2, 1990), https://www.ftc.gov/sites/default/files/documents/advocacy_documents/ftc-staff-com ment-hon.alan.diamonstein-concerning-virginia-s.b.235-prohibit-petroleum-refmers-owningand-operating-retail-motor- fuel- stations/v900012.pdf [https://perma.cc/G5RN-5YRP] (offering an opinion on the FTC's expertise with anticompetitive effects of
divorcement laws).
It is interesting to compare these results to those of Vita (2000), who finds that, on average, states with
divorcement laws had regular unleaded gas prices 2.6 cents higher than those without.
(65) Michael Vita, Regulatory Restrictions on Vertical Integration and Control: The Competitive Impact of Gasoline
Divorcement Policies, 18 J.
The couple divorced in 1980 and the parties negotiated an agreement that would provide a get (bill of
divorcement) enacted in a religious court to enable the wife to marry again in the Jewish tradition.
Back at RI<O Pictures during the early 1930s where he would be hard at work on such pictures as What Price Hollywood, A Bill of
Divorcement, and Rockabye (all from 1932), one of his biographers tells of Cukor's partiality for the teamwork approach to filmmaking.
34), it was incorrectly stated that the actress won her first Academy Award for 1932's A Bill of
Divorcement. In fact, her first Oscar was for Morning Glory in 1933.
Vita, M., "Regulatory Restrictions on Vertical Integration and Control: The Competitive Impact of Gasoline
Divorcement Policies," Journal of Regulatory Economics, 18(3), 2000, 217-33.
Men with a sense of conscience sent wives bills of
divorcement, but frequently married men lost themselves in foreign landscapes and were never heard from again.
He wrote in this superlative vein because his principal aim was the
divorcement of good and evil.
She made her screen debut in LaCava's The Age of Consent (1932) and followed with roles in Bill of
Divorcement (1932) with Katharine Hepburn, Roman Scandals (1932) and most notably took dubbing duties for Greta Garbo on Grand Hotel (1932).
In The Distant Sound that loss of contour suggests a defeat, a final
divorcement from the outside world, while in Awakening to the Great Sleep War, the main character Bergmuller achieves a kind of nirvana, a quietly ecstatic unity or kinship with the world around him in a closing scene of transcendent beauty.
Most of these Romance borrowings were lost before the end of the seventeenth century and replaced by corresponding eModE ones; this is the case of OSc divortioun (1511-1596), OSc part&sing (c1568-a1578) or OSc viduitie (1420-1685), which become OSc
divorcement (1558-c1615), OSc separatio(u)n (1490-1681) and OSc wedowship (1608), respectively.
Bishop Dionisije's readjustment of position includes
divorcement from the extreme nationalist campaign which has been carried on in the United States by the Serbian National Defense Council, and, coincidentally with the recall of Ambassador Fotich, a decision to end the public support heretofore given by the Bishop to General Draza Mihailovich.
So soft streames meet, so springs with gladder smiles Meet after long
divorcement by the Iles: When Love (the child of likenesse) urgeth on Their Christal natures to an union.
Three issues lie at the heart of this controversy: zone pricing,
divorcement, and the phenomenon of "rockets and feathers." Zone pricing--the practice of refiners setting different wholesale prices for retail gasoline stations that operate in different geographic areas or zones--has been a particularly contentious topic in the public policy debate for the past several years.