removed from Tahrir Square and an invigorated Russia interfering at will with democratic elections abroad.
|
|
While firms with less than $250 billion in assets would no longer be automatically subject to stricter oversight, the Fed still has power to apply those standards at will.
|
|
"There is no evidence that Congress would have preferred no bureau at all to a bureau whose director was removable at will," Justice Department lawyers wrote in the brief.
|
|
Second, and perhaps more problematic, is that the median voter theorem assumes political leaders can just move around this one-dimensional issue space at will to respond to voters.
|
|
A federal appeals court on Wednesday said the president can fire a CFPB director only for cause, rejecting the White House argument that removal at will is also permitted.
|
|
The United States Women's National Team got off to a fiery start at the Women's World Cup in France, seemingly scoring at will during their opening match against Thailand.
|
|
The law does not "surrender to the president a boundless authority to set the rules of entry and override the immigration laws at will," Katyal said in court papers.
|
|
Naturally, you're able to swap between time periods at at will, but you can also summon temporary windows into other timelines, which adds a layer of strategy to stealth.
|
|
" Hours before Sayoc's arrest, Trump was unrepentant, tweeting that he found it "funny" that CNN "can criticize me at will, even blaming me for the current spate of bombs.
|
|
But it's got a secret weapon in B.J. Britt, who's endlessly charming and has a surprisingly deep reserve of empathy he can seemingly turn on and off at will.
|
|
But Russia and China have nuclear weapons, so they can hack at will, as computer network operations nearly always fall below the threshold of a true national security crisis.
|
|
"I became aware of that it is a universal thing that a director can touch and harass his actresses at will and the institution of film allows it," she wrote.
|
|
It can be turned off and on at will, the stock usually bounces when one is announced and a big enough buyback can reduce a company's share count, boosting EPS.
|
|
Chris Burden's "Urban Light" (2008), the artist's popular light installation outside of the Los Angeles County Museum of At, will be temporally shut down for a two-month restoration project.
|
|
The T-1000 blob-terminator seems like a too-easy touchstone, but when it comes to autonomously reconfigurable robots―machines that become other machines at will―it really is perfect.
|
|
Skorobogatov then carved a hole in the back of the phone and wired a connector through the hole that allowed the memory chip to be attached and removed at will.
|
|
"I became aware of that it is a universal thing that a director can touch and harass his actresses at will and the institution of film allows it," Björk wrote.
|
|
The hurricane has been over nearly a year, but Mapp has continued to renew this order, apparently setting the precedent that Virgin Islands residents can lose their weapons at will.
|
|
Since fast-food cooks and cashiers are at-will employees, missing shifts is a legal reason for firing or disciplining them, even if a severe storm warning is in effect.
|
|
The Taliban's intended message is clear: We waited out the Americans, and now can strike at will — even through the so-called "ring of steel" cordon of security around Kabul.
|
|
It's still unclear, however, if Line's efforts to grow into a lifestyle platform (a strategy WeChat has excelled at) will succeed and there are already signs it may be struggling.
|
|
However, on Tuesday, the head of Russian state producer Rosneft, Igor Sechin, said Russia should pump at will and he would seek compensation from the government if cuts were extended.
|
|
Last weekend, the pumped up featherweight clasped his hands behind his back and stuck out his chinny chin chin for lightweight champ Eddie Alvarez to try and sock at will.
|
|
For a truly egregious example, consider Jared Leto's (Oscar-winning!) work in Dallas Buyers Club, where womanhood is treated as something his character puts on and takes off at will.
|
|
CONTROL Top U.S. policymakers appear convinced they have achieved escalation dominance, allowing them to dial-up and dial-down pressure on Iran at will and precisely without too much risk.
|
|
Demonstrations have been suppressed; defamation cases have targeted opposition members; activists have been detained; a legal change has cleared the way for the state to shut down parties at will.
|
|
In Harry Potter's world, the Pensieve is a way to access someone's memories: a wizard extracts them from their mind with a wand, and they can store them at will.
|
|
Rather than work within the rules-based system of trade, which America helped create and which, despite the system's imperfections, has served the country well, he bypasses it at will.
|
|
Often the keyboards get reduced to ostinato background, a low, eerie presence flickering on and off at will, leaving hook duty to the crunching and clattering of the snare drums.
|
|
Even the rule of law becomes a tool in their hands, with laws made at will by pliant legislatures, coopted and intimidated, to suit the purposes of the authoritarian leader.
|
|
Developed over the course of several months by George Michael Brower, the game is free-ranging, where players are encouraged to do as they please, building or destroying at will.
|
|
Companies use revolving credit facilities as backstop financing in case short-term CP lines fail to roll over, and are able to draw down, repay and re-borrow at will.
|
|
It attracted funds of more than 40 billion yuan ($6.19 billion) from investors across the country, promising 13.68 percent returns and the flexibility to deposit and withdraw money at will.
|
|
At its best, batsmen hit fours and sixes at will, bowlers deceive them with swing and spin, and the value of each run means that fielding is frequently jaw-dropping.
|
|
Still, with the power to promote and dismiss leaders at will, it's difficult to say whether staff unrest will end up being more than a speed bump for Trump's ambitions.
|
|
As a person designated white by the US color line, the labor of feeling across difference is not done at will, as one does not do death — it does you.
|
|
The best explanation for this sudden inflow is that WTO membership gave certainty to investors in China's export industries; until then, America could impose higher tariffs on China at will.
|
|
OPEC and its partners have been limiting supply since 2017, helping to clear a supply glut that built up in 2014-2016 when producers pumped at will, and revive prices.
|
|
Being able to summon one at will could remove the need to own a car, greatly reduce the number of vehicles on the roads and all but eliminate road deaths.
|
|
The other mice were allowed to continue running at will throughout their pregnancies, and they did keep running, although their distance and speed declined as they grew heavy with young.
|
|
He's someone who argued that Sitting Presidents should be immune from prosecution and not be indicted & POTUS has the sole power to appoint and fire special prosecutors at will Sen.
|
|
If we allow people to just come in here at will, without meeting our laws and our approaches towards immigration, then we're asking for a country that's out of control.
|
|
While Chapel Down's Brut Rose was reportedly poured at Will and Kate's wedding, opt for a bottle of Chapel Down Brut Classic (non-vintage) sparkling wine for $45 on Wine.com.
|
|
After all, Google Glass got a lot of backlash for its awkward design and from onlookers who were afraid of the attached camera, which could be turned on at will.
|
|
Purchasers of drugs across the health system have been outmatched by the political and market power conferred on the pharmaceutical industry, which has the ability to increase prices at will.
|
|
Replacing the independent energy commission with a sole energy commissioner, who may be fired at will by the governor, guarantees that neither oversight, nor transparency, will govern Rosselló's privatization schemes.
|
|
"Under the right to control, which is the most important factor, California courts made it clear that at-will nature of right to terminate has inordinate importance," Judge Corley said.
|
|
Pelicans rally past Heat 91-87 NEW ORLEANS — In the land of tall trees, Anthony Davis has made a tidy NBA living scooping up rebounds and scoring seemingly at will.
|
|
Think of it as a place where worlds can be created and destroyed at will; a noisy frontier where the pioneers are bands called Morbid Angel, Immolation and Napalm Death.
|
|
Max Allison: I tend to use music as a means of escaping whatever is going on around me, to enter another little dimension at will and escape the real world.
|
|
Last year's attack made clear that Assad was prepared to break that norm at will, something certainly not lost on Defense Secretary Mattis or then-National Security Adviser H.R. McMaster.
|
|
One avenue concerned the fact that Kraninger, the current director of the CFPB, does not dispute that she should be removed at will if the President disagrees with her decisions.
|
|
The judge has even laid down a strict new cell phone policy -- Brad will now be able to call and text each child at will -- without Angelina monitoring the convos.
|
|
The constitutional issues at stake go way back to the very first Congress, in 1789, when it gave the president the power to remove the secretary of state at will.
|
|
"I think the first quarter is really important," Anthony said, adding that the Cavaliers had to send a message at the start that the Warriors could not score at will.
|
|
And because Ireland has long treated renting as little more than a stopgap before people inevitably buy homes, its weak tenant protections allow landlords to evict renters almost at will.
|
|