Susannah wants to visits him, but Tristan refuses and insists she "go home to Alfred". After his release, Tristan and Decker kill those responsible for Isabel II's death, including one of the O'Banion brothers. Overview Susannah commits suicide after realizing she cannot live without Tristan. When the remaining O'Banion brother comes for Tristan, he and the corrupt sheriff are killed by Colonel Ludlow and Alfred as Tristan attempts to protect his father. Alfred reconciles with his father and brother. Tristan, knowing he will be blamed for the men's disappearance, leaves for the mountain country after asking Alfred to take care of his children. Over time, everyone in Tristan's life die before him. As an old man, Tristan is set upon with a grizzly bear. He draws his knife and fights with the bear. As they struggle, the image freeze-frames as One Stab narrates: "It was a good death". My Opinion
Article 202. Property Tax Rate 1. Annual rate of the property tax for a company/organization is specified at no more than 1 percent of a taxable property. Article 297. Tax Resolution Bodies 1. Dispute resolution bodies within the system of the Ministry of Finance of Georgia are the Revenue Service and the Dispute Resolution Council at the Ministry of Finance (hereinafter the Dispute Resolution Bodies). 2. Dispute Resolution Council at the Ministry of Finance is the body that reconciles tax related disputes. 3. Tax related dispute in the system of the Ministry of Finance includes two stages, the process begins with submission of an appeal to the Revenue Service. Article 299. Initiation of a tax dispute 4. A person is authorized to appeal against a decision of the tax authorities in a 20-day period running from the receipt of the decision Article 305. Appealing against the decision 1
conclusion of the treaty if the general rules leave some meanings ambiguous or lead to a result which is absurd or unreasonable. Treaties in two or more languages Text is equally authoritative in both languages unless the treaty provides/parties agree otherwise Other languages shall be considered authentic only if the treaty provides/parties agree Terms have same meaning in each text If there's ambiguity, then the meaning which best reconciles the text shall be adopted. treaties and third states general rule: treaty doesn't create obligations or rights to third states without their consent obligations arise if the parties intend so in the treaty and the third state agrees rights arise if the parties intend to and the third state assents thereto revocation: obligation can be modified or revoked with the consent of the parties and the
(Edward IV) is not mentioned in any literal way; one would have to render that last part of (3) as something like "by x, a Yorkist who resembles the sun," where the reference of "x" to Edward is somehow determined by context. "Made glorious summer" would have to be interpreted as something like "alleviated in a manner similar to a winter's giving way to a glorious sum- mer." But probably all this could be worked out. ((4) is still tougher; I shall return to it.) This simile view reconciles Beardsley's two features: It accommodates the "conceptual tension" characterizing a metaphor, while explaining the meta- phor's intelligibility. The intelligibility is straightforward, since statements of likeness or resemblance are obviously intelligible. The tension arises from the move from likeness to actual ascription ("Juliet is the sun"). The Naive Simile Theory has seemed plausible to, and even taken for granted by, many literary theorists and philosophers alike. But it faces objec-