Part One Sample Clauses
Part One. Tables
(i) Table 1: Parties and signature: This Table shall be deemed completed with the information in Exhibit 1 of this DPA and the signatures to the DPA.
(ii) Table 2: Transfer Details
1. UK country’s law that governs the IDTA: England and Wales
2. Place for legal claims to be made: England and Wales
3. The status of the importer: Importer is the Exporter’s Processor or Sub-Processor
4. Whether the UK GDPR applies to the Importer: UK GDPR applies to the Importer’s Processing of the Transferred Data
5. Linked Agreements: The Agreement, Service Orders, and this DPA.
Part One. Data provided by the Employer
Part One. The opportunities of the “Second Colonial Occupation”
Part One. Progress on research and development, status of applications for regulatory approvals, manufacturing, sublicensing, marketing, and sales during the preceding calendar year, as well as plans for the next [***] period.
Part One. An eligible teacher may purchase up to seven hundred twenty-five (725) hours of Retirement Incentive from accrued accumulative leave based upon the following formula: Accrued accumulative leave x daily rate of pay ÷ 7.25 hours. The compensation to be paid each eligible teacher will be the product of the number of hours of accumulative leave times the teacher’s daily rate of pay ÷ 7.25 hours, but will not exceed $45,000.
Part One. (a) The total number of shares of all classes of stock which the Corporation shall have authority to issue is One Million Five Hundred Thirty Six Thousand (1,536,000) shares, consisting of: (i) Nine Hundred Fifty Six Thousand (956,000) shares of Common Stock, no par value per share (“Common Stock”); and (ii) Five Hundred Eighty Thousand (580,000) shares of Preferred Stock, no par value per share (“Preferred Stock”), of which Two Hundred Eighty Thousand (280,000) shares are shares of New Class A 3% Cumulative Participating Preferred Stock (“New Class A Preferred Stock”) and Three Hundred Thousand (300,000) shares are shares of New Class B 5% Cumulative Participating Preferred Stock (“New Class B Preferred Stock”). The express terms and provisions of the Preferred Stock are as set forth in Part Two of this Article Fourth.
(b) There shall be several series of the New Class A Preferred Stock. Except as regards the designation, the Subscription Price (as defined below in Part Two of this Article Fourth) and the Conversion Price (as defined below in Part Two of this Article Fourth) of such series, the express terms of each series of New Class A Preferred Stock shall be identical. As of the date these Third Amended and Restated Articles of Incorporation are filed, there is one (1) authorized series of New Class A Preferred Stock, the New A-1 Series. The Corporation has authority to issue Seventy One Thousand One Hundred Seventy-Four (71,174) shares of the New A-1 Series of New Class A Preferred Stock. Authority is hereby granted expressly to the Board of Directors from time to time to adopt amendments to these Third Amended and Restated Articles of Incorporation providing for the issue, pursuant to acquisitions approved by the Board of Directors in accordance with Section 5.3 of the Investment and Recapitalization Agreement dated as of July 14, 2006 among the Corporation and several investors (the “Recapitalization Agreement”), in one or more series of any unissued shares of the New Class A Preferred Stock (as of the date these Third Amended and Restated Articles of Incorporation are filed, there are Two Hundred Eight Thousand Eight Hundred Twenty Six (208,826) such unissued shares), and to fix, by the amendment creating each such series of the New Class A Preferred Stock, the designation and number of shares, the Subscription Price and the Conversion Price of such shares, to the fullest extent now or hereafter permitted by the laws of the State of Ohio and notwi...
Part One. The Owner hereby covenants with the City Council, as follows:
Part One. If children do have a negative concord grammar, they would be expected to produce sentences with a negative concord construction as opposed to sentences using any NPIs in contexts where both are acceptable. Though they may not produce negative concord constructions all the time given that they do have an NPI grammar, they would be expected to make a significant number of mistakes in also producing negative concord sentences. This part examines the extent that children make these mistakes.
Part One. Introduction to your agreement
Part One. Application and Operation