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"edict" Definitions
  1. an official order or statement given by somebody in authority

435 Sentences With "edict"

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

The town of Afula denied the edict was racially motivated.
His writing had the style of a verdict, an edict.
Trump's tweets are a new form of governing by edict.
Mass protests by women were unsuccessful in overturning the edict.
Mr. Cuomo's edict takes effect on Sunday at 8 p.m.
He said any violation of the edict would be punished.
My edict went into immediate effect for my teachers, too.
His security clearance was downgraded after an edict from Kelly.
In "The Triumph of Christianity," Ehrman describes the Edict of Milan (which was neither an edict nor written in Milan) as the Western world's first known government document to proclaim the freedom of belief.
Many Catholics across Latin America and elsewhere ignore the edict, however.
One edict obliges districts to plant bamboo on river banks. Why?
Obeying its edict, Ms Bakht's father drugged and then electrocuted her.
In fact, the law is more a nudge than an edict.
Humayun Khan, serving as a sharp rebuke of Trump's proposed edict.
The edict is expected before a hotly contested election on Feb.
I suggest that you simply refuse to accept the D.N.C. edict.
Winning is no longer a best-case here, it's an edict.
I would never accept any edict not to report the news.
Urban Dictionary's abandonment of that edict afforded it a rebel spirit.
Analysts said they fear the edict could provoke religiously motivated violence.
For the most part, our leaders have taken this constitutional edict seriously.
Mr Trump says the aim of the edict is to thwart terrorism.
But even without the new edict, Nantong had been having second thoughts.
After a drink, Peter breezily flouts the official edict against ethnic labelling.
Most faculty would pay attention to this edict, but many students wouldn't.
She is kind of going against the company edict there, you know.
In complying with that final edict, Foles does not strut or preen.
Gregory becomes Pope Gregory and, finally, his manuscript becomes a papal edict.
The painting edict would likely meet a similar fate, Mr. Circa predicted.
The menu arrives in a sealed parchmentlike envelope, like a royal edict.
Many Indonesians, however, think the edict may be politically and racially motivated.
It's also important that this be done by legislation, not by executive edict.
Or does Trump have an exception to his edict for non-Muslim terrorists?
" According to a Fox source, "There is no edict not to wear pants.
Li's speech had the effect of a political edict, and wine imports soared.
Many Democrats echoed their discomfort, saying Mr. Trump's broad edict threatened global commerce.
In the personal edict, the pope affirms a "significant principle," Mr. Tornielli wrote.
"Repeal the edict or face more of the same!" is the nomads' mantra.
But I did laugh at how he deals with the edict to stone adulterers.
The edict caused tension between the two -- but it didn't stop Danny from racing.
"The edict was never to injure, it was to satirize, to lampoon," Paulsen explains.
But under a new edict from Venezuela's government, shopping centres must close by seven.
Whether a league-wide edict would halt the wider demonstrations remains an open question.
In 2013, her creative team quit over an editorial edict preventing her from marrying.
He has enforced the President's edict to deny Congress witnesses, again despite congressional subpoenas.
The edict is reversed, and Haman is hanged on the gallows meant for Mordecai.
But they have arguably done more to promote interest-rate liberalisation than any regulatory edict.
Malcolm Turnbull, Australia's prime minister, issued an edict banning sex between ministers and their staff.
A recent edict requires universities to report any books on the topic to the authorities.
A fatwa, or religious edict, is influential among Muslims although it is not legally binding.
In its current form, the document is a Motu Proprio, or a personal papal edict.
The erosion of this unstated edict may not be the only shift this show represents.
China retaliated with an edict to strike back at any foreign company that boycotts Huawei.
Another edict: You must slather your face and hands and feet in sweet-smelling stuff.
The edict affects carriers from 13 countries, including Royal Jordanian airlines and Saudi Arabia's Saudia Airlines.
Anyone entering any park must, by government edict, wear a mask and have their temperature checked.
A Malaysian High Court has upheld a government edict declaring the shirt a national security threat.
But there's been no clear edict here, nothing that actually binds those in power to act.
China's central government handed down an edict last week that effectively barred them from the council.
In 1492, the Catholic monarchs signed an edict to expel the Jews, forcing a mass exodus.
Mr. Irving-Pease first did a bit of historical housekeeping and searched for the papal edict.
Historians say the edict affected at least 35,000 Sicilian Jews, including at least 5,000 in Palermo.
That's not exactly an edict with biblical or Quranic eloquence, but it makes sense to me.
An edict preventing any suitor from integrating Air India into its existing operations was greeted with bemusement.
But the choice on DACA is not between the rule of law and rule by presidential edict.
"He really wanted to be in the movie, but it was a British-only edict," Hirshenson said.
That's according to a religious edict — known as a fatwa — from Dubai's Islamic Affairs & Charitable Activities Department.
Google, in other words, is taking a massive potential hit in order to comply with Trump's edict.
Fidel issued this edict that art could be free as long as it operated within the revolution.
I can't even imagine what I'd make of a shelter-in-place edict and booze on delivery.
Instead a top-down edict about gender equality has caused national federations to scramble to start programs.
It's a well known edict that once something has been posted online, it can never be removed.
Last year, for example, clubs scrambled to honor a semiofficial edict that banned visible tattoos during games.
England and Scotland duly confirmed that they would wear poppy-bearing armbands, in defiance of FIFA's edict.
Six other predominantly Muslim countries are covered by the edict: Syria, Yemen, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Iran.
"Watering down a bad idea doesn't make it a good idea," Dr Kelli says of the revised edict.
Al-Adnani is best known for issuing an edict for lone wolves to kill Westerners in September 2014.
President Obama elected to rule by executive edict and what a president giveth another president can taketh away.
Some of them are Jehovah's Witnesses, in spite of a strict edict against the practice in their faith.
The ruling was the second edict out of the California courts directed at the Trump administration's immigration policies.
During the highly publicized events, he resurrected the Communist edict that journalists reflect the will of the party.
This particularly applies if several hours have elapsed between the secret and the edict not to tell anyone.
Byrne's savage assassination was the result of an imprisoned drug lord's edict to exact retribution for his incarceration.
That roughly echoes George Steinbrenner's edict during the Yankees' dynasty, as voiced in the clubhouse by Derek Jeter.
That conclusion is not an edict banning airlines from allowing passengers to put their electronics in checked bags.
Judge Paul W. Schmidt observed the effect of this edict from his bench in an austere Arlington courtroom.
But what are we to do when the edict to lie or suppress is about a foreign threat?
Young, who posted a copy of the excommunication edict on his blog, said he will appeal the order.
Garcetti also praised the company for maintaining work for its employees during the California stay-at-home edict.
But Conley and Castanha ignored that edict, instructing Desi to calm down, listen up, quit crying, pay attention.
Israel has called on the IPC to change the venue if it cannot persuade Malaysia to lift the edict.
In trying to dial the difficulty back, they worked under a new edict: make the game feel too easy.
The two-week edict keeps him out of the lineup until the March 2 home game against Michigan State.
But the grant of civic rights was withdrawn 60 years before the revocation of the edict itself in 1685.
But barely six decades after that edict, the eastern Roman empire began to enforce a particular understanding of Christianity.
He issued an edict forbidding his subjects from harbouring Quakers, whom he abhorred, on pain of imprisonment or eviction.
Russia Today was one that did not follow it, but the Guardian and others followed the edict from France.
Sixteen states, including California, filed a court motion arguing that Mr Trump's edict would divert money from law enforcement.
Andrew M. Cuomo issuing an edict to remove all homeless people from the street and place them in shelters.
After the announcement of first travel ban a year ago, several politicians, spoke out against the White House's edict.
A future governor could presumably reverse Newsom's edict, and death penalty supporters are already arguing his action is unlawful.
But that is not good enough for Fikile Mbalula, the combative minister of sport, who issued the recent edict.
Would this edict extend to every computer file, every message, screen sharing over the web, and every phone call?
More than 100,000 Islamic scholars and clerics on Saturday issued an edict against militancy in the name of Islam.
Yet that edict may still leave the company plenty of room to negotiate more limited deals with digital services.
Daniel went home, threw open the windows for all to see and got on his knees, defying the edict.
The kicker is that Brookfield is a Canadian-owned company, one that presumably falls under the new Saudi edict.
The following year, Constantine co-issued the Edict of Milan, granting Christians the right to practice their faith unmolested.
Others, however, saw the edict as an effort to tame a party culture that has become notorious among students.
An edict at the club runs that the men's and women's teams were to be treated exactly the same.
Gillespie, on the other hand, wasn't happy with this edict, because he believed LaVona would still be lighting up.
Mrs Lam denied that anyone from the central government had asked her to issue the edict during her visit.
Mr. Trump made America look cruel and incompetent in the eyes of the world with his sweeping immigration edict.
After it was rephrased, Lippi gave a short, diplomatic response, saying he was not unduly concerned by the edict.
The cultural edict is seen as partly responsible for the many obstacles that Saudi women face in joining the workforce.
"The most logical explanation is he was terrified of having players get hurt," Linnemann says of Gagliardi's no-tackling edict.
The Trump administration issued a broad edict to all federal agencies to respect "religious liberty" in their various policy pursuits.
I can tell you this personally, because my family was one of the thousands directly affected by this devastating edict.
There was a conflict over whether local and national news outlets would sign an unusual edict she had handed down.
But the main reason Ms Faust's predecessors left the clubs in peace is that the new edict may be unenforceable.
The orders for the systematic execution of dissidents came from Khomeini himself, in the form of a fatwa (religious edict).
In Egypt 61% of girls are cut in defiance of a decade-old fatwa (religious edict) by senior Islamic clerics.
Seven rabbis recently banded together and released an edict, advising that the vaccinations are a matter of life and death.
Advocates for victims of abuse said that the edict had shielded clergy members from prosecution and contributed to cover-ups.
He compared the group to kapos, the Jewish collaborators who enforced Nazi edict in the World War II concentration camps.
Antigone, one of Polyneices's sisters, insist on burying her brother's body, despite an edict from the king that forbids it.
She added that the updated dress code, far from being a heavy-handed edict, was made after requests from LPGA players.
Mr Duterte's edict was made public four days after he signed it, while he was on an official visit to Israel.
Optimists point to experienced and distinguished generals and businessmen appointed to Mr Trump's cabinet as a restraint on government by edict.
His edict, and the violence that followed, caused a lasting rupture with the revolutionaries who helped put Mr Morsi in office.
"Within the German borders every Herero, with or without a gun, with or without cattle, will be shot," his edict read.
He may not survive long enough to see a higher federal court repudiate his unjust prosecution under an unconstitutional regulatory edict.
WorldRemit is an online money transfer service that launched in Nigeria 2011 and one of the companies affected by the edict.
The judges issued a "writ of mandamus," a rare edict from a federal court that requires a litigant to take action.
But what I recall is the first edict was they have to be as true to the source material as possible.
This year, a religious edict calling for the death of Salman Rushdie for writing "The Satanic Verses" was renewed in Iran.
Their edict to the states concerning restrooms, locker rooms and other facilities is at once illegal, ominous, and ignores privacy issues.
And ultimately it has the effect of quashing a little First Amendment edict that includes the ability to have free speech.
But for others, that edict is clearly not so cut-and-dried, as cliffhanger romances continue to be written and published.
The edict was scrawled on signs at women's marches around the world in January, as were other nods to the book.
When scrutinized, the economics of it are rather ingenious, and, paradoxically, somewhat compliant with the current edict to eat less meat.
He then expanded on the edict by ordering that two existing regulations be put out to pasture for every new rule.
A one-sided edict penned behind closed doors to threaten and bully college administrators will chill more speech than it frees.
This theme, of individual choice and romantic love thwarted by parental edict and tradition, is a long-standing one in literature.
The edict is not legally binding, as Indonesia is not an Islamic state and it has a secular Constitution and government.
Analysts say the edict against Muslims wearing Christmas-themed clothing is another example of the conservative agenda of Indonesian Islamist groups.
Megadonor Tom Steyer has collected millions of signatures on an impeachment petition, and issued a statement after he heard Pelosi's edict.
"The Democrat platform is a 2018 socialism, open borders edict," he declared at a rally in Cleveland the night before the election.
It is remarkably refreshing and a pleasant reminder that WWE's men don't (usually) tap edict is the aberration, not the historical rule.
The four sites implicated in the edict are owned by some of China's biggest internet companies, including Sina, Sohu, NetEase, and Phoenix.
First, female cabin crew at Air France complained about an edict telling them to wear a headscarf when disembarking aircraft in Iran.
In 1954, the Klamath Tribes were forcibly terminated as a sovereign nation by an edict from Congress, unilaterally abrogating the 1864 treaty.
Karim Askari, executive director of the Islamic Foundation of Iceland, is in no doubt which edict he will be following this Ramadan.
His coach, Jimmy Johnson, ordered the Cowboys' defensive backs to be physical with receivers, and Woodson interpreted that edict to the extreme.
It has grown exponentially since Prime Minister Narendra Modi shocked India last November with an edict declaring all large bank notes invalid.
For one thing, the court's edict that only "green", less-polluting firecrackers can be let off between the hours of 8 p.m.
It has to do with the league's emphasis on pace and 3-pointers, combined with an edict to make defenders back off.
But the edict that employees with wage and hours claims may seek relief only one-by-one does not come from Congress.
The precise character of that isolation, however, is bound to shift somewhat when it's not a matter of preference, but government edict.
But Trump, with his absurd edict to eliminate two regulations for every new one proposed, is making things more dangerous for them.
Announcing her anti-mask edict, Mrs Lam said that businesses want a stable environment, and that the ban would help create one.
Some note that in October, the council issued an edict forbidding Muslims from voting for non-Muslim candidates such as Mr. Basuki.
Congress has an opportunity to effectively overrule the President's edict if lawmakers pass a spending bill that includes a federal pay raise.
That's the type of edict that might come from the leadership of the old Soviet Union, Cuba or even today's communist China.
The answer lies in a semiofficial edict from Chinese sports officials issued last year that bans tattoos from being visible during matches.
Francis's edict obliges the world's one million priests and nuns to report all suspicion of sexual abuse by clerics of any level.
The move was perceived as a significant, if long-overdue, gesture of reconciliation, coming some 500 years after the Spanish edict of expulsion.
According to the South China Morning Post, the no-black-imports edict was first issued in July but recently became more all encompassing.
A similar edict said that only Indonesian ships could export coal and palm oil and import rice, though the wording was characteristically vague.
China, a nation whose leaders Trump is courting hard for his much-needed trade pact, did not react well to his oil edict.
Washington (CNN)President Barack Obama ignored his own "no hats" edict Monday when he partook in a traditional American Indian ceremony in Washington.
I was alerted to this holy edict at the gates to art fair paradise yesterday, two booths flanking the entrance to the event.
Loyal soldiers apparently referred to him by rubbing their chins after Gigante issued an edict that his name not be uttered in public.
Boiron criticised the plan earlier on Tuesday as rumours of the health ministry decision circulated, and it said it would fight the edict.
We'll happily remind Trump of this at every opportunity, and that anyone who ignores that edict is on the wrong side of history.
Euro zone countries hastily discarded the "no bailout" edict in the 1992 Maastricht Treaty setting out the ground rules for the single currency.
Surprised by the blowback, Mr. Mulvaney dropped his court request and now says he will abide by the president's edict not to cooperate.
But the mantra of being "tough on border protection" has been an edict both major parties in Australia are eager to stick to.
The China Banking Regulatory Commision (CBRC) transmitted the so-called window guidance, a sort of informal administrative edict, orally, the three people said.
One sister eventually revolted against her brother's edict — but not until 393, when she was 239, too late to produce potentially troublesome heirs.
Though the guidance is nonbinding, critics have argued that the edict pressured districts to keep suspensions low at the expense of student safety.
Then the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention took up Mr. Pence's edict, announcing that anyone could be tested if a doctor agrees.
Documents show that Jews were in Sicily at least since the first century A.D., and remained on the island until the 16013 edict.
The new government edict gave labor unions the power to gerrymander workplaces and allow small groups of employees to form collective bargaining units.
More radical is the edict that went into effect on Sunday banning the use of pesticides in public gardens and along public highways.
The martial law edict gives the military widespread powers, including the ability to carry out warrantless arrests and set up roadblocks and checkpoints.
With an edict made public on Monday, China's top internet regulator ordered online companies to stop producing original reporting from their news operations.
The fear inside the agency is palpable; especially since Trump issued an edict banning Environmental Protection Agency employees from sharing information on social media.
A quarter of a century after the St Bartholomew's Day massacre (pictured above), the Edict of Nantes (1598) gave French Protestants limited religious liberty.
Davis's proposed wording was not inserted by edict, nor did it fall outside CNN's normal editorial process, said the people familiar with Davis's involvement.
The University of Wyoming demands that consent should be "voluntary, sober, enthusiastic, verbal, non-coerced, continual, active, and honest"—a hard-to-enforce edict.
He was summoned to the principal's office just a few hours before the May 19th ceremony – where school and district administrator's delivered their edict.
The film was "Psycho" and Alfred Hitchcock's edict—part artistic statement, part marketing ploy—placed new emphasis on plot twists in the final act.
The motivation to put points on the board to demonstrate compliance with an executive SDN edict does not tend to lead to positive outcomes.
The new edict is no different: Less than a week after the guidance was issued, a lawsuit was filed that sought to overturn it.
So, the high priest passed an edict that we can marry these women and now his son has a beautiful wife from the Ukraine.
So far, a dozen current administration officials have testified despite the White House edict, while about 10 have refused to talk or provide documents.
The use of the mouthpiece as a projectile gives Silver the perfect excuse to issue an edict to keep it unseen, where it belongs.
I cannot live as a democratic citizen, observing the laws I have helped to enact -- I can only submit to the edict of others.
I cannot live as a democratic citizen, observing the laws I have helped to enact — I can only submit to the edict of others.
Though the guidance is nonbinding, critics have argued that the edict pressured districts to keep policies that allowed dangerous students to stay in schools.
Augusta National is still Coke country, although, in keeping with a Roberts edict of yesteryear, no brand names are visible at the concession stands.
To follow the court's New York-style pizza edict, Mr. Harel said, he searched online for the best dough recipe that fit the bill.
Others advocate outlawing all semi-automatic firearms — an edict first floated by the Clinton administration that would create tens of millions of new offenders.
The Trump executive order should be seen more as a mission statement, and less as a monarchical edict that can instantly change the law.
The edict "Love the stranger because you were a stranger once yourself" is the single most common idea in the Hebrew Bible, used 36 times.
To give his edict extra prominence, officials took the rare step of inviting foreign journalists to Zhongnanhai to quiz a deputy finance minister on it.
The laptop ban has probably encouraged those flying between America and Asia, for example, to connect in Europe, which was not affected by the edict.
In 2015, Indonesia's National Commission on Human Rights urged authorities in Yogyakarta to repeal the land edict, saying it was discriminatory and would hurt development.
Batman's no-kill edict may have been an editorial choice, but his decision not to kill is what separates him from the criminals he captures.
Yudhoyono was responding to claims he had urged a senior cleric to declare Purnama a blasphemer, an edict that led to the Jakarta governor's trial.
Their uncle, a dashing fellow with whom our governess becomes a bit smitten, offers one edict: He wants to know absolutely nothing about the children.
The History Huguenot refugees arrived in New Rochelle in 1688, having fled religious persecution in France after Louis XIV's revocation of the Edict of Nantes.
Some Yahoo employees were upset about the decision not to contest the more recent edict and thought the company could have prevailed, the sources said.
The original Marseille soap had a specific olive-oil-based recipe that was considered so sacred that Louis XIV protected it with a royal edict.
Shatner's edict to fans to "just learn the tools to deal with bullies and your fandom will be at peace" seems like pretty vital advice.
The new edict said if you're in the Mafia and then cooperate with law enforcement, we'll go after you, your relatives and your loved ones.
The findings would counter a 2014 World Health Organization edict that no level of alcohol consumption is safe because it raises the risk of cancer.
But in the early fourth century the Roman emperor Constantine converted to Christianity, and his Edict of Milan established freedom of religion across the realm.
The process of securing a sign for posterity — or until the next renaming — is far more cumbersome than obtaining a temporary one through mayoral edict.
After an inconclusive meeting, he and Ms. Morrissy Merick adjourned for drinks in her hotel room, where she persuaded him to have Westmoreland's edict reversed.
In 1935, the news organization complied with a Nazi edict by firing or reassigning six employees the Germans considered to be Jewish, the review said.
But the IRS issued an edict Wednesday night saying the early payments could be deducted on 2017 taxes only if they had already been assessed.
Those contradictions are among the many reasons that even members of Mr. Trump's party see his budget more as a mere suggestion than an edict.
Salesmen who violated the edict were scolded by compliance officers who said the bank feared stoking public interest in its ties to the new president.
These trends don't appear to be a matter of policy — if you define "policy" as an edict from above, an executive order, even a press release.
In 2013, Christians celebrated 1,700 years of the edict of Emperor Constantine, which ended the persecution of their faith and provided a degree of religious liberty.
There are decades upon decades of comic books where these characters have existed with a no-kill edict, and Snyder's movies are ostensibly based on them.
The religious edict forbids women from cycling because it's viewed as a practice that "exposes society to corruption" and "contravenes women's chastity," according to The Independent.
Torture, medical experimentation, and death by government edict seemed an inescapable part of Chany's inheritance, and it was one she shared with members of her community.
A federal judge blocked the Obama administration's edict that transgender school pupils should be allowed to use whichever toilet or locker room they feel comfortable in.
For all of us, and for the millions of others who knew they could one day be in our situations, the USPSTF's edict was simply unmaintainable.
This is supposed to be a column about the NFL, although I don't always abide by that self-imposed edict up at the top of it.
It is an edict that generally forbids banks from using their own capital to trade in securities or invest in hedge funds and private equity funds.
They were all arrested, and the country's highest religious body issued an edict banning female driving, adding what was a customary ban to the legal code.
Update: This story has been changed so as not to imply the Edict of Milan was able to institute permanent religious tolerance throughout the Roman Empire.
When one commission edict proclaimed: "No French 18th-century landmark chateau has a swimming pool," Mr. Corrigan discovered a crack in the Exotic Garden's reflecting pool.
Yet since delivery accounts for only 215% of sales at Calexico's Park Slope restaurant, the edict means taking an immediate 113% hit to its bottom line.
In March 1513, the government banned Twitter in a notorious edict that backfired, as people flocked to Twitter using tools to get around the government block.
In March 2014, the government banned Twitter in a notorious edict that backfired, as people flocked to Twitter using tools to get around the government block.
Diane Greene, its enterprise SVP, who wields considerable power in the company, has an edict to grow her unit, even through acquisition, as Recode reported earlier.
This year's target has been set to 80,000 recruits, up from 68,000 the year before, and the edict comes at a low point for recruitment enthusiasm.
But the pipe, as Irving wrote, "was the great organ of reflection and deliberation of the New Netherlander," and Kieft's antismoking edict sparked a popular commotion.
The cardinal also persuaded the pope in 2007 to issue an edict granting priests permission to celebrate the old Latin Mass, its pre-Vatican II form.
The guidance could face legal challenges, and if agencies fail to comply with OMB's edict, Mouton said, OMB could respond by pulling funds from their budgets.
Like many other fortified castles, its military capability — including the top 10 feet of the tower — was eliminated following a government edict in the 17th century.
By testifying before the House Intelligence, Foreign Affairs and Oversight and Reform Committees, Vindman defied a White House edict not to cooperate with the impeachment inquiry.
It cannot go unchecked when, as here, the President wields it through an executive edict that stands to cause irreparable harm to individuals across this nation.
The ban is expected to come into force by the end of August and any citizen in violation of the edict will have their passports invalidated.
" Thou shalt talk Trump: An on-air personality, on what to cover: "Nobody needs to put out an edict to producers to try to win their hours.
"I'm not aware of any prior such edict from the president saying that people from a particular country aren't permitted to be admitted as refugees," Cox said.
Narrowly speaking, the edict is a blow to Queen Cersei, who will no longer be able to use "Ser Robert Strong" as her one-man wrecking crew.
Together the two companies sued the city of Seattle over an edict that allowed "on-demand workers to unionize," which was dismissed by a judge last year.
"We will deal with that matter," Magashule said when asked by reporters what the party would do if Zuma refused to heed the edict from his party.
Take Daniel, for example, who was thrown to the lions because he wouldn't obey an edict requiring all subjects of King Darius to pray only to him.
It was as keenly symbolic of Gaullist triumph as any law or edict, but, though the alteration is mentioned, we never really see it or feel it.
In 1997, a presidential edict was passed prohibiting the "hunting, killing, wounding, taking away or possession of the Philippine tarsier" and activities that would destroy its habitats.
The machines were not recalibrated before last week's edict; by keeping the move a secret, officials prevented big holders of unaccounted-for money from outwitting the ban.
Democrats see some hope in Mr. Trump's seeming lack of commitment to his own draconian edict — last week, "Nancy" persuaded him to tweet reassurance to those affected.
Earlier this season, an edict was passed down that all extracurricular activities — promotional work, media appearances and the like — were to be run by the technical staff.
Steinbrenner has said getting below the luxury-tax threshold for the first time — it will be $197 million next year — is an objective, if not an edict.
The statement, though, heightened the skepticism of some employees, who questioned whether the social media edict was part of a deal Mr. D'Vorkin had struck with Disney.
Both meat and milk were scarce in Japan and China (and sometimes banned by Buddhist edict) but available to the wealthy for special dishes and medicinal purposes.
The president has also charged Mr. Kushner, who has no previous government or diplomatic experience, with a vague edict to establish peace between Israel and the Palestinians.
"You have fanatics in every group," said Avi Kagan, an accountant who is Hasidic, and who like others stressed that there is no religious edict against vaccination.
But in 2014, Francis reversed that edict as some skeptics questioned whether the new pope was signaling a softer line on priestly celibacy, something denied by Vatican officials.
Although the edict does not mention the Dodd-Frank act of 210, which redefined financial regulation after the crisis of 25.75, it is chiefly aimed at that law.
When he spoke to Vox in June, Dick said he'd operate the bar as a mixed space, against Holbrook's edict, catering to both women and the gay community.
Gemma Whelan, who has played Yara Greyjoy on the HBO series since season 2, said she almost lost her part before it even began for violating that edict.
Within weeks of the release of the white paper on preserving traditional culture came another edict forbidding even retired officials in Beijing from engaging in any religious activities.
Take Shinohara's simple yet loaded edict, pop it on a museum wall, and suddenly the evidence of his postmodern genius extends to an entire generation of Japanese designers.
"It cannot go unchecked when, as here, the President wields it through an executive edict that stands to cause irreparable harm to individuals across this nation," he wrote.
The edict of Hemingway's art is to take what life throws at you without complaint, but it is also to never postpone pleasure if you can help it.
Indeed, accepting a "good enough" solution to a constitutional problem is well within our constitutional tradition: consider the Supreme Court's famous edict in the wake of Brown v.
JAKARTA (Reuters) - Indonesia's highest Muslim clerical council is to issue an edict, or fatwa, declaring the spreading of fake news un-Islamic, the organisation's chairman said on Wednesday.
On June 14th around 100,000 Muslim clerics in Bangladesh issued a fatwa (Islamic religious edict) ruling the murder of "non-Muslims, minorities and secular activists…forbidden in Islam".
" Watch: Rose McGowan on Sexism in Hollywood "Every studio that approached them, their edict was that they had to write in a male character from beginning to end.
Andrew M. Cuomo issued a sweeping edict meant to compel New Yorkers to stay indoors as much as possible, ordering all nonessential businesses to keep their workers home.
The edict forced people to exchange their rupees for new notes at banks, setting off a short-term cash crunch and prompting many Indians to consider digital options.
Her edict to fill my own empty space with a new story has given me permission to make the most out of my remaining time on this planet.
The new edict contained a loophole of sorts, in that players can remain in the locker room during the playing of "The Star-Spangled Banner" if they wish.
There may not be an edict coming down from on high to "destroy" those candidates who threaten the system, but there are natural defense mechanisms that kick in.
And the first-quarter total for the four banks was held back by a 1.1 percent decline at Wells Fargo, which is operating under a strict regulatory edict.
Historically, Deadspin had covered sports and other things, but after being bought by Great Hill Partners in April 2019, the new owners issued an edict: stick to sports.
What should really make the NFL and it's owners nervous is the potential reaction by a large majority of its African American players in response to Jones's edict.
Aside from her co-stars, Ms. Lister-Jones was unflinching about the all-female edict: She even banned her male financial backers and executive producers from the set.
The order waives for six months a congressional edict requiring the embassy be located in Jerusalem, meaning he will have to consider the matter again by Dec. 1.
There were no reports of altercations or anyone being injured, but there were accounts that the Islamists sought to intimidate shop managers and workers into obeying the edict.
A lineup of current and former administration officials defied the White House's edict not to cooperate with the impeachment inquiry, and came in to give closed-door depositions.
After the royal edict on Monday, the income tax payable from the beginning of this year will fall to 20.4 percent, from a previous rate of 85 percent.
So when I arrived, breathless, at his post mere seconds after the start of the Metropolitan Opera's production of "Das Rheingold" three decades ago, his edict was unwavering.
And it underscores the broad edict and influence that its new enterprise SVP Diane Greene has at the company as it aims to compete with Amazon and Microsoft.
Her intention is to find positive and loving ways to plead for an end to gun violence, which directly affects her neighborhood, rather than create a judgmental edict.
First proposed in 1923, this Constitutional edict would establish the legal equality of all sexes; it has been unsuccessfully introduced in every Congress since 1982 (we know, it's insane).
Huawei's bad weekend is turning worse as the company's American suppliers are all falling in line with a US government edict banning them from doing business with the company.
It was not clear exactly how the complex's guards intended to enforce the edict, but one who was carrying out checks promised that the authorities would foot the bill.
Grouped inside the umbrella of the Popular Mobilisation Forces (PMF) or al-Hashid al-Shaabi, they formed after an edict by Sistani and helped turn the Sunni jihadi tide.
With a single edict in 2014, the country's top Shi'ite Muslim cleric also mobilized tens of thousands of men to fight Islamic State as part of Shi'ite paramilitary groups.
Occupants are also required to hold themselves in "kapu aloha," a spiritual edict of restraint and self-control where one acts only with compassion, love, and care for others.
According to sources, the edict from Google was to ship hardware as well as build out a system that fills the gaps with communication and operability in connected devices.
Executives have issued an edict that GSAM's 2,000 employees must curtail spending, including a ban on all travel that is not associated with meeting clients and winning new business.
Featuring witnesses representing the nine million Americans living abroad, the hearing will dramatize how this ill-conceived edict has turned law-abiding, middle-class citizens into virtual financial lepers.
The ban is widely disregarded in many countries, but activists say there is still a stigma attached to birth control in some Latin American countries because of the edict.
In 2016, Francis issued an edict establishing that bishops could be removed from office for negligence or omission that led even indirectly to sexual abuse of minors by clergy.
That's a common occurrence when companies pursue the initiatives with a top-down mentality, where executives give an edict from on high and expect employees to blindly follow it.
" In the Christian tradition, this role reversal was often an extension of Jesus's revolutionary edict that one day "the last will be first and the first will be last.
It has been almost 110 years since Attorney General Joseph Bonaparte issued an edict establishing an investigative agency within the Department of Justice — a precursor to the modern FBI.
So just two weeks ago, Trump revoked President Obama's edict that federal agencies account for rising seas and raging storms in assessing infrastructure projects in places that flood repeatedly.
Condemned to death by a medicine man, often for breaking a religious edict, the victim is so frightened that his physical condition deteriorates rapidly and he dies within days.
Many were infuriated by the government's decree, which would have directly benefited some prominent politicians, and feared the edict could erode the country's long-term commitment to fighting corruption.
Last month's GSA edict put an official stamp on those suspicions, but without any official explanation as to what exactly the Moscow-based cybersecurity firm has done to merit them.
That year, she signed the ironically named "Fair Justice Act," an Orwellian edict that cuts short the appeals process for those who have been condemned to die by the state.
The news from Sunday night that Google would be complying with a US government edict and suspending business with Huawei is one of the most dramatic moments in Android's history.
He grumbles about an edict from Park Won-soon, the mayor, which has limited the height of the proposed apartment blocks to 22 storeys as a condition for their approval.
In the wake of the international success of Battle Royale, the young-adult literature market exploded with similar sagas about teens fighting each other to the death, by dictatorial edict.
In a comment that drew headlines on Israeli news websites, Aviner said the military edict reminded him of photographs from the Nazi era showing Jews being forcibly shaved by Germans.
The edict says:  There is nothing wrong in using the line if your neighbors allow you to do so, but if they'd don't allow you, you may not use it.
Francis instead issued an edict in 2016 tasking four Vatican departments with oversight of bishops to examine evidence and make recommendations to the pope, who could then demand their resignation.
One of the Trump administration's top officials issued an unusual edict to Americans: Go see a movie starring a superhero made of Legos — which he just so happened to produce.
In practice, though, Ayatollah Khamenei's statement amounts to an edict, and it is almost certainly hopeless for Mr. Ahmadinejad to try to mount a campaign against the supreme leader's wishes.
The request to search Yahoo Mail accounts came in the form of a classified edict sent to the company's legal team, according to the three people familiar with the matter.
The office of Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, issued a religious edict on Monday that said using cars during times of pollution without a good reason was religiously forbidden.
The edict is the product of months of cajoling from cyber-focused lawmakers on Capitol Hill, who regularly have warned that the lack of global cyberspace rules poses serious dangers.
But it's also not a psychological edict you want to put on your fan base if you can avoid it, especially one as recently damaged as the Browns have been.
Although Club Cumming is known as a queer bar, Mr. Cumming said he opened it a year ago with the "edict" of inclusiveness for all ages, genders and sexual orientations.
But if the Vatican aimed to present this as a model for bishops' conferences worldwide, associations that advocate for victims complained that the new edict fell short of their ambitions.
She appeared alongside her father, Ziauddin Yousafzai, the owner of a girls' school, in a 2009 New York Times documentary about the Taliban edict that forbade girls from attending classes.
But Mr. Nygaard, then the chief of the publishing house Aschehoug, which his family controls, went ahead with publication of a Norwegian-language edition, two months after the ayatollah's edict.
The advisers feared the president's edict would trap American tourists in Mexico, strand children at schools on both sides of the border and create an economic meltdown in two countries.
Mr. Biden has pledged not to accept contributions from the fossil fuel industry but his super PAC, which cannot legally coordinate with the campaign, is not bound by that edict.
Last year, a group of Pakistani clerics issued a religious edict saying that transgender people with "visible signs" of male or female attributes could marry someone of the opposite sex.
The edict gives the military widespread powers not just in Marawi but across the large southern island of Mindanao, including carrying out warrantless arrests and setting up roadblocks and checkpoints.
Bernie Sanders Thursday night tweeted support for the Deadspin journalists who resigned en masse, in protest of a management edict that their coverage stick exclusively to sports: Three thoughts: 1.
At a June gathering in Kabul, the Afghan Ulema Council — an organization of Muslim clerics and scholars — issued an edict against suicide attacks, saying they are "haram," forbidden under Islamic law.
Thais have been encouraged to don yellow, the royal colour, over the coronation period, although a short trip on a local train reveals a lack of broad enthusiasm for this edict.
Of course, many Catholics chose to ignore the edict altogether: In 1970, 66 percent of Catholic women said they had used contraception, a rate that grew to 94 percent by 1980.
Even people holding valid green cards allowing permanent U.S. residence have been ensnared by the edict, though top Trump administration officials said Sunday that the ban would not apply to them.
The edict made public on Monday, which said the web portals were in "serious violation" of a 2005 internet regulation, came before a meeting next year of the Communist Party Congress.
The question of whether to enact a shelter-in-place edict degenerated into a semantics debate with Mayor Bill de Blasio, resurfacing a petty feud between the two New York Democrats.
Under President Obama, the Department of Health and Human Services issued an edict that demanded religious employers become complicit in the provision of abortion-causing drugs and devices to their employees.
And a Treasury Department edict to allow U.S. tech companies to ship to Russia with permission of the FSB was initially misinterpreted as the Trump administration lifting some sanctions on Russia.
The pope later issued an edict, titled "As a Loving Mother," saying that the Vatican already had all the offices necessary to investigate and discipline negligent bishops, and would do so.
Last week, after Maidment sent the memo that instructed Deadspin's editorial staff to "stick to sports," Deadspin's interim editor-in-chief Barry Petchesky was fired for not abiding by the edict.
Palermo Journal PALERMO, Sicily — Sicily's Jews were banished from this island in 1492, the victims of a Spanish edict that forced thousands to leave and others to convert to Roman Catholicism.
It came one month after Pope Francis issued a sweeping edict that ordered church officials around the world to report cases of sexual abuse — and attempted cover-ups — to their superiors.
In April, female Muslim clerics issued an unprecedented fatwa - a religious edict which is not legally binding but influential among Muslims - to declare underage marriage harmful and said its prevention was mandatory.
As one of the world's richest and most powerful people, he established an edict that, after his death, nothing would be changed, so the garden rests nearly unaltered over 230 years later.
Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei issued a religious edict, or fatwa, in 2013 calling for Iranians to avoid "dealings" with Baha'is and labeled the group "deviant and misleading," news reports said.
Much of the Nets' dysfunction can be traced to their move to Brooklyn in 2012 — and specifically to the win-now, win-at-any-cost edict that was passed down by Prokhorov.
On a Sunday night last February, hours before same-sex marriages were scheduled to begin in the state, he issued a similar order to probate judges, most of whom defied the edict.
But the most childish of all was Trump's edict to cancel his subscription to The New York Times and The Washington Post and force all federal agencies to do the same thing.
It's a very good idea to agree on a strategy together rather than enforcing it from an edict on high, and always being open with your kids about how you're tracking them.
Casey told CNN during a promotional stop in London that he intends to continue protesting despite the new NFL edict that players are to show respect while the anthem is being played.
Imagine Tevye and Golde forced to flee their beloved home not in a Russian shtetl, but in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, and not because of a czarist edict but because of the L-pocalypse.
Israelis flying home from Germany, France, Spain, Austria and Switzerland will have to remain at home for 14 days under the edict, which will effectively cut off foreign tourism from those nations.
Some China experts said Bloomberg's declaration that Xi is not a dictator stems from his understanding that the Chinese government works through various layers of committees and not by one person's edict.
At the time, she had been blogging for the BBC about life under the grip of the terrorist group after an edict by the militants in 2008 banned girls from attending school.
Within hours of her edict being issued, protesters (mostly masked) vented their anger on the territory's rail network, which they accuse of aiding police by shutting down stations to hinder demonstrators' movements.
This was a blatant insult to the principle of fair and equal justice under the law, and a prime example of an arbitrary and capricious government edict that individuals should fear most.
Over the years, most players have abided by the clean-cut edict with little fuss, though as Showalter remembered it, a few might have complained of a Samson-like loss of mojo.
Here's another view of the action, from the heavens: It appears that stadium security works with an edict to just leave brawling fans alone until they get it out of their system!
Al Qaeda affiliate claims killing of Bangladeshi blogger On Saturday, 100,000 Islamic scholars launched a fatwa or a religious edict, saying that militancy and terrorism in the name of Islam is un-Islamic.
First, a decision by the Supreme Court in early April voided an RBI edict that ordered banks automatically to refer large companies which are behind in their debt payments to the insolvency regime.
And it was McConnell's edict last year that Obama would not be allowed to fill the current Court vacancy, created by Justice Antonin Scalia's death, that provides the backdrop for our current crisis.
For a country that is highly progressive when it comes to fashion and pop culture, this generations-old edict poses a challenge for young Koreans looking to express themselves beyond clothing and accessories.
But the weary Durant reporters and fans saw in Oklahoma City kept the media at arm's length and cautioned his running mate to do the same because of an edict from the team.
His most famed decree, the Edict of Milan, sought to put an end to the persecution of Christians under his dominion, and chart the mighty empire on an unprecedented course toward religious toleration.
In a complex edict on Friday, it forbade cities below a certain size from building subways systems, even as it indicated that delayed projects in larger cities could go forward with some limits.
The pope later issued an edict, titled "As a Loving Mother," saying that the Vatican already had all the offices necessary to investigate and discipline negligent bishops, and that it would do so.
He ordered women to maintain near-starvation diets to achieve the type of body he found desirable and punished those who disobeyed his edict to have sex only with him, former followers said.
In 2300, Kentucky's departing Democratic governor issued an executive order restoring voting rights to 140,000 residents with nonviolent felony records, only to see his Republican successor reverse the edict shortly after taking office.
"People are really focused on making sure that their child who has asthma can still get coverage," said Mr. Donnelly, arguing that his state's voters did not elect him with any firm edict.
An edict issued this month by the head of the Sports for All Federation, a government institution promoting sports and a healthy lifestyle, effectively banned Zumba classes for being contrary to Islamic precepts.
In a report Monday, RT did not name the company that the Department of Justice (DOJ) has compelled to file paperwork under the Foreign Agents Registration Act, but blasted the edict as overreaching.
One edict that I had going into this is that I wanted to give the show a lot of room to breathe so that we could get into personal issues and family issues.
Second, the false dichotomy that the Sultan's edict is trying to create between Brunei's desire to be an Islamic country and the West's proposition of human rights must be denounced as a lie.
Trump's campaign and the Secret Service were unusually lax about enforcing its edict that reporters can't mix with the crowds — something they're the only ones to do at every event — after the earlier hullabaloo.
"The patron in chief of TLP, Muhammad Afzal Qadri, has issued the edict that says the chief justice and all those who ordered the release of Asia deserve death," said party spokesman Ejaz Ashrafi.
The head of Poland's Supreme Court turned up for work Wednesday despite a government edict that removed her from office just hours earlier, deepening a standoff over the conservative government's purge of the judiciary.
Although he did not elaborate on his decision, the judge appeared to side with prosecutors, who argued on Wednesday that the former district attorney had not been authorized to make such a sweeping edict.
In response, in 2008, Indonesia's top Muslim clerical body issued a nonbinding fatwa or edict saying female circumcision should be performed if requested, as long as the method was not physically or psychologically dangerous.
Chernow, the author of the Alexander Hamilton biography that inspired the massive hit musical "Hamilton," opened his remarks by joking about Trump's "edict" last Tuesday banning everyone in his administration from attending the dinner.
Uber is clearly playing by the same "grow first, make money later" edict of Silicon Valley, so it should be no surprise the company's costs have increased as its operations expand into new cities.
Handoko Wibowo had filed a petition in a district court in Yogyakarta, calling for a repeal of the 1975 edict that gives only indigenous Indonesians the right to own land in the central province.
The court last week dismissed the lawsuit, reasoning that the edict was imposed to protect the interests of indigenous Indonesians who are less wealthy than ethnic Chinese people, said Handoko, who rejected that conclusion.
Muhammadiyah, Indonesia's second-largest Muslim organization, became the first major Muslim group in the country to issue an edict declaring that smoking is forbidden in all circumstances, citing smoking's devastating consequences to public health.
"Henceforth, you may not insert yourself as a passenger in the secretary's car unless this office has specifically approved," it said, adding that the security detail had been given instructions to enforce this edict.
Rockland's decision to "bar" unvaccinated children from public places may be an unenforceable edict, but that doesn't mean we shouldn't be using every possible means to pressure members of the herd to act responsibly.
The rash of announcements sounds familiar: during the panic of the swine flu epidemic in the US, my high school sports team was given a similar edict: no high fives or handshakes after games.
A longtime LGBTQ ally, Roberts wrote on a recent blog post that she quit RWA back in 2005 when the leadership drafted an edict defining romance as only between one man and one woman.
This month, the Indonesian Ulema Council, the country's largest body of Islamic clerics, issued a religious edict barring Muslims from wearing Christmas-themed clothing, specifically those working in shopping malls, department stores and restaurants.
He told the Treasury to review the extent to which financial regulations contradict the "core principles" of the new administration, a broad edict that will revisit a host of measures disliked by the banking industry.
Mr. Erlicht and Mr. Van Amburg have said there was no edict handed down from Cupertino on how the shows treat the iPhone and other Apple devices, a point confirmed by many of the producers.
Amina, a former victim of sex trafficking who did not want to disclose her last name, calls the king's edict a first step, but no substitute for practical steps to overcome the victims' social exclusion.
This edict playfully combined the DIY trappings of the "Handy Dad" aesthetic, the idea of drawing from personal history, and the "wax-on, wax-off" notion of mentorship by a process of tedious physical repetition.
The edict comes after Beijing ordered A-list movie star Fan Bingbing to pay about 884 million yuan ($129 million) in taxes and fines, spurring widespread discussion on the moral health of China's film industry.
France's highest administrative court ruled against the ban on Friday, but mayors in several beachfront towns have said they will defy the edict, determined to stop swimwear designed to be Islam-compliant appearing in public.
We continue to see proposals that would preempt state licensing requirements and, thus, consumer protections by allowing sales across state lines by federal edict, without proper discretion for the states to form compacts between themselves.
But there is also concern among his critics that a young and inexperienced legislature is deferring to him too much, allowing him at times to govern almost by edict, often bypassing debate and dismissing criticism.
Within hours of the edict, airport customs and border agents were detaining or blocking dozens of migrant families, some of whom had permanent resident status, until John F. Kelly, the new homeland security secretary, intervened.
They have argued that any credible impeachment trial concerning Mr. Trump's dealings with Ukraine must include testimony from key officials like Mr. Bolton, who followed a White House edict against cooperating in the House inquiry.
Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.), who was among those who supported the rebuke, said Tuesday that he would once again vote to spike Trump's emergency edict if the question comes to the floor a third time.
That regulation was challenged in October, when the Indonesian Ulema Council, the country's largest body of Islamic clerics, issued an edict declaring it "haram," or forbidden, for Muslims to vote for a non-Muslim candidate.
JERUSALEM (Reuters) - A Human Rights Watch (HRW) official complied with an Israeli expulsion order on Monday imposed over accusations he backs an international pro-Palestinian boycott, but said the edict would only encourage rights abuses.
When the Italian walked away from a deal to sell his company to Ford, Henry Ford II issued an edict to his engieers: Build me a car that will crush Ferrari at the world's premiere race.
The edict said that the popularity of gaming among the young was storing up problems and suggested the number of new games and the amount of time that children can play them would both be restricted.
Iran's then Supreme Leader, the late Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, issued a fatwa, or religious edict, in 1989 calling on Muslims to kill Rushdie and others associated with his book "The Satanic Verses" for its alleged blasphemy.
Despite that judge's edict, and having been asked many times whether Joe would be deported since he is a convicted felon who isn't a citizen, Teresa told Cohen she was "shocked" at the immigration judge's ruling.
Others are in disrepair, a result of an edict from Jeffs in the early 2000s, when he ordered a halt to all construction in the Utah-Arizona community to focus on building a compound in Texas.
This was a game the No. 8-ranked Bluejays had to schedule after an edict from the Big East Conference that all teams needed to play on Saturday before a full slate of conference games Monday.
While some victims' groups saw the lack of a specific tribunal as a product of resistance from the Vatican's old guard, others said the procedure outlined in the edict could be more rapid than the tribunal.
Thousands of workers from factories in and around Phnom Penh went on strike last week amid fears bosses were plotting to circumvent a new government edict to pay - and backpay - bonuses based on length of employment.
Ms. Lakshmi particularly highlights her high-profile relationship with the author Salman Rushdie, which was overshadowed by a fatwa, or religious edict, that had been issued in 1989 by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, Iran's former supreme leader.
Driving the trend: IEA says an important reason for China's rising thirst is the federal government's edict to improve the country's terrible air quality, in part by replacing coal with gas for industrial and residential use.
In turn, religious leaders assured that they would not issue an edict against him — apparently to ensure that the minister did not come under further attacks; blasphemy accusations have often led to killings of the accused.
Issuing a religious edict in April 2013, the Palestinian Supreme Fatwa Council detailed the restrictions, limiting the process to those men with a long sentence, a marriage consummated before imprisonment, and no other way for pregnancy.
As a representative of the new nation, the group now should have a repertoire that addresses, he explains, "land reform, world peace and threats to it," an edict that pushes art into the service of propaganda.
The new indication from the Trump White House is that the president is drawing a firm edict against cooperation, and few Republicans appear willing to break with him even to protect the authority of their institution.
Since women were prohibited from appearing onstage with men in the Papal States (probably owing to St. Paul's edict that women remain silent in church), castrati found in opera a role for themselves outside church choirs.
"Through March 10, we were setting records as a business … It is intuitive and highly likely that we're headed for a steep increase in hiring as we come out of the safer-at-home edict period." 
China's media regulator singled out hip hop in January, with an edict saying that Chinese television "should not feature actors with tattoos (or depict) hip hop culture, sub-culture and immoral culture," according to state media.
He said that he, too, had been taught Cosa Nostra tactics and rules by his father, and that he was aware that his father had approved an edict by Colombo leaders to kill him for defecting.
But unlike the West coast, the state has been hesitant to adopt any mandates around renewable energy, partly because of its Republican, small-government edict, and partly because of the political clout of the powerful utilities industry.
MOSCOW — Russia's prison system, the successor to the notoriously harsh gulag, has issued an edict that would have shocked even the victims of Stalin's purges: From now on, officials say, some prisoners will be forbidden to swear.
Her intensity comes with risks, since Leila is a virgin priestess who must keep her vows on pain of death, an edict enforced by the high priest Nourabad (Nicolas Testé, a fine bass-baritone), who accompanies her.
The alleged ban on South Koreans came after an edict issued by the media regulator in June imposed "strict limits on foreign-inspired TV programs in a bid to boost innovation of homemade programs," according to Xinhua.
You accurately describe the plight of these 3,000 people — mostly Haitian migrants — who have fled the Dominican Republic in terror from the mounting xenophobia caused by the 2013 Dominican edict revoking citizenship from Dominicans of Haitian descent.
The House voted Tuesday to repeal a controversial edict on auto lending from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), capping off an unprecedented use of congressional powers that could give Republicans a new way to reverse regulations.
Mr. Goldstein said in court that the government had not and would not direct D.E.A. witnesses "not to meet with the defense," nor did he believe there had been any such blanket edict issued within the agency.
A group of clerics in Pakistan has declared marriage between transgender individuals permissible in Islam, saying they have a right to be buried in Muslim ceremonies, according to a copy of a religious edict Reuters obtained Monday.
The French Revolution rose up in opposition to the stifling greed and cruelty of that country's Ancien Regime, whose rulers declared that whatever the king decided by edict was, by definition, what was good for the people.
"In 100 years of case law this has never been done before, this whole ripping up a standing agreement and putting down an edict that's not agreed to by both parties," said AFGE spokeswoman Ashley De Smeth.
WARREN BUFFETT: Yeah, we don't own any gun manufacturers but I have not issued any edict, for example, to the two managers that-- run money besides me at Berkshire that they can't own stock in gun manufacturers.
Anne Morrissy Merick, who as a television field producer persuaded the Pentagon to overturn an edict that prevented women in the press corps from covering combat during the Vietnam War, died on May 53 in Naples, Fla.
However, the Trump campaign's edict against Bloomberg News reporters could have a serious impact on its White House coverage as well, since Bloomberg reporters follow Trump to campaign events as part of the White House press pool.

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