(1) The ability to reopen proceedings after the ordinary appeal process has been concluded can also create injustice.
(2) He therefore saw no justification to reopen the proceeding before him.
(3) India's fear that substantive negotiations will reopen the state's accession to India is unreal.
(4) Perhaps he was simply reluctant to reopen a debate that came to define, if not paralyse, much of his second term.
(5) The defendants were directed to bring a motion to reopen the trial.
(6) They asked him to reopen his bank and cash their cheque.
(7) There are competing interests seen in a motion to reopen the trial.
(8) In its last pitch it made a desperate bid to reopen the trial, calling new witnesses, and this was of course refused.
(9) By mid-November, once the newly paved road has fully hardened, it will be reopened to bus traffic.
(10) He is a strong advocate for reopening Aranda House as a youth refuge, but says his appeals to the NT Government are falling on deaf ears.
(11) Only when the main roads are reopened does the traffic become normal.
(12) Most Londoners resent attempts to repair it and support the idea of reopening it.
(13) I think having a cinema will mean that kids can go somewhere in the evening and it might guilt the council into reopening the ice rink.
(14) Crozier Field was finally reopened for business last Saturday with the official open day.
(15) Normal settling of your house opens new entry routes and reopens old ones.
(16) The matter has now been reopened to cover more of the alleged homophobes.
(17) Monck reopened negotiations with Charles II, effected his restoration, and met him on the beach at Dover.
(18) The White House today was reopened for the very first time to tours, public tours.
(19) Organised by the Energy Research Centre, the conference comes just as Britain reopens the debate of whether to expand Britain's nuclear power capacity.
(20) He wanted to assure the public that by reopening this building there is to danger to anyone in the area being affected by anthrax.