XXXXX Xxxx Xxxxxx Sample Clauses

XXXXX Xxxx Xxxxxx. The principal amount of the TIFIA Loan shall not exceed $87,663,515 (excluding capitalized interest). TIFIA Loan proceeds shall be disbursed from time to time in accordance with Section 4 (Disbursement Conditions) and Section 12(b) (Conditions Precedent to All Disbursements).‌
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XXXXX Xxxx Xxxxxx. When the University, or a portion of the University, is closed, officers may be laid off for up to twenty-five (25) working days, without notice, at the University's sole discretion.
XXXXX Xxxx Xxxxxx. The principal amount of the TIFIA Loan shall not exceed $1,330,000,000 (excluding capitalized interest). XXXXX Xxxx proceeds shall be disbursed from time to time in accordance with Section 4. SECTION 4. (a) Disbursement Conditions. (b) The Borrower shall deliver copies of each Requisition to the TIFIA Lender, the FHWA TIFIA Joint Program Office (HITJ), the Servicer, if applicable, and the FTA Regional Office on or before the first day of each month for which a disbursement is requested, or the next succeeding Business Day if such first day is not a Business Day; provided, however, that the first Requisition shall be submitted not less than sixty (60) days prior to the anticipated date of the first disbursement of funds. Subject to Section 4(e), if the TIFIA Lender shall expressly approve a Requisition or shall not expressly deny a Requisition, disbursements of funds shall be made on the fifteenth (15th) day of the month for which a disbursement has been requested, or on the next succeeding Business Day if such fifteenth (15th) day is not a Business Day. Express TIFIA Lender approval or denial shall be substantially in the form annexed hereto as Appendix Three to Exhibit D. In no event shall disbursements be made more than once each month. At the time of any disbursement, the sum of all prior disbursements of TIFIA Loan proceeds and the disbursement then to be made shall not exceed the cumulative disbursements through the end of the then-current year set forth in the Anticipated TIFIA Loan Disbursement Schedule, as the same may be amended from time to time. (c) The Borrower may amend the Anticipated TIFIA Loan Disbursement Schedule by submitting a revised version thereof to the XXXXX Xxxxxx and the FTA Regional Office no later than thirty (30) days prior to the proposed effective date thereof, together with a detailed explanation of the reasons for such revisions. Such revised Anticipated TIFIA Loan Disbursement Schedule shall become effective upon the TIFIA Lender’s approval thereof, which approval shall be granted in the TIFIA Lender’s sole discretion. (d) As a condition to each disbursement of the TIFIA Loan, the Borrower shall provide to the TIFIA Lender evidence satisfactory to the TIFIA Lender that, prior thereto or simultaneously therewith, a disbursement of other non-federal funds has occurred such that as of any such TIFIA Loan disbursement, the aggregate amount of all disbursements of the TIFIA Loan (including such disbursement) shall not exceed t...
XXXXX Xxxx Xxxxxx. I understand my rights and responsibilities as a client, and my psychologist’s responsibilities to me. I agree to undertake counseling with Dr. Xxxxx Xxxx-Xxxxxx. I know I can end therapy at any time I wish and that I can refuse any requests or suggestions made by my counselor. I am over the age of eighteen.
XXXXX Xxxx Xxxxxx. As already suggested, official memories are of little use from the standpoint of the moral flourishing of a society. The phrase “official memory” is a contradiction and by its nature an authoritarian concept. This would be one of the reasons why it fits so well in political systems that do not admit criticism; for example, fascism or Stalinist communism. However, this danger can also be detected, again, in liberal democratic systems. Something like this happened in the Spain of the Transition and the years that followed it. In the interests of consolidating democracy, from the highest echelons of power an effort was made to favour one narrative of the mutilated immediate past—the Civil War and the Franco regime—from which many felt that many different memories were excluded, especially the memories of the losers in the war. Completely consensual memory is an illusion, because memory is conflictive by nature and, therefore, a claim of this kind only leads to processes of mystification and simplification. Myths conceal the complexities that weave the past together and also tend to have a saturation effect, as Xxxxxx Xxxxx suggests when he refers to “saturated memory”. A good example is the sanctity of the witness and the victim, so characteristic of our time. In addition to having a bounce-back effect that leads broad swathes of society into a kind of historical half-wittedness (very in tune, incidentally, with the dominant media culture), this sanctity of the victim has meant a relegation of the resistant witness. Immediately after Second World War, the person resisting fascism or Nazism was the paradigm par excellence. Since the nineties, more or less, the subject-victim or survivor has occupied that place, because political commitment has lost its prestige, which is now given instead to an ecumenical view of suffering. These monolithic fixations on the past evidently meet the interests of the present resulting from political circumstances and cultural hegemonies. That is what we try to counteract. It is necessary, for example, to stress that under fascism not everyone was in the resistance, nor was everybody a victim. There were, obviously, all kinds of people. Moreover, there were also many people who were indifferent and more than a few collaborators on different levels that include informers, torturers and executioners. In reality, commemorative acts are ambivalent. In many cases they still propose an overload of heroic epic and patriotic zeal. What en...
XXXXX Xxxx Xxxxxx. The recovery of the past or of a particular interpretation of the immediate past always appears on political agendas, because its purpose is to legitimise the status quo of the present. The question is what is this past and how is it recovered. The choice to forget is, of course, one way of dealing with the past. It is also a form of memory. When addressing this issue, that is, the promotion of forgetting in the name of building a better future that will leave the strife of the past behind (in the case of civil wars), or tiptoeing around acts as appalling as crimes against humanity (for example, the case of Nazism), it is common to refer to the paradigmatic example of Classical Greece, so well analysed by Xxxxxx Xxxxxx in her book The Divided City. In that case, the ancient Greeks, in 403 B.C., after a long period of war and violence, decided to “eradicate the yoke of memory from their lives” and prescribed the civic virtues of forgetting as a future form of coexistence. In other words, they banned stirring up the past in order to prevent the instigation of new disputes that would be dangerous to the continued peace and prosperity of the community. This possible path of reconciliation tends to neglect the heaviest burdens of the past, which often contain facts and behaviours that do not square with the discourses on which a forgetful present is founded. The journey into the future is more easily made with light baggage. However, the risk is that these kinds of operations leave a deep ethical vacuum in such societies. The act of “casting into oblivion” might work at first as a buffer that makes it possible to rebuild a society which, as in the case of the Germany of the Second World War, had hit an absolute low, or in the face of the risk of a new civil confrontation, as might have been the case of the Spain of the Transition, but it has dire consequences in the medium term, and it takes a lot of effort to recover. The biggest casualty is the quality of democracy. In our case, the appeal to forgetting could be understood in the complex years of the transitional process, although it is important to clarify that the inculcation of fear in society—and hence the invitation to forget—was related to the maintenance of a significant portion of the privileges enjoyed by the sectors closest to the dictatorship. Unfortunately, this commitment to forgetting endured over time and became public policy for memory promoted by the social- democratic governments of the eigh...
XXXXX Xxxx Xxxxxx. 18 Basis Schlumberger Office 1 10/1/2024 121 121 360 360 L(24),D(95),O(2) 22 Basis Holiday Inn Express - Flint and Fairfield Inn Madison 1 8/1/2024 120 119 300 299 L(25),D(93),O(2)
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XXXXX Xxxx Xxxxxx. The Admission Committee shall act collectively, decisions of the Committee shall only be valid if at least four members are present and voted with the agreement of at least four of its members.
XXXXX Xxxx Xxxxxx. SC000062 for professional development training services.
XXXXX Xxxx Xxxxxx. The principal amount of the TIFIA Loan shall not exceed $[ ]. TIFIA Loan proceeds shall be disbursed from time to time in accordance with Section 4 (Disbursement Conditions) and Section 12(b) (Conditions Precedent to All Disbursements).‌
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