Xxxxxx Xxxxxx, Xx Sample Clauses

Xxxxxx Xxxxxx, Xx. Provisions on Companies in United States Commercial Treaties, 50 Am. J. Int’l L. 373, 388 (1956) (noting that “recent treaties signed by the United States, . . . , indicate that this possibility of a ‘free ride’ by third-country interests is one to be guarded against ”).
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Xxxxxx Xxxxxx, Xx et al. vs. Exxon Corporation et al., Xx. 00-0000-XX-X, Xxxxxx Xxxxxx Xxxxxxxx Xxxxx, Xxxxxxxx Xxxxxxxx of Alabama, Southern Division. This action was filed on August 19, 1999, in state court in Xxxxxx County, Alabama and then removed to federal court, as indicated in the caption above. The plaintiffs in this action purport to represent the heirs and assigns of the lessors under a 1949 mineral lease to Humble Oil and Refining Company. The plaintiffs seek to establish a class action on behalf of themselves and the other owners of mineral interests under the lease. The plaintiffs claim that the lease covers 46.5 acres of land, but that the various defendants have paid royalties to the lessors as though the lease covers only 15.5 acres. The defendants are purportedly the parties who operated various xxxxx affecting the lease. The plaintiffs’ claims are quite old and it is anticipated that the statute of limitations has run. The case is currently in the discovery stage, and management intends to defend this action vigorously.
Xxxxxx Xxxxxx, Xx and Xx Xxxxxx, and the San Xxxxxxx Community Ditch Association vs. The State of New Mexico, ex. rel, Xxxx D’Xxxxxxx, New Mexico State Engineer, No. CV-2006-166, State of NM, County of Grant, Sixth Judicial District, (July 10, 2008). However, actually implementing the Doctrine of Prior Appropriation to address pressing over- allocation or water-shortage problems has proven to be virtually impossible in key basins for several reasons. First, administering priority is difficult and possibly illegal9 in the many basins where water rights adjudication has not been completed. If it is required that adjudication be completed in a basin before the state engineer can implement priority administration, then it is unlikely that priority could be administered in a meaningful time frame in most basins because of the time and costs associated with the water rights adjudication process. Second, the highest economic-value uses of water are generally associated with entities holding junior rights, so administering priority to curtail water use would cause immediate and severe welfare losses in local and regional economies.10 In some basins, the priority system and the hydrology interact in such a way that a priority call would be futile; shutting down water withdrawals in most of the basin would be necessary in order to increase deliveries to the most senior users.11 Third, water markets would not be able to mitigate adequately the welfare losses associated with curtailing high- economic-value uses. Although such welfare losses could be avoided in theory, this is not the case in practice: transaction costs and (especially) the time required to implement transfers make the market transfers too cumbersome to be relied on to prevent large losses, especially in the short run. Both the time involved and the transaction costs could conceivably be reduced, but changes in the process are limited by laws that protect third parties from impairment. Thus, in circumstances where over-allocation must be corrected, alternatives to traditional litigated adjudications, priority administration, and existing market mechanisms are required. Many alternatives can be imagined; examples include streamlining the water rights adjudication process to make it less costly and time-consuming, using alternative water- sharing schemes instead of priority administration to alleviate economic welfare losses associated with the curtailment of water supplies, and/or developing expedited water leasing or tran...
Xxxxxx Xxxxxx, Xx and Xx Xxxxxx, and the San Xxxxxxx Community Ditch Association vs. The State of New Mexico, ex. rel, Xxxx D’Xxxxxxx, New Mexico State Engineer, No. CV-2006-166, State of NM, County of Grant, Sixth Judicial District, (July 10, 2008) Xxxx, X.X. and X. Xxxxxxx 2007. Climate Change and Its Implications for New Mexico’s Water Resources and Economic Opportunities. New Mexico Water Resources Research Institute’s 52nd Annual New Mexico Water Conference Proceedings, Beyond the Year of Water: Living within Our Water Limitations, Report No. 343. Las Cruces, NM. Xxxxxxx, X.X., et al. 2003. Water Resources of the Lower Pecos Region, New Mexico: Science, Policy, and a Look to the Future (New Mexico Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources, a division of New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology 2003). New Mexico Interstate Stream Commission 2003. San Xxxx Basin Regional Water Plan. http:// xxx.xxxxx.xx.xx/xxx_xxxxxxxx_xxxxx0.xxxx New Mexico Office of the State Engineer, Website - Water Rights Adjudication, NM Office of the State Engineer 1999. At xxxx://xxx.xxx.xxxxx. xx.xx/xxxxx_xxx_xxxxxxxxxxxx.xxxx New Mexico Office of the State Engineer Interstate Stream Commission 1999. 1998-1999 Annual Report. New Mexico Office of the State Engineer & Interstate Stream Commission. New Mexico Office of the State Engineer Interstate Stream Commission. 2003. 2002- 2003 Annual Report. pp. 51-52. xxxx://xxx.xxxxx. xx.xx/XXX/Xxxxxxxxxxxx/XxxxxxXxxxxxx/00- 03-annual-report.pdf New Mexico Office of the State Engineer, et al. 2003. Settlement Agreement, March 25, 2003 (Lower Pecos River Basin) (2003). xxxx://xxx. xxx.xx.xx/xxx_xxxxx_xxxxxxxx_xxxxxxx.xxxx New Mexico Office of the State Engineer, et al. 2005. Settlement Agreement, April 19, 2005 (San Xxxx River Basin in New Mexico Navajo Nation Water Rights Settlement). xxxx://xxx. xxx.xxxxx.xx.xx/xxxxx-xxxx/XxxxxxXxxxxxxxxx/ NavajoSettlement.pdf New Mexico Office of the State Engineer 2006. Proposed Rules and Regulations Providing for Active Administration of the Waters of the Lower Pecos River Basin Water Master District and Implementation of the Pecos River Settlement Agreement. xxxx://xxx.xxx. xxxxx.xx.xx/XXX/XxxxxxXxxxx/Xxxxx Pecos/ PecosProcessSchedule2006-01.pdf
Xxxxxx Xxxxxx, Xx. Xxxxxxxx Xxxx Dr. A V Boratne Xx. Xxxxx Xxxxxxx 22-24 February 2007 AIIMS, New Delhi Training for Doctors-STIs (Including HIV) Certificate course Xx.Xxxxx Xxxxxxx 24 Febuary-04 March2007 IASSTD & AIDSChennai Naturopathy & related issues CLICS Doots Xx. Xxxxxxxxx Xx. Xxxxxxx Xxx. Xxxxxx Xxxxxxx (PHN) 21-30 March 2007 Manibahi Xxxxx Management Training Centre, Nature Cure Ashram, Uruli kanchan, Pune Training/workshop Participants Dates Place Xxx.Xxxxx (ANM) LAQS training CLICS Staff 23 March 2007 Dr. S. N. School ofPublic Health MGIMS, Sewagram Dissemination Workshop for WHO funded ‘Qualitative study on delivery and neonatal care practices in rural areas of Rajasthan’ Xx. X X Xxxxx 21-22 June 2007 ARTH Project, , Rajasthan Application of Qualitativemethods of data collection in Population Research Xx. X X Xxxxxxxx Dr A R Xxxxxx 18-29 June 2007 IIPS, Mumbai The Network: TUFH 2007 International Conference Xx. X X Xxxx 15-20 September2007 Human Resources for Health: Recruitment, Education andRetention Training and Exposure visit to ARTH Project Xx. X X Xxxxxxx Mr. X X Xxxxxx Mr. X X More Mr. X X Xxxxxxxx Mr. X X Xxxxxxxxx Xx. X X Xxxx 21-27 August 2007 ARTH Project, Rajasthan First meeting of the technical experts to review interventions in the area of Community Health Planning and Monitoring Xx. X X Xxxxx 29-30 August 2007 RCH Campus, Namkon, Scaling up FP/MNCH BestPractices in the Near East technical meeting Mr. X X XxxxxxxxXx. Xxxxxx Xxxxxx Xx. Xxxxxxxx Xxxx 3-8 September 2007 USAID , New Delhi The Network: TUFH 2007 International Conference Xx. X X Xxxx 15-20 September2007 Human Resources for Health: Recruitment, Education andRetention Evidence review meeting on Community-Based Newborn Care Xx. X X Xxxxxxxx 26-27 September2007 VISTAAR Project, New Delhi Micro Enterprises Development Training Program Xx. Xxxx Xxxxxxxxxx 28-30 September2007 Development Alternatives Group Orchha, Madhya Pradesh Monitoring and Evaluation Technical Advisory GroupMeeting Mr. X X Xxxxxxxx 9 October 2007 VISTAAR Project at New Delhi Training/workshop Participants Dates Place Joint Annual State Conference of IAPSM and IPHA Maharashtra Chapter Dr. B S GargDr. P R Deshmukh Mr. X X Xxxxxxxx Xx. Xxxxxx Xxxxxxx Xx. Xxxxxx Xxxxxxx 29-30 December2007 SBH Govt. Medical College, Dhule
Xxxxxx Xxxxxx, Xx. Xxxxx Xxxxxx, Xx. Xxx Xxxxxx and Xxxx Xxxxxxx substantially in the respective forms attached hereto as Schedule G;
Xxxxxx Xxxxxx, Xx. Xxxxxxxx Xxxxxx and Dr. Xxxxxxxxxx Xxxx participated to the 2009 NTTS Conference (New Techniques and Technologies for Statistics), Brussels 18-20 February 2009. Xxxx. Xxxxxxx Xxxxxxx (UMH) participate as speaker in a talk organized by the University Xxxxxx XXX de Madrid (UC3M) with the aim to describe the methodological developments and applications of the SAMPLE project (January 9th, 2009, Madrid).
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Xxxxxx Xxxxxx, Xx. Xxxx Xxxxxx Clay Benaschak Xx. Xxxxx Xx Xxxx Xxxx Xx. Xxxxx Xxxxx
Xxxxxx Xxxxxx, Xx. Xxxxxx Xxxxx, and many unsung hero who endeavored hard within their by-laws to work out the lease relationship with Xxx Xxxxx. After six years of interactions and communications, this relationship has materialized and Xxx Xxxxx is very proud of it. Sudhir sincerely urges you to take this message to the community and make this dream of instilling our culture into next generation come true in timely manner by generously offering the financial support and whichever way you can help. Bal Vihar has fulfilled its commitment of donating $250,000 upon signing the lease agreement and may donate additional $150,000 upon occupying the facility in August 2017. In his talk, Xxxxxx also mentioned that after 23 years of successfully conducting Bal Vihar School with more than 2000 children graduating over period, Bal Vihar has acceleration and is setting the stage of combined forces to be more effective for our coming next generations. Our youth program directed by Xx. Xxxxx Xxxxx and regular program by teachers coordinators such as Xxxxx Xxxxxxxxx and Xxxxxxx Xxxxxxxx have taken us to the next level in the community as our participation in the St. Louis universities, interfaith community and Arts museum, Science center, MO state political offices has taken us to different level and the demand is increasing to make our culture known in this society. At Bal Vihar we urge all to be part of this growth by supporting Hindu Temple in this cause whichever way you can either financially or contacting your friends to donate as this project is $6 million. The photo gallery witnessing the event is in this link: - xxxx://xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx.xxxxxxx.xxx/2014/Balvihar-Lease-Signing-Ceremon Watch video presentation of this ceremony at: - xxxxx://xxxxxxxx.xxxx.xxx/redir?resid=6AA93CA1465F6C05%2114022
Xxxxxx Xxxxxx, Xx existing outlet into rear yard swale. Significant water standing through the extension of the rear yard. o 37, 38, and 00 Xxxxxx Xxxxxx Xx.: drainage through rear yards is extremely limited.
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