I downloaded your 32bit installer and it installed the game. It was working fine but I thought the picture was kind of small and thought it might be bc of the small size of your installer (but i don't know how it installed at 21 mb this way) so I deleted the folder in C:\westwood
Section 2(a) makes it unlawful "for any person engaged in commerce to discriminate in price between different purchasers of commodities of like grade and quality where the effect of such discrimination may be substantially to lessen competition or tend to create a monopoly in any line of commerce, or to injure, destroy, or prevent competition with any person who either grants or knowingly receives the benefit of such discrimination." 15 U.S.C. Sec. 13(a). The first point of contention between the parties is whether plaintiffs were discriminated against "in price" as is meant under the statute. There is no allegation they paid a higher invoiced price; rather they are saying that when you add the cost they incur to pick up the feed, they are in effect paying a higher price. The Tenth Circuit has given instruction on defining "price discrimination" under Section 2(a):
There are two reasons why I wrote a book on competitive provision of government services rather than an argument against the very notion of government services. One is that other people can write and have written books claiming that we need no government services. The other reason is that in an urbanized society, doing away with government services comes across as implausible. Instead, my approach is to suggest experiments that reduce the monopoly power of existing governmental units.
Warmest respect to those ministers who fought so doughtily to protect Sky TV's stranglehold on live Premiership football. Admittedly Rupert Murdoch has lost his monopoly, but the deal struck in Brussels keeps Sky in a hugely dominant position. What's so touching here (apart from the fact that Richard Keys can remain on permanent secondment from the ape house at London Zoo) is the role played by Gordon Brown, who was reportedly one of several ministers to lobby on Sky's behalf in Brussels (a useful hint for those naively anticipating a brave new world when he finally succeeds Tony Blair). Who exactly he did tap up is unclear, but it probably wasn't the EU trade commissioner Peter Mandelson. Some seven years ago, when Mandelson was about to be sacked as our own secretary of state for trade (always trade with him, isn't it? Trade, trade, trade, trade, trade...), I had a chat with him about Murdoch and football that led to me ask him why Murdoch had such a visceral loathing of the EU that he was vetoing any move towards monetary union. What you have to understand, said Mandelson, as if speaking to a peculiarly dim child, is that no single government is big enough to stand up to Murdoch, but Europe as a whole can challenge his monopolistic instincts. And so it comes to pass with this deal, albeit in such a minor way that Murdoch may regard it as a small triumph. If so, we must look out for The Sun, already beginning to tire of the PM, rewarding Brown with gushing leaders.
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