Example sentences of "the 1976 [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 The 1976 Order ( as amended by a further order in 1978 ) applies to any exemption clause claiming in a consumer deal to exclude liability under sections 13-J5 of the Sale of Goods Act .
2 If so , the clause is not caught by the 1976 Order , Cavendish Woodhouse Ltd. v. Manley ( 1984 D.C. ) .
3 The ambit of the 1976 order has twice been considered by the Divisional Court .
4 Prior to 1978 , when the factory was relocated in the San Bartolo industrial park , there were three strikes for official trade union recognition , In the 1976 strike , 50 North American guards were sent to dislodge the women from the factory gates .
5 We evaluated the effect of the 1976 legislation on the issue of the anonymity of the rape survivor ; on the basis of press reporting in 1978 , we found that she was now most unlikely to be named , but identifying detail was still published .
6 The 1976 Act allows charges of possession and handling of explosives to be brought in the Republic , but not charges of conspiracy to cause murder or explosions .
7 Direct discrimination involves treating someone less favourably on the grounds of their sex or marital status ( the 1975 Act ) or colour , race , ethnic or national origins or nationality ( the 1976 Act ) .
8 This would not be unlawful under the 1976 Act .
9 While there had been a lot of activity by feminists regarding questions of rape in the early 1970s , it was the Morgan case which was the focus of the mainstream public debate prior to the 1976 Act .
10 The changes in the period 1971 to 1978 are particularly important since the sample years are either side of the 1976 Act which attempted to restrain press coverage of rape .
11 The hope that the restriction imposed by the 1976 Act which limited defendants ' rights to produce evidence in court of the rape survivor 's past sexual relationships with persons other than the defendant would cause newspapers to lose interest in reporting rape cases was a hope that was totally misplaced .
12 Whatever had been achieved by the 1976 Act , it had made little impact on this case except for the removal of her name from the media .
13 The Press Council strongly encourages anonymity in sexual assault cases , although unlike rape cases they are not covered by the 1976 Act , and so it is something of a test of the voluntary code .
14 This raised the question of sections 42 and 57 of the 1976 Act which weaken the powers of investigation by the Fair Employment Commission .
15 Despite Tom King 's claims that there is a fine distinction between the two , both the 1976 Act and the 1989 Act will only produce marginal change .
16 To receive protection under the 1976 Act , an agricultural employee has to achieve the legal status of ‘ qualifying worker ’ , which requires that the person has worked at least 91 out of the preceding 104 weeks whole-time in agriculture .
17 One obvious reason for the persistence of pronounced regional anomalies on this scale is the fact that the guidance contained in the 1976 Act still affords massive scope for the exercise of discretion by magistrates , thereby enabling different policies to be pursued in individual court areas .
18 The 1976 Act confers a right of appeal to the sheriff against a determination by a licensing board , and a further right of appeal from the decision of the sheriff to the Court of Session on a question of law .
19 Such a grant or renewal is a purpose under the Act of 1963 or the Act of 1968 and not of the 1976 Act .
20 The 1976 Act specifies in Sched. 1 the types of licence which a board may grant , including the nature of the premises in respect of which any particular certificate may be granted and the authorization conferred on the licence holder by the licence , and provides for specific offences instead of prosecutions for breach of certificate .
21 The 1976 Act also makes a radical change as regards the grounds for granting or refusing an application for a licence .
22 This discretion has been considerably narrowed by the 1976 Act which limits the grounds of refusal to those specified in 5.17 .
23 The tenor of the 1976 Act is permissive : a licence should be granted unless good cause is shown justifying refusal .
24 ( 4 ) Unlike the 1959 Act , the 1976 Act does not prescribe any particular form of licence , leaving that to be a matter for the determination of the licensing board granting the licence .
25 It was considered that , under the 1959 Act , an informal meeting of the licensing court prior to the statutory meeting to consider and authorise citations was competent , and there is no reason why such consideration under the 1976 Act should not take place under the provisions of s.15(2) .
26 The absolute discretion conferred by the 1959 Act is restricted by the 1976 Act to matters of suitability of the applicant and the premises and implications of public order and the environment in relation to immediate locality and the type of licence sought .
27 It should be borne in mind that an application for the grant of a provisional licence is an application under Part II of the 1976 Act , and must conform with its provisions , in particular with 55.5 , 10(1) ( 3 ) ( 5 ) ( 7 ) , 12 , 17 and 23 .
28 The two purposes of s.60 have been separated in the 1976 Act , 5.33 being concerned with the sale of liquor outwith the licence-holder 's premises .
29 He considers that the nineteenth century cases of Camplin , Flattery and Williams accomplished no more than to include within rape sexual intercourse with an unconscious woman or one deceived by a specific type of fraud and that the 1976 Act merely declares the law as it was established at that time .
30 Having examined the parliamentary history of sections 61 and 63 of the Finance Act 1976 , it was held that the parliamentary intention was that in-house benefits should be assessed for income tax on the basis of marginal costs to the employer and not as a proportion of the total costs incurred in providing the service both for the public and the employee ; that this effect applied to the education of the children of teachers who were employees ; and that section 63 of the 1976 Act should be construed accordingly .
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