Sentence examples for Deemed expedient from inspiring English sources

Exact(7)

The general manufacturing act of 1809 contained a provision that the legislature might from time to time, upon due notice to any corporation, make further provisions and regulations for the management of the business of the corporation and for the government thereof, or wholly to repeal any act or part thereof establishing any corporation, as should be deemed expedient.

On Tuesday the finance minister, who detailed the drive in a letter to eurozone leaders, said he hoped the EU would wrap up negotiations over a second rescue package of emergency loans – now deemed expedient if Athens is to stave off economic collapse – by the end of August, before it receives its next tranche of emergency aid on 15 September.

Higher education policy has been mired in the deep fissures within the coalition, a victim of the opposition's veering between tactical point-scoring and strategic repositioning, and beset by an unusual distance between what is said freely, but confidentially, in private and what is deemed expedient to admit in public.

It is a creature of the law; and a state, in authorizing its own corporations or those of other states to carry on business and employ men within its borders, may qualify the privilege by imposing such conditions and duties as reasonably may be deemed expedient, in order that the corporation's activities may not operate to the detriment of the rights of others with whom it may come in contact.

For some their only purpose is to be on constant standby for officially orchestrated vilification whenever it is deemed expedient for the general population to ritually boo the scroungers and the workshy.

Samuel Bamford, a local radical who led the Middleton contingent to the assembly, wrote that "It was deemed expedient that this meeting should be as morally effective as possible, and, that it should exhibit a spectacle such as had never before been witnessed in England".

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Similar(53)

Otherwise the general power, given by § 24, to declare such dividends as the company deems expedient, remains in force.

Haupt wired immediately for clarification; Stanton's May 28 reply named Haupt "Chief of Construction and Transportation in the Department of the Rappahannock … authorized to do whatever you may deem expedient to open for use in the shortest possible time all Military Railroads".

Stanton also concurred with the need for a standing body of trained civilian construction workers, authorizing Haupt "to form a permanent corps of artificers, organized, officered, and equipped in such manner as you may prescribe … to employ civilians and foremen and assistants, under such rules and rates of compensation as you may deem expedient".

The clause is much less well known than, say, the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment, and yet Congress's power under it, Justice Scalia wrote, "is paramount, and may be exercised at any time, and to any extent which [Congress] deems expedient".

Still, the current administration would do well to heed Jackson's admonition in Korematsu: that in seeking a balance between liberty and security, no court, and no president, should "distort the Constitution to approve all that the military may deem expedient".

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