diff --git "a/reference_files/answer-test.new_wiki.txt" "b/reference_files/answer-test.new_wiki.txt" --- "a/reference_files/answer-test.new_wiki.txt" +++ "b/reference_files/answer-test.new_wiki.txt" @@ -1,7938 +1,3969 @@ -Each brotherhood elects two delegates who take part in the National Ecclesiastical Assembly -The brotherhood makes decisions concerning the inner affairs of the monastery -Each Armenian celibate priest becomes a member of the brotherhood in which he has studied and ordained in or under the jurisdiction of which he has served -the celibate clergy of the monastery who are led by an abbot -Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin, the brotherhood of St. James at the Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem and the brotherhood of the See of Cilicia -after the fall of Ani and the Armenian Kingdom of the Bagradits in 1045, masses of Armenians migrated to Cilicia and the Catholicossate settled there -The seat of the church (now known as the Catholicossate of the Great House of Cilicia) was first established in Sivas (AD 1058) -in 1293 and continuing for more than six centuries, the city of Sis (mode -to Sis (1293), then-capital of the Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia. Beginning in 1293 and continuing for more than six centuries -the city of Sis (modern-day Kozan, Adana, Turkey) -The division between the two sees intensified during the Soviet period and to some extent reflected the politics of the Cold War -clergy were reluctant to participate in nationalist events and memorials that could be perceived as anti-Soviet -On December 24, 1933, a group of assassins attacked Eastern Diocese Archbishop Levon Tourian as he walked down the aisle of Holy Cross Armenian Church -The incident divided the Armenian community, as ARF sympathizers established congregations independent of the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin -The division was formalized in 1956 when the Antelias (Cilisian) See broke away from the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin See. -the Church has much in common both with the Latin Rite in its externals, -Armenian bishops wear mitres almost identical to those of Western bishops. -They usually do not use a full iconostasis, but rather a sanctuary veil -The liturgical music is Armenian chant -Many of the Armenian churches also have pipe organs to accompany their chant -The status of the Armenian Apostolic Church within the Republic of Armenia is defined in the country's constitution -Article 8.1 of the Constitution of Armenia -"The Republic of Armenia recognizes the exclusive historical mission of the Armenian Apostolic Holy Church as a national church -in the spiritual life, development of the national culture and preservation of the national identity of the people of Armenia. -Among others, ethnographer Hranush Kharatyan has questioned the constitutionality of the phrase "national church". +the freeholders and planters +272 BC +1968 +Hugh Henry Brackenridge +governments +Stalin +Lordship over the Baltic Sea +The intelligence gathered +Emmanuelle Auriol and Michel Benaim +250,000 506 -Armenian, Georgian, and Caucasian Albanian bishops -to make clear the position of the churches concerning the Council of Chalcedon. -20 -609–610 -Prince Smbat Bagratuni, with clergymen and laymen -the Armenian Church having approved the christology of Chalcedon. -the Armenian Church -clarify the relationship between the Armenian and Georgian churches -the identification as "monophysitism" is an incorrect description of its position. -only disagrees with the formula defined by the Council of Chalcedon -the doctrine defined by Cyril of Alexandria -miaphysitism -Catholicoi -'Patriarch -in the Armenian Apostolic Church hierarchy, the position of the Catholicos is higher than that of the Patriarch. -two catholicoi -two patriarchs, plus primates, archbishops and bishops, lower clergy and laity serving the Church. -Gevorkian Theological Seminary at the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin, and the Vaskenian Theological Academy at Lake Sevan -6-year course -bachelor's degree and a master's degree in Theology -Seminary of Antelias at Bikfaya -religious minorities and human rights groups -2009 -Armenian Apostolic Church -"the Armenian Apostolic Church today wants to have a monopoly on religion". -Armenian Apostolic Church -the U.S.S.R -the Bolshevik revolution -all functioning religious institutions in Armenia and NKAO -Armenian Apostolic Church since 1989 -more than 30 churches. -Armenian Apostolic Church -endangered historic churches -Prime Minister -Large-scale construction of new churches -Hrant Bagratyan -high-profile leaders -34% -the Archbishop of the Araratian Diocese and Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan -Bentley -2013 -Father Asoghik Karapetyan -Father Asoghik Karapetyan -Aram Abrahamyan -Father Asoghik Karapetyan -Aram Abrahamyan -The Armenian Apostolic Church -Oriental Orthodoxy -adopt Christianity as its official religion -4th century -The Armenian Apostolic Church -Bartholomew and Thaddeus. -Abgar V of Edessa +much progress has been made in automated theorem proving +inconclusive +across +governmental and non-governmental organizations. +Feyenoord +the Tenth Amendment +logical symbols +Communist Party of Yugoslavia +background areas of compositions +1870 +city +at their full depth +Canadian national team or the United States national team +160–180 BPM +Chetniks +colorless +Western and West Central Africa +mass-market flags, printed reproductions, and other products +the party's support for economic policies that they saw as sometimes in conflict with their moral values. +their properties +epidemics of polio +New York City Subway +about a third of the adult workers in New York City +seven +Ivan Cankar +Paz y Miño +national and local managers and officials +National Committee Chairman +1994 +mononym +railways +populations could grow +overpopulation +matronymic +spinning yarn from wool and knitting sweaters and stockings, making candles and soap from ashes, and churning milk into butter +40 percent +religious +the Andean Volcanic Belt +cause the U.S. to enter recession in 2013 +Gusset plates +biological functions +windward +New York City +46% +19 September 1942 +fats are a subgroup of lipids called triglycerides +Chester Moore Hall +profitable +because the number of possible algorithms is +15 +The parentheses around the argument +planners predating Postmodernism +incipient Romance languages +Slovene language +National Invitation Tournament +Rocky Mountains +religion +Lithuania +Republican +Verville +Nexelion cells +sixth grade +14.6-kilometer (9.1 mi) +French writer Simone de Beauvoir +ByRef (default) or ByVal +ensure that the assumed collapse mechanism is realistic +872 +delay the use of a call stack until it is really needed +directed edges +Lenin usurped the all-Party Congress of the RSDLP +8.5 years +cyanide +The report, which revealed great discrimination against women in American life, +to confirm Norman authority over the area +1967 +Cornell University +4,754 +Parent Power +Yosemite Valley +Hilbert-style deductive systems, natural deduction, the sequent calculus, the tableaux method +have been able to reduce chronic homelessness +Adolphe Sax +eastern +In 1777 +restrictions +f(x) = 4 − x +National Conference of New Politics (NCNP) leprosy -30 AD -Bartholomew -kings Axidares, Khosrov I, and Tiridates III -Ancient Armenia's adoption of Christianity as a state religion -Ancient Armenia's -Sassanids -Tiridates III -Gregory -Tiridates -Caesarea -the king -Christ's coming to the earth to strike it with a hammer -373 +Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools +Instruction in Latin +port towns +graceful and slow +was caused by the weight of ice +king +87 percent +almost exactly 20 blocks per mile +where the form is cut into the field or background rather than rising from it +New England +rain gauge measurements, weather radar estimates +$200 million +Thomas Muenzer +broadly by the temperature and humidity at which it is formed +undergraduate +Rotterdam The Hague Airport +botanist +790 meters above sea level +The origin +Tin(II) chloride +Brain Research Organization (IBRO) +1810 +1909 +7,000 BP +funnel Christianity -the Bible -406 -Liturgy -another one further down a hierarchy -"Regional Advanced Television Infrared Observational Satellite Operational Vertical Sounder Retransmission Service" -ATOVS -multiply -RARS -Colonial and Indian Exposition -20th-century -1886 -London -Linguist -Franklin D. Roosevelt -U.S. Navy -yet another bloody acronym -alphabet soup -commander -Suneung -Gyowondae -Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology -Seoul National, Korea, and Yonsei Universities -first letter of their English names -Short Message Systems -160 -GF -laughing out loud -DL -Member of the Standing Committee of the Central Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China -proper nouns -four parts -Standing Committee of the Central Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China -skimming -redundant to such readers -sequentially -print -folk etymology -constable on patrol -Taboo words -golf -Geheime Staatspolizei -Abkürzungsfimmel -syllabic -German -military and law enforcement services -Indonesian military -ranks, units, divisions, procedures -Akmil -random-access memory -personal identification number -automated teller machine -human immunodeficiency virus -stop/period/point -the deleted part to show the ellipsis of letters -the presence of all-capital letters -an abbreviation of a separate word -colon and apostrophe -phrase that is constructed "after the fact" from a previously existing word -Box Of Organized Knowledge -Local Integrated Software Architecture -Steve Jobs' daughter -i18n -the 18 letters that come between the first and the last in internationalization -Localization -x -Crxn -deliberately designed to be especially apt for the thing being named -clothing company +poverty level +5.2-mile (8.4 km) +Executive Branch +The movement is usually believed to have begun in 1963 +branch back +obvious negligence +decentralized manner, +honorary doctorates +15 May 1945 +Cenozoic filling of the Great Valley +enact +Western Pennsylvania Hockey League +Jews +The Bosphorus +Adam of Bremen +village of origin +than 20 years fcuk -French Connection United Kingdom. -add an 's' following an apostrophe -only when an abbreviation contains internal periods or both capital and lowercase letters -Ph.D.'s -DVDs -do not use an apostrophe to form the plural of an abbreviation -The US Department of Defense's Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency -In July 2010 -transform biology from a descriptive to a predictive field of science -BATMAN and ROBIN -developing contrived acronyms to name projects -(trying to thrust the reader's attention toward where the letters are coming from -this has no basis in standard English orthography, which reserves capitals for maintaining the common-versus-proper distinction -Enforcing the latter, most professional editors case-fold such expansions to their standard orthography when editing manuscripts for publication. -common nouns do not take capital initials in standard English orthography -to avoid a name considered undesirable -Alles nur aus Liebe -ANAL -CLaIT -disregarded because of the practicality in distinguishing singulars and plurals -U.S., U.S.'s -possessive abbreviations are often foregone -This is not the case -C.D.'s, C.D.s, or CDs -C.D.'s' -SOSes -the addition of an apostrophe is necessary when pluralizing all abbreviations -At the copyediting end -official style guide -some publishers choose to use cap/lowercase (c/lc) styling for acronyms -the pronunciation is reflected graphically by the capitalization scheme -initial letters -initialisms -an abbreviation that is pronounced as a word -as a word -as individual letters -cardinal and ordinal -by digits rather than initial letters -Abbreviations using numbers for other purposes include repetitions -metric prefixes, -M's P -Ben Chifley -Australian Prime Minister -s -lead to redundant acronym syndrome -A few high-tech companies -the television shows CSI: Crime Scene Investigation and Navy: NCIS -to educate new viewers as to what the initials stood for -There is no rule -what to call abbreviations that some speakers pronounce as letters and others pronounce as a word -JPEG /ˈdʒeɪpɛɡ/ and MS-DOS /ˌɛmɛsˈdɒs/ -as individual letters: /ˌjuːˌɑːrˈɛl/ and /ˌaɪˌɑːrˈeɪ/, respectively; or as a single word: /ˈɜːrl/ and /ˈaɪərə/ -abbreviating corporation names in places where space was limited for writing -Richmond, Fredericksburg and Potomac Railroad -AT&T -space was limited for writing -Sunoco -frequent use of acronyms across the whole range of registers -1899 -became increasingly convenient -OED -1965 -awol -acronym -Greek -a word made from the initial letters or syllables of other words -UNIVersal Automatic Computer. -precipitation increases -dry steppe -woods -the Plomo glacier and the Horcones glaciers -cold, windy and wet -deciduous woodland -hyperarid -virtually lifeless -30,000 -accelerated -Cinchona pubescens -tobacco and potatoes -Queñua -Altiplano -chinchillas -very low -Andean condor -hillstars -Titicaca flightless grebe and Titicaca water frog -mammals -cloud forests -6,961 m -The peak of Chimborazo in the Ecuadorean Andes -the Andes -Andes -6,893 m -the northern part of the Andes -"cordel" -"rope" -200 km -640 kilometres -a zone of volcanic activity that encompasses the Pacific rim of the Americas as well as the Asia-Pacific region. -due to the subduction of the Nazca Plate and the Antarctic Plate -the Andes end at the Pacific Ocean -iron ore -several sedimentary basins, such as Orinoco, Amazon Basin, Madre de Dios and Gran Chaco, -The Bolivian Orocline area overlaps with the area of maximum width of the Altiplano Plateau -"Arica Elbow". -Patagonian orocline. -crustal shortening. -15° to 20° counter clockwise and clockwise respectively +cheaper +all mammals living in complex social groups The Bolivian Orocline area overlaps with the area of maximum width of the Altiplano Plateau -"Arica Elbow". -Patagonian orocline. -crustal shortening. -15° to 20° counter clockwise and clockwise respectively -The formation of the modern Andes began with the events of the Triassic -several rifts developed. -uplifting, faulting and folding of sedimentary and metamorphic rocks of the ancient cratons to the east. -different regions have had different degrees of tectonic stress, uplift, and erosion. -Pangaea -the construction of aqueducts and roads -15th century -north-south -north-south axis -aqueducts and roads -1532 -Francisco Pizarro -Machu Picchu -Quechua and Aymara -1826 to 1827 -Paso Internacional Los Libertadores -building highways and railroads -aircraft -between Argentina and Chile -recently -eastern side -The Chilean Army and Chilean Navy -1870 +either at rest or with exercise +President Dwight D. Eisenhower +Devolution of control to regional or local governments +Durban, South Africa +Taft-Hartley Act +Archibald Dalzel +810 millimeters (31.9 in) per year +left bank of Cowley +newspaper publisher +to educate new viewers as to what the initials stood for +sugar backbone +Dolmabahçe Palace +blue stripes 1978 -Chile -irrigation -over 6,000 years -potato -Maize -chicha -Tectonic forces -orogenic event -a major transform fault -1,000 km (620 mi) -the mountains of the Antarctic Peninsula -Parts of the Sunsás Orogen -The Sierras de Córdoba -Amazonian craton -the onset of the Andean orogeny -in the Mesozoic -The Andes -The Andean volcanism -volcanic gaps -there are significant differences inside volcanic zones -the Andean Volcanic Belt -eastern fold and thrust belt -dry -Chile -disturbing actions of meteoric water -extensive saltpeter deposits -varies greatly -latitude, altitude, and proximity to the sea -rainy and warm -Rainforests -elevations -transatlantic slave trade -West Africans -the 15th through to the 19th centuries -other western Africans -western European slave traders -The Portuguese -1526 -indentured servants -markets -merchandise -on the African coast -local African leaders -the New World -a factory -about 12 million -tidal currents -the 15th century -approximately 300,000 -Pierre Chaunu -the consequences of European navigation -technical and geographical factors -Historian John Thornton -gold -the Muslim Empire of the Middle East -technical and geographical factors -12.5% -2.2 million -Meltzer -600 -350 -economics -mortality rates among Africans during the voyages of the Atlantic slave trade -decreased -eighteenth century -nineteenth century -the coast of West Africa -Portuguese -Spaniards -1501 -1630 -Britain -London -1689 -Birmingham -slaves -January 1526 -1533 -300 -1563 -El Salvador -to opposing the slave trade and working for the abolition of slavery throughout the British Empire -an overwhelming 283 votes for to 16 against -1807 -1807 -the 1860s -Walter Rodney -John Thornton +the densely populated immigrant neighborhoods on the Lower East Side in Israel Zangwill's play +first-order theory of cardinality λ +On 20 October +Chase +The ten largest companies +Chinatown +violence against the homeless +Organotin compounds +Lord Thomson +bad +rectangular coordinate system +8 +skimming +homelessness +unawareness of, indifference toward, or disbelief in any set of moral standards or principles. +Georgian houses +the pipe's tone +degree of bending it is subjected to +Nuruosmaniye Mosque +electric power generation +Paz y Miño led to Africa being underdeveloped -that Africans and Europeans were equal partners in the Atlantic slave trade -exchanging raw materials and human resources (i.e. slaves) for manufactured goods -The First Atlantic system -awarding merchants (mostly from other countries) the license to trade enslaved people to their colonies -started (on a significant scale) in about 1502 and lasted until 1580 -Spanish empire -slightly more than 3% -Royal Navy -2,000 officers -over 50 African rulers -150,000 Africans -approximately 1,600 -a variety of goods from Europe -Sir John Hawkins -Americas and the Caribbean Islands -cotton, sugar, tobacco, molasses and rum -1440 to about 1833 -labour shortage -Native peoples -the Slave Coast -failed to provide a sufficient workforce -exploit New World land and resources -in 1859 -Cudjoe Lewis, who died in 1935 -Brazil in 1831 -1888 -until the 1860s, when British enforcement and further diplomacy finally ended the Atlantic trade. -selling their captives or prisoners of war +reproducing +an administrator account +Insular Affairs (OIA) +retreating soldiers and refugees +Sichuan University +the legitimacy of most forms of economically significant private property +The plane perpendicular to the lens axis situated at a distance f from the lens is called the focal plane. +YouTube, Dailymotion +late 1890s +hate crimes +as insurance groups +1960 +PhD thesis +do not affect +Krishna +fewer attractive metalogical properties +morality forms in a series of constructive stages or domains +has not been shown to protection against +Atlantic +28 February 2014 +1966 +scenes of daily life in the Khmer Empire +supply depot in Danbury +Indian Heart Association +150 million passengers per year. +the heart +lakes, ponds and artificial outdoor rinks during the winter no longer commit crimes in that area -King Jaja of Opobo -kidnappings -neighbouring or enemy ethnic groups -Britain -President James Madison -historian -changes in productivity, technology and patterns of exchange in Europe and the Americas informed the decision by the British to end their participation -In 1809 -that it was neither a matter of strictly economics nor of morals. -moral arguments did play a secondary role -the Haitian Revolution. -an "ideological" apparatus in order to eliminate the sentiment of guilt in western society. -capitalism, providing not only influx of capital, but also disciplining hardship into workers (a form of "apprenticeship" to the capitalist industrial plant). -the significant decline in population -Portuguese controlled Angola -military technology (specifically guns and gunpowder), gold, or simply maintaining amicable trade relationships with European nations. -African scholar -the Kingdom of Benin -Angola, -saw an economic benefit from trading their subjects with European slave traders. -the significant decline in population, -The benefit derived from trading slaves for European goods -£250,000 per year -52,000 -18th century -the Kongo Civil War -French -the New World -Africa -West Africa -European colonies -11 million people -about 1.5 million -4 million -10.5 million -the presence of European slavers -50% -tribal and state warfare -Western and West Central Africa -Dahomey -16th and 17th centuries -the slave trade -Slave Coast -increase in shipments -seven years -to Belize -Irish immigrants -1656, and in 1662 -1656 -partus sequitur ventrem -seven -indentured servants -Montserrat -United Kingdom -France -St. Domingue -cheaper -ship building -profits from slavery -industrial revolution -steam engine -Eric Williams -Joseph C. Miller -West Central Africa -estimating counterfactual demographic developments in case the Atlantic slave trade had not existed. -Joseph Inikori -Rodney -Archibald Dalzel -African societies -David Livingstone -slave trade -Roots: The Saga of an American Family -1976 -January 1977 -ABC -Roots Homecoming Festival -1816 -1877 -1820 -around two thousand -Durban, South Africa -fear of monetary compensation -apology for slavery from the former slave-trading countries -United Kingdom, Portugal, Spain, the Netherlands, and the United States -24 February 2007 -Governor of Alabama -Virginia General Assembly -31 May 2007 -Civil Rights Congress of Nigeria -2009 -African traditional rulers ... [can] accept blame -cannot continue to blame the white men -Europeans -"a truly international exercise -Iberian monarchs. -"the Iberians were the sole leaders of the exploration". -Portugal, Spain, the Italian kingdoms, England, France and the Netherlands. -were captured in endemic warfare between African states -capturing Africans from neighboring ethnic groups or war captives and selling them. -European demand for slaves -those shipped away had little chance of returning to Africa. -not only that wars are entered into for the sole purpose of making slaves, but that they are fomented by Europeans -Upon discovering new lands through their naval explorations -Kingdom of Castile, -15th century -they also captured native Canary Islanders, the Guanches, to use as slaves -wine and sugar. -was little more than to exploit the opportunity for immediate profits made by raiding and the seizure or purchase of trade commodities" -primarily Portuguese traders -a naval base -African naval forces were alerted to the new dangers -boats were better equipped at traversing the west African coasts and river systems -1494 -Kingdom of Kongo -Bissagos Islands -Kongolese king, Afonso I -Portugal, -“Williams thesis” -1% -less than 5% of the British economy -occurred after emancipation, -shipping costs, slave mortality, mortality of British people in Africa, defense costs +Conductive +hyphenate their father's and mother's last names +Windows NT 4.0 +1676 +shower and thunderstorm +the identification as "monophysitism" is an incorrect description of its position. +disturbing actions of meteoric water +Al Gore +burning +translates the complete operating system Walter Rodney -the export of so many people -Africa's population stagnated during this period -top merchants abandoned traditional industries to pursue slaving, -slaving itself. -Joseph E. Inikori -could not sustain such population losses -Africa's population almost immediately began to rapidly increase, -prior to the introduction of modern medicines -widespread problems -(Quakers) -Denmark -1807, -Slave Trade Act of 1794 -1807 -In the very elderly, age-related large artery pulsatility and stiffness is more pronounced among women than men. -This may be caused by the women's smaller body size and arterial dimensions -Among men and women, there are notable differences in body weight, height, body fat distribution, heart rate, stroke volume, and arterial compliance -In the very elderly -independent of menopause -Cigarettes -from exposure to second-hand smoke. -10% -age 30 -from direct consumption of tobacco -A diet high in fruits and vegetables -diet (high in nuts, fish, fruits and vegetables, and low in sweets, red meat and fat) -A high fiber diet appears to lower the risk. -Mediterranean diet may be more effective than a low-fat diet -reduce blood pressure, lower total and low density lipoprotein cholesterol and improve metabolic syndrome -defined as less than 5 x 30 minutes of moderate activity per week, or less than 3 x 20 minutes of vigorous activity per week -Insufficient physical activity -31.3% +29th globally and 7th in Europe +90 +the tropics +7-7.5 years +beats per minute +rigidity and aesthetic limitations +On December 24, 1933, a group of assassins attacked Eastern Diocese Archbishop Levon Tourian as he walked down the aisle of Holy Cross Armenian Church +The New Observer +Hagia Sophia +the eighteenth century +'pre-specialization' +the dromedary camel +dibutyltin dichloride +fatty amides +abruptly dropped all non-mainstream genres to focus on mainstream EDM +six +ambiguity +to avoid their given name being mistaken for and used as a surname +cardiovascular/heart diseases +right-handed +post-glacial rebound +used by artisans for fine work, and for authenticating seal impressions +suspected Hungarian, German and Serbian fascists +Ecuador +centralization and decentralization +do not germinate in the first year +The United States won in 1996 +18.8 +setting its own standards for admissions, awarding of degrees, faculty qualifications, teaching, and staff hiring +surname +without explicit agreement or coordination by individuals who use prices as their guide +1908 +Particulate matter +Türk Telekom Arena +Benjamin Franklin +the ASCOBANS +hydrophobic or amphiphilic small molecules +Düsseldorf +Renaissance Humanists +Verizon Communications +15th century +169 +Headmanning +Nearly two-thirds +In the area, the former seabed is only gently sloping +first-order predicate calculus, the lower predicate calculus +steps +at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research +Andrew Hoberek +moral ontology, +personal guilt and redemption by Christ +eicosanoids +individual's occupation or area of residence +Android +British military +monotheistic +alluvial channels +in the Westphalian sense +air and water +Raid at Ožbalt +The San Jose University Library +function f from X to Y +the peasantry and yeomanry +Windows XP 64-Bit Edition +most radical, however temporary, revisions of saxophone keywork was made in the 1950s by M. Houvenaghel of Paris, +2006 a third -assists weight loss and improves blood glucose control, blood pressure, lipid profile and insulin sensitivity -High dietary intakes of saturated fat, trans-fats and salt, and low intake of fruits, vegetables and fish -1.7 million deaths -Frequent consumption of high-energy foods, such as processed foods that are high in fats and sugars, promotes obesity -There is evidence that higher consumption of sugar is associated with higher blood pressure and unfavorable blood lipids -processed meats -Total fat intake does not appear to be an important risk factor -recommend a reduction in saturated fat -omega 6 linoleic acid -does not appear to have an effect -Replacement of saturated fats with carbohydrates does not change or may increase risk. -depend on the amount of alcohol consumed -Drinking at low levels without episodes of heavy drinking may be associated with a reduced risk of cardiovascular disease -Overall alcohol consumption at the population level is associated with multiple health risks that exceed any potential benefits. -There is a direct relationship between high levels of alcohol consumption and risk of cardiovascular disease. -complex -a low-salt diet may be harmful in those with congestive heart failure -for not excluding a trial in heart failure where people had low-salt and -water levels due to diuretics. -Moderate evidence was found that high salt intake increases cardiovascular mortality -there is strong evidence that high dietary salt intake increases blood pressure and worsens hypertension -Aspirin has been found to be of only modest benefit in those at low risk of heart -those at really low risk it is not recommended -the risk of serious bleeding -Statins are effective in preventing further cardiovascular disease in people with a history of cardiovascular disease -the event rate is higher in men than in women -In those without cardiovascular disease but risk factors statins appear to also be beneficial with a decrease in the risk of death and further heart disease -those who have a 12% or greater risk of cardiovascular disease over the next ten years. -each decade +2001 +64-bit +policies designed to reduce unemployment can create inflationary pressure, and vice versa +Use of f(A) +a drill +74 +Beginning in mid-1918 +Trans-Manhattan Expressway +Kopaonik Partisan Detachment Headquarters +protective coat +automatically installed +40% +Philadelphia +Keynesian economics +Since it is held in the spring, the tournament coincides with the annual NHL Stanley Cup playoffs +Northern China +Manhattan +the European side of the Bosphorus +convex cube and a concave "corner" +Apollo +2.4 million +Senator Robert A. Taft +Rocky Mountains +St Edmund Hall +1976 +in southern Mongolia +localized +inflationary pressure +John Muir +2012 +static structures +poor seismic performance. +Jean Shrimpton +Chile +The Löwenheim–Skolem theorem +Slavery was officially forbidden +precipitation measurement +caste, profession, and village +Patagonian orocline. +Australian Prime Minister +December 2012 +100 mph +recursion theory and functional analysis +E♭ +exploit New World land and resources +315,000 km2 (122,000 sq mi) +The Second Sex +1961 +1945 +what they saw as Republicans' restricting of vital civil liberties while corporate welfare and the national debt hiked considerably under Bush's tenure +miles across +Great Fire of New York +the simplest type of optical telescope +May 2013 +Assam +cross-Canadian border service to Toronto and Montreal +Serbia +significant drop in the stock market and pressure from a variety of sources +different cultures had quite different expectations +to score a goal by taking a shot. +kilograms, seconds, pounds, etc +First Degree of Physician +focuses a collimated beam +paintings +as a percentage +coordinate axis or just axis +Central Post Office in Eminönü +computable functions +14th-century +President Barack Obama +male +Canada 82 percent -Age -Coronary fatty streaks -age 55 -cardiovascular/heart diseases +Hurricane Sandy +the Alliance of European Conservatives and Reformists Multiple -age 45 to 50 -age 60 to 65 -serum total cholesterol level -mechanical and structural properties -arterial elasticity -arterial compliance -Aging -coronary artery disease -Men -pre-menopausal women -menopause -female -male -Cardiovascular disease -a cause and effect relationship -relatively little -The Commission on Social Determinants of Health -non-communicable -Cardiovascular disease -relatively little -a cause and effect relationship -The Commission on Social Determinants of Health -non-communicable -2 to 5 times -men -Estrogen -HDL cholesterol -estrogen -Particulate matter -PM2.5 is the major focus, in which gradients are used to determine CVD risk -Women -PM2.5 -atherosclerosis and inflammation -Particulate matter -PM2.5 is the major focus, in which gradients are used to determine CVD risk -Women -PM2.5 -atherosclerosis and inflammation -childhood -the major precursor of cardiovascular disease -The Pathobiological Determinants of Atherosclerosis in Youth Study -7–9 years -Population -1 in 3 -cardiovascular disease -education -extremely -greatest -a previous cardiovascular event -merits are debated -diabetes -lack clear-cut evidence -myocardial infarction (commonly known as a heart attack). -coronary artery diseases (CAD) such as angina -Cardiovascular disease (CVD) -Cardiovascular disease includes coronary artery diseases (CAD) such as angina and myocardial infarction -Cardiovascular disease includes coronary artery diseases (CAD) such as angina and myocardial infarction -two- to four-fold -cardiovascular disease -Obesity and diabetes mellitus -chronic kidney disease and hypercholesterolaemia -High blood pressure results in 13% of CVD deaths -Coronary artery disease, stroke, and peripheral artery disease involve atherosclerosis -Rheumatic heart disease may follow untreated strep throat. -obesity 5% -tobacco results in 9% -not recommended -not recommended -inconclusive -either at rest or with exercise -not recommended in those at low risk who do not have symptoms -not recommended in those at low risk who do not have symptoms -not recommended in those at low risk who do not have symptoms -not recommended -90% -rheumatic heart disease -55 +Cheshire +nutritious English grass +defensive +marital rape +to reserve remaining tickets for students +40.02% (602,058) +four +Lenin +New York +Partisan forces +static structures +the Town of Groton 45 -The United States Preventive Services Task Force -questionable -predicting the risk of future cardiovascular disease -biomarkers -questionable -Exercise in those who are at high risk of heart disease -has not been found to significantly alter behavior -hypertension, diabetes, hyperlipidemia -unclear -Africa -Cardiovascular diseases -85% -older adults -men -raised blood pressure -raised blood cholesterol -age, gender or family history -raised blood sugar -HDL cholesterol -HDL cholesterol -one year -statins -lipids -HDL cholesterol -one year -HDL cholesterol -statins -lipids -niacin, fibrates and CETP Inhibitors -do not affect -one year -death appears to be long -in year 1949 -by Jerry Morris -were published in year 1958 -The causes, prevention, and/or treatment of all forms of cardiovascular disease -biomedical research, -1949 -Jerry Morris -occupational health data -1958 -a weekly basis -a common inflammatory marker -in patients who are at risk for cardiovascular disease -key inflammatory transcription factor -risk factor of cardiovascular disease and mortality. -a major cause of pneumonia -coronary artery disease -absence of improvement after antibiotic use -Chlamydia -pineal gland secretion -Melatonin -when pharmacological doses are applied -lower total cholesterol -vasoactive agents -pulmonary hypertension with left heart disease -hypoxemic lung diseases -harm and unnecessary expense -vitamin E, vitamin C -not been found to be useful -has not been shown to protection against -vitamin B3 -lowers high blood pressure -Cardiovascular diseases -30% -23 million people -low- and middle-income countries -60% -World Heart Federation -Indian Heart Association -genetic predisposition and environmental factors -1895 -the Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy -Army Institute of Heraldry -no implications of symbolism in the use of fringe -1835 -year-round -Memorial Day -small -3 by 5 feet -civic holidays -United States Flag Code -Martin Sheridan -1908 Summer Olympics -American -the flag should be repaired or replaced -burning -American Legion -June 14 -hazardous gases -horizontal atmospheric flight -stripes running horizontally -Apollo -Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo -mounted cavalry and infantry units -right shoulder -to the right, while the stripes flew to the left -flight suits -November 21, 2008 -Eben Appleton -conservation purposes -10 degree -1907 -respect or mourning -March 1, 1954 -President Dwight D. Eisenhower -the governor -the governor -the "union" -thirteen equal horizontal stripes -fifty small, white, five-pointed stars -the 50 states -the thirteen British colonies -August 3, 1777 -Capt. Abraham Swartwout -Fort Schuyler -Congress -flannel petticoats -a naval ensign -the Marine Committee -its regimental standard -Richard Peters -the maker of the flag -John Trumbull -1792 -The Flag Resolution -its initial -individually crafted -blue stripes -John Paul Jones -George Hasting -Francis Hopkinson -New Jersey -1776 -Quarter Cask of the Public Wine -Betsy Ross -William Canby -1870 -1776 +C and Lisp +The Amen Break +609–610 +nine +Fons Trompenaars +five +Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology +"Doc" Carlson +1987 an upholstery business -1795 -15 -Francis Scott Key -The Star-Spangled Banner: The Flag That Inspired the National Anthem -Smithsonian Institution National Museum of American History -the original colonies -July 4 -1960 -1959 -1959 -Hoa Kỳ -1902 -Flower Flag -flower flag ginseng -guó -"G-spec" (for "government specification") flags -Representatives or Senators -2 × 3 ft. or 4 × 6 ft. (flag ratio 1.5), 2.5 × 4 ft. or 5 × 8 ft. (1.6), or 3 × 5 ft. or 6 × 10 ft. (1.667) -flags made for or by the U.S. federal government -government specification -"White", "Old Glory Red", and "Old Glory Blue" -1946 -there is no perfect way to convert them -by scaling the luminous reflectance relative to the flag's "white" -official colors are only officially required for flags produced for the U.S. federal government -using more saturated colors than the official cloth is not new -mass-market flags, printed reproductions, and other products -1950 -Pantone Matching System (PMS) -1998 -193 (red) and 281 (dark blue) -In 2001 -website of the U.S. embassy in London -Robert G. Heft -17-year-old -B– -his teacher did keep to their agreement and changed his grade to an A for the project -Fort McHenry on Independence Day one year apart, 1959 -250,000 -63 -overpopulation -Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Rhode Island -their land -250,000 -375,000 -63 -overpopulation -their land -250,000 -375,000 -overpopulation -subdivide their land between farmers -63 -land grants -speculators -plots of land -nutritious English grass -red clover and timothy-grass -a variety of artisans, shopkeepers, and merchants -shops -Stores selling English manufactures such as cloth, iron utensils, and window glass as well as West Indian products like sugar and molasses -crops and other local products -port towns -molasses, sugar, gold coins, and bills of exchange (credit slips) -the West Indies -raw sugar was turned into granulated sugar and the molasses distilled into rum -The gold and credit slips -by providing their goods to the agricultural population -elegant ​2 1⁄2-story houses -Georgian houses -library -yeoman houses -1763 -Havana, Cuba -the Seven Years' War -1783 -1810 -Francisco Coronado -1680 -1692 -223 years -third of the population -Father Junípero Serra -150,000 -1830s -European technology, livestock, and crops -The Royal Road -French fur trappers, missionaries, and military detachments -1783 -1,400 -1701 -around 1700 -French immigrants -1718 -7,000 -Mississippi River -1763 -Mississippi -Spain -Napoleon -1803 -Nieuw-Nederland -1664 -New York -1625 -Manhattan -Nya Sverige -1638 -Fort Christina -1655 -Wilmington, Delaware -Lutheranism -1630s -Gibbstown, New Jersey -Nothnagle Log House -log cabin -1799 -Second Kamchatka -1867 -Nikolay Rezanov -Grigory Shelikhov -the Province of Carolina -a group of English Lords Proprietors -1670 -food -rice -English -King William's War and Queen Anne's War -French -Yamasee War -1729 -the Georgia Colony -debtors -1733 -Spain -provide her with a base from which to attack Florida -Slavery was officially forbidden -their colony could not compete economically with the Carolina rice plantations -the restrictions were lifted, slavery was allowed -Georgia never had an established religion. -strict moralistic principles -the monarch -The governor -the freeholders and planters -The governor's council -The governor -cradle scythe -Virginia and Maryland -cows -rice and indigo -northern Ireland -fur-pelt -wheat -flax -West Indies -twice as much as it did in 1720 -ethnic background and wealth -wool and flax -German and Irish -spinning the materials into yarn and cloth -smaller farms -40 percent -Maryland, Virginia, and South Carolina -African slaves -tobacco, indigo and rice -vote -young, single, white indentured servants -1700 -1619 -high mortality rates for newcomers and a very high ratio of men to women -teenage girls who were indentured servants -New England -Chesapeake region -Puritan New England -New England -New England -Plymouth, Massachusetts -Plymouth Colony -Narragansett sachem, Canonicus -egalitarian -Protestant -Province of Massachusetts Bay -England's Glorious Revolution -1684 -1691 -Massachusetts and Plymouth -planters -Pennsylvania -60 percent -iron ores -planters -Horse racing -competitiveness, individualism, and materialism -horse racing and high-stakes gambling -armed gameskeepers -Everyone -Spanish invasion -Queen Elizabeth -indentured servants -50,000 -17th century -George Washington -a sense of American unity -British military and civilian officials -American Revolution -major military resources needed to be devoted to North America -African slaves +automated theorem +processed meats +historically advocated classical liberalism and progressivism. +Rotterdam Philharmonic +109 +Panther Award +The Occupational Safety and Health Administration +4500 years ago +how psychological functions are produced by neural circuitry +slaving itself. +the 15th through to the 19th centuries +non-nomadic +saying that a formula is satisfied if and only if its universal closure is satisfied. +volcanic gaps +Democratic Federal Yugoslavia indentured servants -1676 -tobacco -May 14, 1607 -Quebec -eastern part -Spanish Florida -Mississippi River -colonial protection. -High -very young -England -cash crop -royally appointed governor -Connecticut -1629 -400 -Church of England -20,000 -troops from the colonies and tax funds from Britain -The British elite -the American Revolution -each side believed that it had borne a greater burden than the other -their sons -Church of England -Puritans -Rhode Island Colony -Europe -England -fewer than 1% -majority -property -vibrant political culture -politics -property -British men -political culture -social elites -suffrage -Enlightenment -furniture designs -Charleston -seaport cities -styles of dress, dance, and etiquette -1770s -high -local judges and juries -assemblies and county governments -assemblies and county governments -sued each other -local judges and juries -involvement of lawyers in politics -lawyers -different interest groups -90 -England -aristocratic -interest groups -aristocratic families and the established church -religious -social -Elected representatives -directly from English law -political representation -king -republicanism -English common law -David Rittenhouse -Benjamin Franklin -botanist -colonial Americans -Benjamin Franklin -arts -Literature -major news, advertisements, and business reports -mid-century -William Byrd -New Englanders -religious -Jonathan Edwards -First Great Awakening -minister -Art and drama -London -Pennsylvania -New England -South Carolina -Pennsylvania -English -New England -expelled -Georgia -the Frontier -the eastern seaboard -ravaged by new diseases -around 1600–1650 -explorers and sailors -English entrepreneurs gave their colonies a base of merchant-based investment that seemed to need much less government -1625 -Commission of Trade -Portugal and Spain -1768 -Mercantilism -smuggling -London-based merchants -New Amsterdam (New York) -600,000 -sugarcane-growing colonies in the Caribbean and to Brazil -because of better food, less disease, lighter work loads, and better medical care -4 million -nearly twice as rapid -the Chesapeake region -the Chesapeake region -About 170,000 more -the Carolinas -half the slaves -religious congregations of farmers, or yeomen, and their families -indentured or criminally bonded -indentured or criminally bonded -Every male citizen -levied taxes, built roads, and elected officials who managed town affairs -the property and his wife -the property and his wife -own property, file lawsuits, or participate in political life -three -spinning yarn from wool and knitting sweaters and stockings, making candles and soap from ashes, and churning milk into butter -the abundance of trees -cooking facilities and warmth during the winter -wooden clapboard siding -a general-purpose room where the family worked and ate meals -entertain guests that contained the family's best furnishings and the parent's bed -The Great Awakening -New Lights -Jonathan Edwards -Old Lights -Princeton -Mid-Atlantic Region -Irish -William Penn -Scotch Irish -the colony of Pennsylvania -Dutch -timber -octagon -stone -log cabins -simple -German -Philadelphia -furniture-making -governors -Sir Edmund Andros -Francis Nicholson -New England -Indians, the French, and the Dutch -"country" and "court" -Massachusetts -None -shifting factions -appointed governor and the elected assembly -Protestant -Maryland -port cities -Freedom of religion -Britain and the Continent -German -English law -English -Puritan -The First Great Awakening -Jonathan Edwards -1730s and 1740s -personal guilt and redemption by Christ -George Whitefield -New England -Baptist and Methodist -Anglicans and Quakers -The Awakening -new lights -the unchurched -study the Bible at home -old lights -people who were already church members -late eighteenth century -John Locke -New England -their property -German and Dutch immigrants -360% -British merchants -17th -18th -Britain -Indians -Furstenberg -Benjamin Franklin -Philadelphian -Benjamin Franklin -1765 -1775 -1765 -British tea -13 -1775 -13 colonies -13 -Intolerable Acts -1773 -18th -Malaria -over one-fourth -diphtheria -local healers -Constantinople -Turks -Beyoğlu -across -Greek -Medieval -Constantinople -the first and third syllables -Turkish folk -the 17th -the 7th millennium BCE -5500 to 3500 BCE -the Fikirtepe mound -near the point -Thracian -660 BCE -Megara -the European side of the Bosphorus -73 CE -Byzantium -eastward -Christianity -Byzantine -tens of thousands -Hagia Sophia -structural change -1940s and early 1950s -Ankara -1970s -sharp rise in the city's population -Marmara Region -The Bosphorus -Sea of Marmara, the Bosphorus, and the Golden Horn -5,343 -Black Sea -24 April 1915 -Mehmed VI -November 1922 -British, French, and Italian -Treaty of Lausanne -imperial mosques -Black Sea -Çamlıca Hill -steps -Topkapı Palace -African and Eurasian Plates -1509 -10,000 -18,000 -North Anatolian Fault -between the Sea of Marmara and the Black Sea -ranks as world's 6th-largest city proper -Its commercial and historical center lies on the European side and about a third of its population lives on the Asian side -historically also known as Constantinople and Byzantium -straddling the Bosphorus strait between the Sea of Marmara and the Black Sea -Its commercial and historical center lies on the European side and about a third of its population lives on the Asian side -Istanbul is one of the world's most populous cities and ranks as world's 6th-largest city proper -The city is the administrative center of the Istanbul Metropolitan Municipality (coterminous with Istanbul Province) -Founded under the name of Byzantium on the Sarayburnu promontory around 660 BCE, -After its reestablishment as Constantinople in 330 CE -it served as an imperial capital -It was instrumental in the advancement of Christianity -Founded under the name of Byzantium on the Sarayburnu promontory around 660 BCE, -After its reestablishment as Constantinople in 330 CE -it served as an imperial capital -It was instrumental in the advancement of Christianity during Roman and Byzantine times -Emirgan Park -Topkapı Palace and Yıldız Palace -Yıldız Palace -Ottoman leaders -Belgrad Forest -Fethi Paşa Korusu -Emirgan Park -its diversity of plants and an annual tulip festival -the early decades of the Turkish Republic -47-hectare (120-acre) -Byzantine and Ottoman -obelisk -Theodosius -Valens Aqueduct -to mark the new Roman capital -the late 4th century -Fatih district -the classical Greek period -Byzantine and Ottoman -Sultanahmet Square -Istanbul's strategic position on the historic Silk Road -the establishment of the Turkish Republic in 1923 -migrants from across Anatolia have moved in and city limits have expanded to accommodate them -Arts, Music, Film and Cultural festivals were established at the end of the 20th century -Constantine the Great made it the new eastern capital of the Roman Empire in 330 CE -Constantinopolis" (Constantinople), which, as the Latinized form of "Κωνσταντινούπολις" (Konstantinoúpolis), means the "City of Constantine". -Nova Roma" and its Greek version "Νέα Ῥώμη" Nea Romē (New Rome), -The use of Constantinople to refer to the city during the Ottoman period (from the mid-15th century) is now considered politically incorrect -Basil II -1025 -1204 -Latin -catholic -14th-century -eight-week -Constantine XI -Mehmed II -Kaysar-i Rûm -Istanbul -Anatolia -five thousand -Sürgün -1459 -1517 -four -1520 -570,000 -Mimar Sinan -19th -Golden Horn -Tanzimat period -the 1880s -Mahmud II -Monastery of Stoudios -the Imrahor Mosque -Chora Church and Pammakaristos Church -Hagia Sophia -31 meters (102 ft) in diameter -1261 -classical Roman -a museum -Monastery of Stoudios -Hagia Sophia -powerful mayor, weak council -powerful mayor, weak council -the Metropolitan Executive Committee -appointed by the metropolitan mayor and the Council -as head -Anadoluhisarı and Rumelihisarı fortresses -Baroque -European styles -Neoclassical, Renaissance Revival and Art Nouveau styles -Dolmabahçe Palace -Topkapı -Sultan Ahmed Mosque -the 16th and 17th centuries -the Tanzimat reforms -Nuruosmaniye Mosque -District councils -the metropolitan mayor -One-fifth -five-year terms -Kadir Topbaş -1461 -Galleria Ataköy -Akmerkez -Kanyon -Abdi İpekçi Street in Nişantaşı and Bağdat Avenue on the Anatolian side -Tanzimat period of reform -French cities -Beyoğlu -1908 -1957 -Paris -Beyoğlu -1876 -nine -the Grand Vizier -the Istanbul Metropolitan Municipality and Istanbul Province -the MMI -the Istanbul Special Provincial Administration -building and maintenance of schools -Hüseyin Avni Mutlu -500 CE +Kalawao County, Hawaii +emmer, einkorn and barley +in citing the names of authors in scholarly papers +Men +in the spiritual life, development of the national culture and preservation of the national identity of the people of Armenia. +Bartholomew and Thaddeus. +2 acres +how they are initiated and propagated +the conservative International Democrat Union as well as the Asia Pacific Democrat Union +Mattress +Play can be stopped if the goal is knocked out of position. +Territories +made of fishing boats +all functioning religious institutions in Armenia and NKAO +some publishers choose to use cap/lowercase (c/lc) styling for acronyms +totalitarian +Lenin +Yildiz Atasoy +transmissive optical device that affects the focus of a light beam through refraction +Radiohead +chromatic +the issue of coeducation +the movement lasted from the 1960s into the early 1980s, the exact years of the movement are more difficult to pinpoint and are often disputed +November 1979 +the construction of protective dikes and dams +Xbox OS Baghdad -1500 to 1750 -London -historic seafood restaurants -The Princes' Islands -kebab -Istanbulites and foreign tourists -the shores of the Bosphorus -14,377,019 -14,025,646 -89% -5th -3.45 percent -Some other neighborhoods around İstiklal Avenue -İstiklal Avenue -pubs, cafes, and restaurants playing live music -Beyoğlu, Beşiktaş, Şişli and Kadıköy districts -2004 -Recep Tayyip Erdoğan -2013 and 2014, -3 electoral districts -Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu -29th -Since the mid-1990s -two-fifths -37 -Beşiktaş J.K. -Galatasaray S.K. and Fenerbahçe S.K. -seven -Galatasaray and Fenerbahçe -Galatasaray S.K. -olive oil, tobacco, vehicles, and electronics. -high-value-added work -$69.9 billion -$41.4 billion -Ottoman Stock Exchange -1866 -Bankalar Caddesi (Banks Street) -1995 -Borsa Istanbul +This is not the case +1% +with their parse trees +two +Manhattan +Paragraph 12 +rain shadow +agrarian-based one +1992 sports facilities -Atatürk Olympic Stadium -the 2005 UEFA Champions League Final -Türk Telekom Arena -Bosphorus -more than 200 million tonnes -the Port of Haydarpaşa, the Port of Ambarlı, and the Port of Zeytinburnu -Haydarpaşa -Ambarlı -2.4 million -12.56 -Sarayburnu -Topkapı Palace Museum -64 -after the Turkish Republic shifted its focus toward Ankara -musical traditions -in the new capital -Istanbul -The Silahtarağa Power Station, a coal-fired power plant -1914 -1952 -120 megawatts -1983 -1453 -law, medicine, and science departments -the founding of the Turkish Republic -1773 -eight -the government -1982 -Bio Istanbul -Robert College -Christopher Robert -4,350 -instruction in foreign languages -688 -1481 -Liceo Italiano -the shores of the Bosphorus in Çengelköy -three military academies -free -fourth grade -sixth grade -Kırkçeşme water supply network -4,200 -public demand -the Istanbul Water and Sewerage Administration -1840 -1876 -1994 -1909 -1995 -By the end of the 19th century -1980s -abroad -Beyoğlu -2000s -Istanbul had 137 hospitals, of which 100 were private. -public hospitals tend to be overcrowded -Turkish citizens are entitled to subsidized healthcare in the nation's state-run hospitals -Turkey has more hospitals accredited by the U.S.-based Joint Commission than any other country in the world -upsurge in medical tourism to Turkey -Yıldız Palace -İstiklal Avenue -Istanbul and its picturesque skyline -1950s -The World Is Not Enough -O-1, O-2, O-3 and O-4 -400,000 vehicles each day -14.6-kilometer (9.1 mi) -2013 -2015 -Istanbul Festival -1973 -music and dance -Istanbul Biennial -every two years since 1987 -Fares across modes are integrated, using the contactless Istanbulkart -2009 -265,000 passengers each day -1875 -1872 -three lines -by the Marmaray tunnel -(the M1 and M2 on the European side -in Karaköy -about half a million foreign tourists enter the city by sea each year. -The Sinan Erdem Dome -Abdi İpekçi Arena -Ülker Sports Arena -13,800 -bids for UEFA Euro 2012 and UEFA Euro 2016 -1889 -economic problems in Greece -1908 -construction of Marmaray and the Ankara-Istanbul high-speed line -600,000 passengers -Turkish Grand Prix -1952 -Turkish Offshore Racing Club -race for the Marine Forces Trophy -2000 -Most nationwide newspapers -1961 -1986 -Zaman -more than one million, -1927 -Turkish Radio and Television Corporation -Central Post Office in Eminönü -four -Radio 2 -Star TV -Samanyolu TV, -a mix of news and series -MSNBC -1999 -Istanbul Atatürk, -2001 -51.2 million -2009 -150 million passengers per year. -between 1950 and 2000 -between 1980 and 1985 -seeking employment and improved living conditions -28 percent -Üsküdar -the end of the Ottoman Empire -Islam -the Hanafi school of Islamic thought -approximately 10 percent -the Alevis -300 million -in Istanbul's Church of St. George -in the city -decreased substantially -Christians -the Kurdish community -About two to three million -Bayrampaşa -The neighborhood of Balat -1 percent -the right-wing Justice and Development Party (AKP) -Recep Tayyip Erdoğan -Kemalist center-left Republican People's Party (CHP) -in the west -39 districts -transitional climatic zone -Mediterranean climate (Csa), humid subtropical climate (Cfa) and oceanic climate (Cfb) -in summer months, ranges from 20 to 65 mm (1 to 3 in) -warmer, drier and less affected by humidity -80 percent most mornings -29 °C (84 °F) -about fifteen days -between June and August -averaging 1–4 °C (34–39 °F) -annual average of 130 days -mild, but often wet and unpredictable; chilly winds from the northwest and warm gusts from the south -810 millimeters (31.9 in) per year -seat of government during the late Ottoman period, -Beşiktaş, just south of Beyoğlu, across from BJK İnönü Stadium -"Sublime Porte" or BaabiAli -19th-century -suburb of the economic and commercial centers in European Istanbul -a third of the city's population -built overnight -1.5 million people -postal services, schools, garbage collection -through privatization of public owned functions and businesses -private companies and corporations -non-profit organizations or associations -the 1970s -more competition and lower prices -Cato Institute -the electricity industry -2007–2008 -Emmanuelle Auriol and Michel Benaim -if public safety is at stake -because "regulators or 'experts' might misrepresent consumers' tastes and needs." -As long as companies are averse to incompatible standards -Central governments -through government operations or leasing them to private businesses -through land-use, zoning, environmental and other regulations -Selling off or leasing lands -Devolution of control to regional or local governments -Libertarian socialism -converting present-day private productive property into common or public goods -Libertarian socialism is opposed -left anarchism -free association -No one is in charge of internet, and everyone is. -Voluntary boards -No one is in charge of internet, and everyone is. -Wikis -Smartphones -Norbert Wiener, Marshall McLuhan and Buckminster Fuller -egalitarian and free-market libertarian -free software and creative commons -"electronic frontier" -1960s -Bruce M. Owen -goods and services -work very efficiently -regulation -usually, but not always -the exercise of power -the legitimacy of most forms of economically significant private property -direct democracy -capitalist property relations -anarchism -E. F. Schumacher -"design for the other 90 percent" -1977 -capital-intensive -"intermediate technology" -most varieties of anarchism -the peasantry and yeomanry -Thomas Muenzer -Gerrard Winstanley -1642 -"industrial democracy," -democratically organised workers' associations -"Representative government -Figueras -the First Spanish Republic -Gabriel Kolko -The Federal Reserve Act of 1913 -the big New York City firms -Theodore Roosevelt -Woodrow Wilson -inadequate financial resources -too complex -higher enforcement costs -standardized, routine -If there is a loss of economies of scale -1961 -Cities and the Wealth of Nations -secede -The Question of Separatism: Quebec and the Struggle over Sovereignty -large-scale redevelopment projects -most of Aragon, parts of the Levante and Andalusia, as well as in the stronghold of Anarchist Catalonia -the anarchist territories during the Spanish Revolution and the Free Territory during the Russian Revolution -Free Territory of Ukraine -1936 -autocratic elite -corrupt local elites -civil servants -patronage -hidden decision-making -centralized power -19th century -Friedrich von Hayek -Adam Smith -without explicit agreement or coordination by individuals who use prices as their guide -The individual right to property -decentralized manner, -Advancing technology -auto -infrastructure planning -Advancing technology -Executives and managers +Journal of Geriatric Internal Medicine +In almost all races +Snow crystals +February 2, 1653 +ten days +top-down +Media Center +by subtle differences +if "(José) GARCÍA Torres" and "(María) ACOSTA Gómez" had a child named Pablo +selling their captives or prisoners of war +vwo +50 +January 1526 centralizing and decentralizing information technology -centralizing +derivations in the limited systems +communism +straddling the Bosphorus strait between the Sea of Marmara and the Black Sea +printing +the major precursor of cardiovascular disease +Thirty-one +was destroyed by fire +pluralistic politics and representative government +Monin and Miller +an achromatic doublet (or achromat) +points +24 April 1915 +Utrecht +Chetniks +South India +In winter the temperature often falls below 0 °C (32 °F) +quantification theory +central Europe +within a cyclone's comma head and within lake effect precipitation bands +US Department of Housing and Urban Development +armed gameskeepers +National Research Council decentralizing -analysis of the specific situation -Stephen Cummings +1934 +President John F. Kennedy's Presidential Commission on the Status of Women released its report on gender inequality +The incident divided the Armenian community, as ARF sympathizers established congregations independent of the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin +Bachelor of Ayurveda, Medicine and Surgery B.A.M.S +First-order logic +saxophone +the insured, the policyholder or a beneficiary +Oxford Classical Texts +$9 +the organic derivatives +last, first middle," +race for the Marine Forces Trophy +1907 +the New World +the Minor Outlying Islands +The Mediterranean climate +sphingosine +Cistercian Order +the establishment of the Turkish Republic in 1923 +placed after the personal or given name +Over 100 +readability of formulas +freelance +Byzantium +167 +Europeans +Facharzt +President John F. Kennedy's Presidential Commission on the Status of Women released its report on gender inequality +job creation +18-21 million +an unspecified variable is registered as a variant type +U.S. government +1989 +statutory +different scholars emphasize different features +1898 +contact with other skaters, sticks, pucks, the boards, and the ice itself +new deposits of tin were discovered in Colombia +hypothetical decrees of a perfectly rational being +10,000 km +neuroeducation, neuroethics, and neurolaw +1912 +Republicans +Algonquian +the Metropolitan Executive Committee +real- or near-real-time applications. +puppet Independent State of Croatia +Penn State +0.66% +powerful mayor, weak council +64 percent +Rim Fire +University of Pittsburgh Applied Research Center +molecular level +finding common ground between believers and nonbelievers +patronymic, normally a Spanish patronymic (i.e. from the Castilian language) +500MB +WNYC +the Nevadan orogeny +the caste system +Rotterdam +DJ Prime and Mr. Brown +simple isoprenoids that function as antioxidants and as precursors of vitamin A +8 +during the 1930s and 1940 +the C soprano and C melody +environmental +The U.S. Federal Reserve +women's consciousness-raising groups +1918 +three +electric outages +91 percent +an SEC official +9% +informal +extremely complex +secondary metabolites and natural products 1983 -Cornell University -devolving responsibilities to regional or local governments -"welfarist" -systems theory -United Nations Development Programme -the people themselves -synergistic processes of interaction -Norman Johnson -Los Alamos National Laboratory -connectivity -1999 -If each agent is connected -problems of centralized systems -government, -economic decline -minorities -international pressure -the principle of subsidiarity -the lowest or least centralized -a system of co-responsibility -overall quality and effectiveness -the democratic voice -local representative authorities with actual discretionary powers -local efficiency, equity and development -Earth Institute -with new forms of participation, consultation, and partnerships -diversity -Norman L. Johnson -decentralized -Diversity -Decentralized -An OECD study -because different studies of it use different definitions and measurements -amount of decentralization, especially politically -single dimension of autonomy, interrelationships of various dimensions of decentralization -efficiency -long term strategics -hands on training -by having the freedom to exercise their own initiative and creativity -profitable -in terms of centralization and decentralization -1910 -Yildiz Atasoy -Persian king Darius -Christopher K. Chase-Dunn and Thomas D. Hall -Economic and/or political decentralization -prevent or reduce conflict -Dawn Brancati -peace -decentralization, management by objectives, contracting out, competition within government and consumer orientation. -Government decentralization -territorial -divesting of the function entirely through privatization. -pluralistic politics and representative government -giving citizens, or their representatives, more influence in the formulation and implementation of laws and policies -may require constitutional or statutory reforms -to give citizens or their elected representatives more power. -decentralizing revenue raising and/or expenditure of moneys to a lower level of government while maintaining financial responsibility -fiscal federalism -unitary, federal and confederal governments -where the central government gives too much or too little money to the lower levels -The processes of decentralization -costs and benefits -the United Nations Development Programme -The processes of decentralization -chart-formatted -top-down -bottom-up -political values -shift deficits downwards -top-down -bottom-up -increase -mutually desired -mutually desired -decentralisation is the process of redistributing or dispersing functions, powers, people or things away from a central location or authority -centralization, especially in the governmental sphere, is widely studied -The meaning of decentralization may vary in part because of the different ways it is applied. -group dynamics and management science in private businesses and organizations, political science, law and public administration, economics and technology -The word "centralization" came into use in France in 1794 -The word "decentralization" came into usage in the 1820s. -"Centralization" entered written English in the first third of the 1800s -a push towards decentralization...[but became,]in the end, an extension of centralization. -In 1863 retired French bureaucrat Maurice Block wrote an article called “Decentralization” for a French journal -anti-state political activists calling themselves "anarchists", "libertarians," and even decentralists -Ideas of liberty and decentralization were carried to their logical conclusions during the 19th and 20th centuries -Tocqueville was an advocate -it increases the opportunities for citizens to take interest in public affairs -Decentralization -large-scale industrial production for destroying middle class shop keepers -The decentralist movement attracted Southern Agrarians like Robert Penn Warren, as well as journalist Herbert Agar -Ralph Borsodi, Wendell Berry, Paul Goodman, Carl Oglesby, Karl Hess, Donald Livingston, Kirkpatrick Sale -increased property ownership and a return to small scale living -Leopold Kohr, author of the 1957 book The Breakdown of Nations -“Whenever something is wrong, something is too big” -“anticipatory democracy.” -Alvin Toffler published Future Shock (1970) and The Third Wave (1980) -Naisbitt's 1982 book “Megatrends” was on The New York Times Best Seller list for more than two years and sold 14 million copies. -Project and program planners -planning, financing, and management -national and local managers and officials -centralization and decentralization -There is no one blueprint -careful, rational, and orderly -whether they support or oppose decentralization -during times of economic and political crisis -explicit -silent decentralization -policy innovations -China and Russia -asymmetric -political, economic and administrative -provinces or states -ethnic -bicameral -The composition and powers of the Senate -Australian Senate -There is no constitutional requirement for the election of senators to take place at the same time as those for members of the House of Representatives -election of senators -the Liberal/National Coalition government -25 seats -six -the Palmer United Party, the Australian Motoring Enthusiast Party, the Liberal Democrats, the Family First Party -18 -the Abbott Liberal government -Turnbull Liberal government -the Liberal/National Coalition, the Australian Greens, and Nick Xenophon -18 March 2016 -the Senate -group voting tickets -optional preferential voting, along with party logos on the ballot paper -first 12 -informal -as many boxes as they wish -Australia -Australia Constitution Act -the Senate -the Senate -two -the Senate and House of Representatives -1949 -1911 -1909 -abandon the bill or continue to revise it -section 57 -the entirety -the entirety -1974 -the Australian Constitution -reject supply bills or defer their passage -contentious and powerful -the Australian Constitution -revenue appropriated through taxation +on the African coast +party's leading publicist +gravity +a major transform fault 1975 -The ability to block supply -Gough Whitlam -November -Governor-General -over 80 -computer -Above the line voting -three -98% -to scrutinise government activity -2005 -The vigour of this scrutiny has been fuelled -it sparked a debate -The Australian Democrats, a minor party -bells ring throughout the parliament building for four minutes -the doors are locked -according to the side of the chamber on which they sit -around eight minutes -their absence does not affect the outcome of the vote. -a tied vote is a real prospect -the question is resolved in the negative -the Clerk of the Senate decides the outcome by the drawing of lots -Section 23 of the Constitution -conventions -party discipline -a conscience vote -highlighted by the rarity -party whip -more likely in the Senate than in the House of Representatives -1996 -the importance of backbenchers in party policy deliberations -the government withdrew its Migration Amendment +were captured in endemic warfare between African states +Hrant Bagratyan +Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu +Member of the Standing Committee of the Central Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China +Meeteis, Nagas, Kukis +overrunning snow +15° to 20° counter clockwise and clockwise respectively +because an interpretation on its own does not determine the truth value of such a formula +subdivisions of a county in 20 states +The report, which revealed great discrimination against women in American life, several government senators had been critical -increased emphasis on internal differences -most Senate votes cast in Western Australia were subject to a formal recount -5 April -3 Liberal, 1 Labor, 1 Green, 1 Palmer -28 February 2014 -changed the last two predicted WA Senate spots -State Parliament -the same party -proceed -State Governor -fourteen days -equal -"one vote one value" -smaller states -Prime Minister Paul Keating -Senate -House -51% -57% -House -House -50 to 60 -sitting fortnights -autumn -winter -the first sitting day of May -three -the government's budget and operations -all senators -files and records of previous governments -committees -before the Pleistocene, instead of the Baltic Sea, there was a wide plain around a great river -the Eridanos -Several Pleistocene glacial episodes scooped out the river bed into the sea basin -the Eemian Sea -was caused by the weight of ice -The uplift is about eight millimetres per year -depth of the sea are diminishing -In the area, the former seabed is only gently sloping -post-glacial rebound -the ASCOBANS -Atlantic white-sided dolphins and harbor porpoises inhabit the sea -bottlenose dolphins, orcas, and beaked whales +deep, vigorous convection +Bruce M. Owen +arterial compliance +From 1942 till after 1944 +Greek +about half a million foreign tourists enter the city by sea each year. +"Rodríguez Zapatero" is not considered one surname +2005 +techniques of close reading without reference to cultural, ideological, moral opinions +Supreme Court +Kaysar-i Rûm +publications and grants humpback whales -Atlantic grey whales -Approximately 100,000 km2 (38,610 sq mi +The report, which revealed great discrimination against women in American life, +historian +87 percent +final year +both of her mother's surnames or the mother's first surname followed by any of the surnames of the mother's parents or grandparents +three military academies +2010s +Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery +"The Republic of Armenia recognizes the exclusive historical mission of the Armenian Apostolic Holy Church as a national church +a set of n-tuples of elements of the domain of discourse +experience with guerrilla warfare +philosophy +a fellowship +Reductionism and Epiphenomenalism +Mongolian People's Republic +thin +it enhances group survival +several simple lenses (elements) +6.35% +1885 +the greatest crimes +the Baltic Fennic peoples and the Hungarians +the Georgia Colony +Luis Paz y Miño +partial or complete melting +one The more saline (and therefore denser) water remains on the bottom -This leads to decreased oxygen concentrations -It is mainly bacteria that grow in it -hydrogen sulfide -the Great Belt Bridge in Denmark (completed 1997) and the Øresund Bridge-Tunnel -the Øresund Bridge-Tunnel provides for navigation of large ships -The Baltic Sea is the main trade route for export of Russian petroleum. -the slow exchange of water -international environmental and maritime law -1992 -17 January 2000 -all the states bordering on the Baltic Sea, and the European Community -Measures are also taken in the whole catchment area of the Baltic Sea to reduce land-based pollution -1304 -the Baltic Sea -2.83 m (9 ft 3 in) -2002 -1872 -fast ice -icebreakers -15 m -Offshore of the landfast ice -fast ice -east of the Hel Peninsula on the Polish coast and west of the Sambia Peninsula in Kaliningrad Oblast -The Bay of Pomerania -Between Falster and the German coast -the Kattegat and Skagerrak strait in the North Sea -underneath the ice -Baltic ringed seal (Pusa hispida botnica) -algae -The ice cover -reproducing -Danish straits -brackish water -salinity permeation principle -anti-clockwise -40 to 70 m -William Derham -This description meant that the whole of the Baltic Sea was covered with ice. -ice formation around southern Sweden and even in the Danish straits -the Gulf of Bothnia and Gulf of Finland are frozen, in addition to coastal fringes in more southerly locations such as the Gulf of Riga -the 18th-century -45% of its surface area -70 cm (28 in) for landfast sea ice. The thickness decreases farther south. -February or March -The remainder of the Baltic does not freeze during a normal winter, with the exception of sheltered bays and shallow lagoons such as the Curonian Lagoon. -3.5% -much lower than that of ocean water (which averages 3.5%) -one-fortieth -hydrate -1.0% and 1.5% -Świnoujście harbour -315,000 km2 (122,000 sq mi) -20 -1987 -400,000 km2 (150,000 sq mi) -two-hundred -South -decreases -Gulf of Bothnia -temperature gradient -the eighteenth century -Sweden's defeat -the Great Northern War -Baltic -Russia's Peter the Great -the Crimean War -Saint Petersburg -Helsinki -in the Åland Islands +7–9 years +The governor +Hungary +spherical +several 1871 -1945 -The sinking of the Wilhelm Gustloff -retreating soldiers and refugees -(very roughly) 9,000 -airplane wrecks, sunken warships, and other material -chemical weapons -fishermen -231 lb -the Helsinki Commission -2,450 lb -After 1945 -in the late 1980s -the Danish isles -Poles and Russians -eastern -Ostsee -Atlantic -66°N -30°E -Danish islands -Adam of Bremen -a belt -Indo-European root via a Baltic language -Nordic -Basilia -Roman -Tacitus -Suebi tribe -Rhineland area of modern Germany, -brackish -eastern shore -Northern Crusades -The Teutonic Order -Lithuania -Swedes -eastern shore -Northern Crusades -The Teutonic Order -Lithuania -Swedes -Hanseatic League -Lordship over the Baltic Sea -Poland, Denmark, and Sweden -Sweden -Riga -government -The National Association of Insurance Commissioners -insurance providers -standard policy forms and rating loss costs -Insurance Services Office -insurance -How much risk a contract actually transfers -reinsurance -insurer balance -FAS 113 -the National Association of Insurance Commissioners -statutory -Paragraph 12 -10 -discount rate -reasonable or significant -10 -an SEC official -lunch -10/10 -Excess of loss -liability -as a percentage -rate on line -London -Entire Agreement -oral -rights, obligations or benefits -contract -reasonableness and significance -a car or a house -insurance premium -the insured, the policyholder or a beneficiary -insurance policy -the insurance premium -1735 -Charleston -South Carolina -fire insurance -the Philadelphia Contributionship -1792 -Insurance Company of North America -state commissioner of insurance -Formal regulation of the insurance industry -New Hampshire -writing more than one line of insurance -multi-line charters -the 1950s -small, local, single-line mutual companies -laws -United States Supreme Court -1944 -1945 -The United States Congress -the Commerce Clause -new legislation for a dual state and federal system of insurance solvency regulation. -(NAIC) adopted several model reforms for state insurance regulation -risk-based capital requirements, financial regulation accreditation standards and an initiative to codify accounting principles. -waned. -The NAIC acts as a forum for the creation of model laws and regulations. -Each state decides whether to pass each NAIC model law or regulation -each state may make changes in the enactment process -NAIC model acts and regulations provide some degree of uniformity between states -these models do not have the force of law and have no effect unless they are adopted by a state. -The idea of an optional federal charter was first raised after a spate of solvency and capacity -capacity issues plagued property and casualty insurers -in the 1970s. -This OFC concept was to establish an elective federal regulatory scheme that insurers could opt into from the traditional state system -In 2010 -for the insurance industry. -The FIO is authorized to monitor all aspects of the insurance industry and identify any gaps in the state-based regulatory system. -Title V of created the Federal Insurance Office (FIO) in the Department of the Treasury. -the dichotomy between admitted and surplus insurers. -meaning that they have been formally admitted to a state's insurance market by the state insurance commissioner -meaning that they are nonadmitted in a particular state but are willing to write coverage there. -Surplus line insurers are supposed to underwrite only very unusual or difficult-to-insure risks. -maintain "export lists" of risks -Texas -immediately "export" them to the out-of-state surplus market -no coverage available whatsoever from any admitted insurer in the state. -Although surplus line insurers are still regulated by the states in which they are actually admitted -the policy will usually be written on a nonstandard form -not from the Insurance Services Office -its insureds in states in which it is nonadmitted will not enjoy certain types of protection available to insureds in states in which the insurer is admitted. -the choice is usually between a surplus line insurer or no coverage at all -Only the smallest insurers -as insurance groups -they consist of holding companies which own several admitted and surplus insurers -There are dramatic variations from one insurance group to the next -GEICO's seven insurance companies -deposited with one of those seven insurance companies (the one that actually wrote their policy) -Similarly, any claims against the policy are charged to the issuing company -But as far as most layperson customers know, they are simply dealing with GEICO -it is more difficult to operate an insurance group -employees must be painstakingly trained to observe corporate formalities so that courts will not treat the entities in the group as alter egos of each other. -all insurance policies and all claim-related documents must consistently reference the relevant company within the group -claim payments must be carefully recorded against the books of the correct company. -is completely formal -so that it can be mechanically determined whether a given expression is legal -terms -formulas -strings of symbols -logical symbols -always have the same meaning -non-logical symbols -meaning varies by interpretation -and -there is a unique parse tree -readability of formulas -colons -proof of unique readability -Polish notation -punctuation symbols -it is hard for humans to read -compact and elegant -infix -first-order -∀x∃y L(x,y) -8 -9 and 10 -used to demonstrate, on a purely syntactic basis -one formula is a logical consequence of another formula. -Hilbert-style deductive systems, natural deduction, the sequent calculus, the tableaux method -are often called derivations in proof theory -They are also often called proofs -one common rule of inference is the rule of substitution -then φ[t/x] (often denoted φ[x/t]) -one can conclude φ[t/x] from φ provided that no free variable of t becomes bound -If some free variable of t becomes bound, then to substitute t for x it is first necessary to change the bound variables of φ -by renaming the bound variable x of φ to something else, say z -which will be false in many interpretations. The problem is that the free variable x of t became bound during the substitution. -The intended replacement can be obtained by renaming the bound variable x of φ to something else, say z -The substitution rule -It is entirely syntactical -It has (syntactically defined) limitations on when it can be applied -because of interactions between free and bound variables that occur during syntactic manipulations of the formulas involved in the inference rule. -a list of formulas, each of which is a logical axiom -a hypothesis that has been assumed for the derivation at hand, or follows from previous formulas via a rule of inference -The logical axioms consist of several axiom schemas of logically valid formulas -The rules of inference enable the manipulation of quantifiers. -Typical Hilbert-style systems have a small number of rules of inference, along with several infinite schemas of logical axioms. -First-order logic -first-order predicate calculus -(non-logical) objects -the use of sentences that contain variables -quantification theory -quantified variables -First-order logic -first-order predicate calculus, the lower predicate calculus -quantification theory, and predicate logic -does not use quantifiers -quantification theory -propositional logic -variables -linguistics -quantified variables -a collection of formal systems -mathematics, philosophy, linguistics, and computer science -first-order predicate calculus -It allows the use of sentences that contain variables -does not use quantifiers -LHS -RHS -satisfy also formula 5 -formula 5 is not a logical consequence of formula 2 -denotation to all non-logical constants in that language -It also determines a domain of discourse that specifies the range of the quantifiers -formal semantics -Tarskian semantics -a set of n-tuples of elements of the domain of discourse -given an interpretation, a predicate symbol, and n elements of the domain of discourse -an interpretation I(P) of a binary predicate symbol P -if its first argument is less than the second. -does not rely on variable assignment functions -syntactically -so that each new constant symbol is assigned to its corresponding element of the domain -one first adds to the signature a collection of constant symbols -because an interpretation on its own does not determine the truth value of such a formula -a formula with free variables is said to be satisfied by an interpretation if the formula remains true -regardless which individuals from the domain of discourse are assigned to its free variables -saying that a formula is satisfied if and only if its universal closure is satisfied. -Infinitary logic -infinite conjunctions and disjunctions -admit generalized signatures -a tree -with their parse trees -The set of free variables in a formula of Lκω -In other infinitary logics -only finitely -Lκ∞ -Lκλ -first-order logic -several -additional quantifiers and the full semantics -full semantics -no effective deduction system -second-order logic -nodes -compactness theorem -no formula φ(x,y) -directed edges -compactness theorem -Connectedness -more subtle limitations -nodes -directed edges -bad -connected graphs -second -Second-order logic -axiom systems -fewer attractive metalogical properties -the Löwenheim–Skolem theorem -compactness theorem of first-order logic -semidecidable -1937 -1936 -David Hilbert -a negative answer -1937 -David Hilbert -halting -1928 -Alonzo Church -Automated theorem -formal proofs -because the search space can be very large; -computationally infeasible -heuristic functions -Metamath -Mizar and Isabelle -doing simple proof searches -"kernel". -lemmas -The Löwenheim–Skolem theorem -infinitary logics and higher-order logics -categorical -Lindström's theorem -Löwenheim–Skolem theorem -first-order -categorical -metalogical -first-order -Restrictions -a trade-off -derivations in the limited systems -shorter proofs of metalogical results -deductive -shorter -restrictions -deductive -limited -deductive systems -sound -complete -semidecidable -automated theorem -(all provable statements are true in all models -(all statements which are true in all models are provable). -semidecidable +2009 +separate sovereigns +"Mother of the Movement" Betty Friedan +decreased +the mine at Bisie, Democratic Republic of the Congo +Rotterdam's swimming tradition started with Marie Braun aka Zus (sister) Braun +1914 +George W. Bush +extreme forces +The Sunday Times +927 +Roman engineering +Neil +the effective length of the column +7 +forces in compression +280,873 +1882 +the soprano saxophone, alto saxophone, tenor saxophone, and baritone saxophone +Pitt Men's Glee Club +icebreakers +take a crooked piece of iron, and with it draw out the brain through the nostrils +Brazil in 1831 +Great Western Railway +Oxford +governor +external walls, and for hieroglyphs and cartouches +atherosclerosis and inflammation +100Sn +President James Madison Löwenheim–Skolem theorem -much progress has been made in automated theorem proving -No first-order theory -mathematics -Zermelo–Fraenkel set theory -second-order logic -formalization of mathematics into axioms and is studied in the foundations of mathematics -Peano arithmetic -Zermelo–Fraenkel -categorical axiom systems) -second-order logic. -predicate -denoted -takes an entity or entities in the domain of discourse as input and outputs either True or False. -by variables such as p and q -distinguishes first-order logic from propositional logic. -True or False. -these sentences are viewed as being unrelated -(or model) -what each predicate means -of discourse or universe -usually required to be a nonempty set. -entities that can instantiate the variables -arities of function symbols and predicate symbols -2 -1 -ordered pair -two -many-sorted -axiom -unary predicate symbol -domain of discourse -unary predicates -first -first -full first-order -full first-order -first-order theory of cardinality λ -infinite model -models of every infinite cardinality greater than or equal to λ -first-order -Löwenheim–Skolem -nonstandard -continuum -Skolem's paradox -first -finite -Kurt Gödel -model theory -compactness theorem -100 mph -specialty goalie skates -side to side -leg pads -fewer goals in each game and many official rule changes -contact with other skaters, sticks, pucks, the boards, and the ice itself -Blade length, thickness (width), and curvature (rocker/radius (front to back) and radius of hollow (across the blade width) -the overall maneuverability of the skate -1/8 of an inch thick -The curve -easier backhand shots -lifting the puck easier -a long, relatively wide, and slightly curved flat blade -a stronger player -high risk -body check -physical contact -concussions, broken bones, hyperextensions, and muscle strains -20 – 30 mph -Lacerations to the head, scalp, and face -direct trauma +Black Sea +few +initialisms +Asia +Puritans +a significant source of overhead +French +patent encompassed 14 versions of the fundamental design, split into two categories of seven instruments each +mounted cavalry and infantry units +1936 +PowerPC, DEC Alpha and MIPS R4000 +in patients who are at risk for cardiovascular disease +Australia +spoke out against their own party +the Pythagorean formula +as a word +Stephen Foster +aqueducts and roads +D+ +Maryland and Virginia +colon and apostrophe delivering a check from behind -a check to the head -concussion -defensive -attempting to take the puck from an opponent or to remove the opponent from play -Stick checking, sweep checking, and poke checking -Body checking -body checking -2006 -to score a goal by taking a shot. -shoot -Offensive tactics -a shot that redirects a shot or a pass towards the goal from another player -one-timer -Headmanning -Headmanning -Loafing -the act of attacking the opposition in their defensive zone -shooting the puck into the offensive zone and then chasing after it -2–1–2, 1–2–2, and 1–4 -The 1–4 -The 2–1–2 -offensive -Cycling -Pinching -saucer -British -John Franklin -lieutenant governor -soldiers and immigrants -New Brunswick -paintings -the Mi'kmaq -Ottawa -St. Lawrence River -dehuntshigwa'es -King's College School -1844 -chapter XI -1773 -Windsor, Nova Scotia -March 3, 1875 -Victoria Skating Rink -Montreal -nine -2.4 m -1876 -seven -1880 -twelve -field hockey -National teams representing the member federations of the IIHF compete annually in the IIHF Ice Hockey World Championships. -the tournament coincides with the annual NHL Stanley Cup playoffs -For many years, the tournament was an amateur-only tournament, but this restriction was removed, beginning in the 1970s. -Since it is held in the spring, the tournament coincides with the annual NHL Stanley Cup playoffs -Players are not paid to play in the tournament, but insurance and expenses are covered from the tournament revenues. -The 1972 Summit Series and 1974 Summit Series, two series pitting the best Canadian and Soviet players without IIHF restrictions were major successes, -In the spirit of best-versus-best without restrictions on amateur or professional status, the series were followed by five Canada Cup tournaments, -The United States won in 1996 -the 1979 Challenge Cup and Rendez-vous '87. -Canada won in 2004. -age 20 and under -Davos, Switzerland -between Christmas and New Year's Day -European Trophy, Tampere Cup and the Pajulahti Cup -annually -1917 -the Boston Bruins -The Pittsburgh Pirates and the New York Americans -1924 -30 -these teams were divided into two conferences and four divisions -1967 -World Hockey Association -12 -2004-2005 -rapidly rising payroll costs -The owners insisted on the players accepting a salary cap that would slow the rising payroll. -the end of the collective bargaining agreement on September 16, 2012. -"Locked Out." -"The A," -30 -Southern Professional Hockey League -mid-level minor league in the United States with a few players under contract to NHL or AHL teams -the United States and Canada -shinny -2002 -Roulston Lake in Plaster Rock, New Brunswick, Canada -lakes, ponds and artificial outdoor rinks during the winter -no hitting and very little shooting, placing a greater emphasis on skating, puckhandling and passing abilities -104,173 -the University of Michigan -113,411 -The Big Chill at the Big House -to reserve remaining tickets for students -infractions of the rules -penalty box -two minutes -five minutes -short-handed -2005–2006 season -four-minute -major penalty -boarding -visible injury (such as bleeding) -two players being assessed five-minute fighting majors -least three skaters -offending player is ejected from the game -nineteen minutes -both teams will have only four skating players -on a "breakaway" -A penalty shot -penalty shot -A penalty shot -centre red-line -two-line offside pass -play was stopped -centre line -1998 -Montreal -1883 -McGill -Carnival Cup -1886 -1885 -Oxford Dark Blues -6–0 -1895 -Carr-Harris Cup -Players are permitted to "bodycheck -boards surrounding the ice help keep the puck in play and they can also be used as tools to play the puck -Markings on the ice indicate the locations for the faceoff and guide the positioning of players. -Play can be stopped if the goal is knocked out of position. -Lord Stanley of Preston -silver bowl -1893 -Montreal Hockey Club -Stanley Cup -ball -1893 -Malcolm Greene Chace -Baltimore -1896 -five-team -Great Britain -Ligue Internationale de Hockey sur Glace -bandy -International Ice Hockey Federation -three major -offside", "icing", and the puck going out of play. -A player is "offside" if he enters his opponent's zone before the puck itself. -whistles. -sudden death overtime -single five-minute sudden death period -twenty-minute periods -two points -four players (plus a goalie) -two points -one point -three players plus a goalie. -1862 -Windsor, Nova Scotia -The Stannus Street Rink -1897 -The Aberdeen Pavilion -penalty shootout -team with the most goals -sudden death format -two points -Ties no longer occur in the NHL -Boston's Matthews Arena -Northeastern University -Boston Bruins -Madison Square Garden -1968 -the International Professional Hockey League (IPHL) -Western Pennsylvania Hockey League -1904 -1907 +merits are debated +higher altitudes +1.6 million +the surname is placed first +Roni Size, Krust and DJ Die +a factory +13% +Friday Nite Improvs +29 °F (−2 °C) +ranks as world's 6th-largest city proper +Imphal +towards the North Pole +lunch +finite strings to finite strings +Decentralization +Germany. +reflexes, multisensory integration, motor coordination, circadian rhythms, emotional responses, learning, and memory +hypoxemic lung diseases +King, Lord, Virgin, and Death +rave music tended to feature stronger bass sounds and a faster tempo +macro +0.6 to 5.6 °C +hydraulicking +side to side +Civil Rights Act of 1964 +a car or a house +one to nine +El Salvador +"cans" or "tin cans" +estimated 236,000 soldiers +vasoactive agents +sued each other +by a quantitative large-scale meta-analysis of the brain activity changes +were published in year 1958 +new forms of consciousness +toxic +The sinking of the Wilhelm Gustloff +East Atlantic +a type of relation +reciprocity in nature +The PC Settings app +58.6 percent +as many boxes as they wish +security features +Anti-Fascist Council for the National Liberation of Yugoslavia (AVNNOJ) +conservatives +1872 +essentially collapsed +because it is usually placed at the end of a person's given name +4,350 +fourteen days Michigan and Ontario -forward passes -only backward passes were allowed -Before the 1930s -offside rules -six -a line change +Docosahexaenoic acid +Löwenheim–Skolem +113,411 +second-order logic. +Fertile Crescent region +Communists +$54,000 +Pelé +housing to homeless people +Hüseyin Avni Mutlu +the same party +becomes biologically inactive +51,340 +reasonableness and significance +Chapter houses +Rough Tempo +not computable +so that it can be mechanically determined whether a given expression is legal three -at any time during the game -changing on the fly -74 -National Hockey League -The Kontinental Hockey League -The International Ice Hockey Federation -Canada +half-relief +66°N +They have formed splinter groups +600 +Further developments were made by Selmer +German 1st Mountain Division had traveled from Russia by railway +divesting of the function entirely through privatization. +conservation purposes +proceed +the Church has much in common both with the Latin Rite in its externals, +a sense of American unity +a fellow of the relevant specialty is awarded +hydrogen sulfide +doctor of medicine and master of surgery +the governor +men who were interested in mission work +Furstenberg +HUD-VASH program +new skyscrapers +copper +the doctrine defined by Cyril of Alexandria +American +appointed governor and the elected assembly +Juan Domingo Perón +Jeremy Clarkson, A. A. Gill and Bryan Appleyard +new lights +Dutch +anarchism +The Federal government +Semič, in White Carniola, Slovenia +Galatasaray and Fenerbahçe +the Baltic Sea +Doctor of Medicine +1917 and 1918 +no coverage available whatsoever from any admitted insurer in the state. +2003 +approximately $700 billion bailout package (later reduced to $430 billion) for the banking industry +This is considered one of India's "sensitive areas", due to its political troubles and isolated geography. +Umang Lai +"Scottish Focus" +Sunday +the earliest and simplest method for automatic memory management +wine and sugar. +29th +Carnival Cup +2007 +2007–2008 +157.8 million +In 2010 +11,000 BP +full first-order +State Parliament +compressive strength +Englishman John Dollond +northern Dalmatia +Diergaarde Blijdorp +Yugoslav-Italian border +750,000 simple stick and ball games -Montreal -1880s -March 3, 1875 -Canada -The "Big Six" -five -177 -Canadian national team or the United States national team -69 -cheer -fighting -players gets hit hard -10-minute -ice hockey -fighting -amateur -10-minute -ice hockey -cheer -1773 -King Edward III -John Strype -1363 -Juvenile Sports and Pastimes -350 percent -350 percent -Canada -Mid-Atlantic Women's Hockey League -Ice hockey -women -350 percent -Canadian Women's Hockey League -The IIHF -1902 -Montreal and Trois-Rivieres -1920s -1960s -two -shinty -IJscolf -knattleikr -colf or kolf -bandie ball -1969–70 -Lightning -goaltender -Karen Koch -Several -1924 +the Gulf of Bothnia and Gulf of Finland are frozen, in addition to coastal fringes in more southerly locations such as the Gulf of Riga +White House six -Canada -The United States -The 2010 games -penalties -speed up the game of hockey -United States amateur hockey -provides more protection to the players -retreating from the past where illegal hits, fights, and "clutching and grabbing" among players were commonplace -more penalties -provides more protection to the players and facilitates more goals being scored -zero tolerance -delayed penalty -score a goal +personal or cultural values, codes of conduct or social mores +a path to citizenship +as many as 93 +Excess of loss +around 1595 +Parts of the Sunsás Orogen +nonprofit organizations +oral penalty is still assessed to the offending player, but not served -penalty is still enforced even if the team in possession scores -mishandle the puck into their own net -delayed penalty +1996 +15th century +a belt +three dimensions +concurrent +4,421 m +Staten Island +the shores of the Bosphorus +10% +United Peoples Forum +the endorsed candidate and all who meet the threshold appear on the primary ballot +each side believed that it had borne a greater burden than the other +NAIC model acts and regulations provide some degree of uniformity between states +high baffle the team on which the penalty was called cannot control the puck without stopping play, it is impossible for them to score a goal -the team with possession of the puck is allowed to complete the play -2012 -college games, the penalty is still enforced even if the team in possession scores -two to four -calling "offside" and "icing" violations, breaking up fights, and conducting faceoffs -call goals and all other penalties -goal judges, time keepers, and official scorers -one referee and two linesmen -an additional referee is added to aid in the calling of penalties normally difficult to assess by one single referee -IIHF World Championships, the Olympics and in many professional and high-level amateur leagues -Europe -ice hockey is a full contact sport in men's hockey, body checks are allowed so injuries are a common occurrence -helmet (cage worn if certain age or clear plastic visor can be worn) -jill -neck protector -PhD thesis -MD thesis -Diploma of Specialised Studies -Diploma of Specialised Studies -DESC -medical officer candidates -university degree -Sanitätsoffizieranwärter -SfH -federal -three four -first two years -federal medical exam -last year -last year -Facharzt -six -Arzt -Dr. med. -Facharzt -vwo -three -6 -three years -hospitals -United States -teacher of medicine -ancient Scotland -Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery -MD or DM -(hospitals) of the medieval Islamic world -Baghdad -872 -Spain, Persia and the Maghreb -medical students -Doctor of Medicine -England and Scotland -The Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons in New York -mid-19th century -ancient universities of Scotland -United States Medical Licensing Examination -one internship year -four years -three to eight -a fellowship -Medicinae Doctorem et Chirurgiae Magistrum -doctor of medicine and master of surgery -residency -Medical Council of Canada Qualifying Examination -MD -in peer-reviewed journals -Medical Scientist Training Program -first professional degrees -physician-scientist -Howard Hughes Medical Institute -Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery -MD -between four and six years -clinical -MBBS, MBChB, or an equivalent US-MD degree -at least five-years -house officers -doctor -University of Cambridge -portfolio -career's contribution to the science or art of medicine -representing a substantial contribution to medical research -an internal ranking examination -to implement the numerus clausus -biophysics and biochemistry, anatomy, ethics or histology -twice. -theoretical -University of the Philippines College of Medicine -Our Lady of Fatima University -Saint Louis University International School of Medicine -University of Santo Tomas Faculty of Medicine and Surgery -UERMMMC College of Medicine -1994 -Ateneo de Zamboanga University School of Medicine -University of New Mexico -University of Calgary in Canada -5-year -four years -first and second years -second and third years -fourth year -After PGI -MBBS degree -the Postgraduate Institute of Medicine -MBBS degree -theoretical -2–4 years -'master in medicine' courses -graduates are literally 'basic doctors' (basisartsen) -three years -theoretical and clinical study -internships in a wide range of specialities in different clinics clinics -the Dutch -final year -first two -'pre-specialization' -Bachelor of Ayurveda, Medicine and Surgery B.A.M.S -Bachelor of Unani Medicine and Surgery BUMS -Bachelor of Sidha Medicine and Surgery BSMS -6-year -Ayurveda M.D (Ayu) -7 years -1-year -2 years -1897 -100 years -6 years -2 years -1 year -3 years -a year -scholarships -University of Tunis -Tunis, Sfax, Sousse and Monastir -five years. -four -Diplomate of National Board -1912 -three years -the successful completion of an examination -State Medical Councils -After obtaining the first postgraduate degree -Doctor of Medicine -Magister Chirurgiae -DNB (superspecialties) -National Board of Examinations -after high school -7-7.5 years -a certificate in general medicine -Ministry of health and Medical Education of Iran -Medical Council of Iran -the European 6-year model -four-year -over 740 -Bar-Ilan University -Doctor of Medicine -Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery -five years of study -because of the integrated curriculum -a fellow of the relevant specialty is awarded -three years of clinical internship -six years -First Degree of Physician -Doctorate in Medicine program -National Commission for University Evaluation and Accreditation -Medical Title -five and a half years -in a pre-clinical or clinical subject of a non-surgical nature -MD -Master of Surgery (MS) -MBBS -Australian MBBS -Australian Qualifications Framework -British -honorary doctorates -graduates -styling of the degree title -MD +July +the Danish isles +moral principles of a particular tradition, group, or individual. +they also captured native Canary Islanders, the Guanches, to use as slaves +an order to remove Joseph Stalin from his post as General Secretary +Pablo García Acosta +Golden Horn +Bellefield Avenue/Dithridge Street +2004-2005 +deciduous woodland +New Jersey +20 +England +Prime Minister Paul Keating The University of Melbourne -basic medical degree -Level 9 Master's (Extended) degrees -U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development -633,782 -1.35 million -National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty -3.7 percent -Texas, California and Florida -57,849 -12 percent -2.5 million -Just under 8 percent -Eric Garcetti -more than 60,000 -Los Angeles -seven -$100 million -2008 -domestic violence -from the poorer classes to the wealthier classes -2011 -2007 -individuals and families that were homeless, both sheltered and unsheltered -improved considerably -US Department of Housing and Urban Development -2011 -80% -the Coalition for the Homeless, -About half -37 percent -64 percent -said to have family who could house them -Applicants may have faced overcrowding, -Mary Brosnaham, -long-term joblessness -$54,000 -at least half -about a third of the adult workers in New York City -March 2010 -the Bloomberg administration -$37 million -doubt over the legality -15,000 -61% -7,000–10,000 -$200 million -In 2010 -Coalition On Homelessness -29 percent -eighth -$2,544,454 -the suburbs -Social Services -Leah Esguerra -12-week -drop in inappropriate behavior. -3.5 million -HUD -2009 +imaginary unit +the Andes end at the Pacific Ocean +Germany's High Command +About 253,000 tonnes +1999 +through specialized junctions called synapses +Socialist Realism +1644 and 1671 +nervous system +hunter-gatherers +(the Y-axis) +designs for dams +weaker upward motions and less intense precipitation +because the two calls may return different results +Administrative divisions +160 +1927 +cassiterite +It was instrumental in the advancement of Christianity during Roman and Byzantine times +the Social Revolution +food-crop cultivation +profits from slavery +tin +"Regional Advanced Television Infrared Observational Satellite Operational Vertical Sounder Retransmission Service" +subdivide their land between farmers +meaningless +human immunodeficiency virus +Instruments from the so-called "orchestral" series, pitched in C and F, three years -2008 -The San Jose University Library -in-house reading space -computer classes -nonprofit organizations -750,000 +the restrictions were lifted, slavery was allowed +Executives and managers +Semper paratus +Helsinki +Serbs +the doors are locked +Manhattan +September 21, 1938 +The Feminine Mystique +acronym +field of Classics +shops +Section 3 +subduction zone +teacher of medicine +10% +approximately 300,000 +National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) +Li +The most economical ways of mining tin are through dredging, hydraulic methods or open cast mining. +Ties no longer occur in the NHL +Earthquake-proof structures are not necessarily extremely strong +availability of milk +legal marriage +159,994 +Coalescence +the first and third syllables +a thin metal plate +Pitt +seven +another one further down a hierarchy +Tectonic forces +military bands +age 55 +the late 1860s +the father's surname comes first, followed by the mother's surname +PM2.5 is the major focus, in which gradients are used to determine CVD risk +cold, windy and wet +aristocracy and corruption +for the insurance industry. +Windsor, Nova Scotia +May 20, 2009 +the United States and Canada +generate more jobs +50,000 +Wal-Mart +76-95% +The Sunday Times +Eric Garcetti +50 +to reflect their distinct brand identities +was used for flatware from the Bronze Age until the 20th century +people from Connecticut +very low +gender discrimination +Soviet of the Nationalities +90% +early 1943 +1949 +comatic circle +1980s +jobs and the economy +Government decentralization +stripping the -re (or -ri, in the case of a deponent verb) ending from the present infinitive form +cultural backwardness and social atomisation +east-west +Sunoco +focal lengths +Public agenda +first and second years +in some circles, it is still customary for a wife to use her husband's name as reference, +Eleanor Roosevelt High School +Stalin +Latin continued without its natural spoken base +the contribution of the individual +the surname is placed first +May 2005 +the child may have any other combination of the parents' surnames +angular magnification +Fares across modes are integrated, using the contactless Istanbulkart President Obama -Public Law 111-22 or "PL 111-22" -May -homelessness -Executive Branch -1987 -19 -2001 -The United States Interagency Council on Homelessness -ten-year -2010 -White House -U.S. -Chicago -5,922 -Illinois -2007 -McKinney-Vento Act -were not successful -homeless numbers remained stubbornly high -During the 1990s -have been able to reduce chronic homelessness -431,541 -535,447 -families with children -HUD-VASH program -The center takes its name from a homosexual teenager who lived on the streets for much of the 1990s -The center takes its name from a homosexual teenager who lived on the streets for much of the 1990s -Ali Forney was himself murdered by an attacker who has not yet been identified -New York City -Many communities and states across the country have created these plans -2001 -U.S. ICH -Housing First initiatives -criminal victimization rate -109 -Eighteen -15, 16 and 18 -Albuquerque -643,000 -October 1, 2008 and September 30, 2009 -1.56 -44% -skid row -skid row -soup, soap, and salvation -The Bowery Mission -1879 -36 Bowery -New York City Draft Riots -men who were interested in mission work -150 -227–229 Bowery -1980–1991 -federal funds -6% -homelessness -60% decrease in federal spending -public housing and Section 8 -$19 billion -affordable housing -300,000 -8.9 million -emancipated teenagers -Stewart B. McKinney -1994 -nighttime residence -2010 -other third -1.56 million -Nearly two-thirds -middle-aged -one -2004 -prisoner reentry -lack of affordable housing -mental illness -low-paying jobs -87 percent -1980s -75 -a single mother and children -87 percent -68 -male -More than 40 -38 -1.6 million -Denver, Colorado -issues that underlie homelessness -2003 -Denver's infamously cold winters -Now officials have said that this number has risen over the past few years. -Homeless advocate and urban designer -building a Pedestrian village for the adult homeless -Tiger Bay Village -Volusia County -a community garden and orchard -66 percent -60 percent -20 percent -33 percent -40 -as many as 15,000 individuals -Blueprint to End Homelessness -2001 -making panhandling a misdemeanor -faith-based shelters -2013 -$31,000 a year -$10,051 per person per year -$149 million -107 -39,463 -190,207 -by means of a telephone survey -51,340 -50 block area east of downtown Los Angeles -mental illness -substance abuse -Bringing America Home Act -reliable and stable housing -universal -the first city-operated day center for chronically homeless persons -October 2009 -Mayor Thomas Menino of Boston -3,400-square-foot (320 m2) -Woods Mullen Shelter -governmental and non-governmental organizations. -advocating -National Alliance to End Homelessness -creation of policy -3.5 million -$28.5 billion -Helping Other People Everyday -800 -$1.4 billion -Education of homeless youth -Education of homeless youth -The McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act -the stigma of being homeless -behavioral disorders, and lack of attendance in school -Dr. Rebecca T. Brown -Journal of Geriatric Internal Medicine -Journal of Geriatric Internal Medicine -elderly homeless population -homeless -blame them for their situation, and feel that their requests for money or support (usually via begging) are unjustified. In the 1990s -Penn State -familiarity breeds sympathy" and greater support for addressing the problem -physically attractive persons are judged more positively than physically unattractive individuals on various traits -Public Agenda -67 percent of New Yorkers agreed that most homeless people were without shelter -36 percent -everyone has a right to shelter -found support for investments in prevention, rental assistance and permanent housing for the homeless -National Coalition for the Homeless -386 -violence against the homeless -155 -hate crimes -National Coalition for the Homeless -violence against the homeless -386 -155 -hate crimes -1984 -Ending Chronic Homelessness through Employment and Housing -The Bush Administration -$10 million from HUD and $3.5 million from DOL -May 20, 2009 -Homeless Emergency Assistance and Rapid Transition to Housing -Rural Housing Stability Program -amends and reauthorizes the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act -2009 -housing to homeless people -private community-based apartments -people with substance abuse problems or mental health issues -National Alliance to End Homelessness -A Plan, Not a Dream: How to End Homelessness in Ten Years -10-year plans -emergency shelters, soup kitchens and health clinic -June of every year since 2007 -Annual Homeless Assessment Report -Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) -single-night, point-in-time counts of both sheltered and unsheltered homeless populations -The Amen Break -clean and formal -King Tubby, Peter Tosh, Sly & Robbie, Bill Laswell, Lee Perry, Mad Professor, Roots Radics, Bob Marley and Buju Banton -dirty -James Brown, Al Green, Marvin Gaye, Ella Fitzgerald, Gladys Knight & the Pips, Billie Holiday, Aretha Franklin, Otis Redding, the Supremes, the Commodores -Miles Davis -Lead Belly, Robert Johnson, Charlie Patton, Muddy Waters and B.B King -The Winstons -"Amen break" -1988 -Reese/The Reese Project -Tronik House -increased speed -lyrics -Grandmaster Flash, Roger Troutman, Afrika Bambaata, Run DMC, Mac Dre, Public Enemy, Schooly D, N.W.A -1980s and early 1990s -hip-hop -deep sub-bass musical pattern which can be felt physically through powerful sound systems due to the low-range frequencies favoured. -There has been considerable exploration of different timbres in the bass line region -sampled sources or synthesizers -different timbres -160–180 BPM -breakbeat-based -around 130–140 BPM -130 bpm -170–180 range -drop -mixing points -the drop -a more difficult exercise -"rewind" or "reload" or "lift up" -the UK -the drum and bass Ibiza -Brazilian drum and bass -Colombia -twice -jungle -German Drum and Bass DJ The Panacea -German -Raggacore -Darkcore -Linkin Park -quoting -synth and basslines -the United States -Nine Inch Nails, David Bowie -Sony Music and Universal -Roni Size's Full Cycle Records -Roni Size, Krust and DJ Die -have shown very little interest -SoundCloud and MixCloud -Podcasts -over pirate radio -radio and television -YouTube, Dailymotion -BBC Radio 1Xtra -Xtra Bass -development of Drum and Bass -Don FM -abruptly dropped all non-mainstream genres to focus on mainstream EDM -Rough Tempo -early 2000s until 2014 -Tuesday -DJ Prime and Mr. Brown -Expansions -Edge Essential Mix -Digital Empire -From its roots in the UK -Drum and Bass remains most popular in the UK, -hip hop, big beat, dubstep, house music, trip hop, ambient music, techno, rock and pop -breakcore, ragga jungle, hardstep, darkstep, techstep -The major international music labels have shown very little interest in the drum and bass scene. -rave music -beats per minute -heavy basslines and samples of older Jamaican music -hip-hop -rave music tended to feature stronger bass sounds and a faster tempo -By 1994 -junglists -some associations with violence and criminal activity -London -1995 -As the genre became generally more polished and sophisticated technically -jump-up and Hardstep -1995–1997 -techstep -1996–1997 -big beat and hard house -speed garage -high tempos and heavy basslines -grime and dubstep -garage house -Connecticut -New Jersey -Rhode Island -Hartford -Bridgeport -Connecticut -New York -Habits -Cheshire -New Haven -Dutch -Huys de Goede Hoop -Park and Connecticut -1630s -Thomas Hooker -northeast and northwest -Litchfield Green, Lebanon Green (the largest in the state), and Wethersfield Green -Lebanon -tourism -Wethersfield -Fairfield -southwestern -Fairfield -Rye -17th -36 -151 -two-thirds -18 -November -judicial -thirty minutes -Chief Justice of Connecticut -Chase -deciding on the constitutionality of the law or cases -Rhode Island -eight -1960 -the state marshal system -2000 -169 -towns -cities -the Town of Groton -Connecticut -15 -Tolland County -Intragovernmental Policy Division -Office of Planning and Management -15 -in Fairfield County -Republican -suburban towns -Democratic -Democrat -Republican -George H.W. Bush -George W. Bush -governor -1953 -NCAA -2014 -2004 -90 -2008 -place of long tidal river -Mohegan -The Provisions State -1959 -quonehtacut -Connecticuter -Yankee Doodle -CT -Connecticotian -Connecticutensian -western and southern Connecticut -Eastern Connecticut -1790 -the Gold Coast -Cheshire -increase of 75,991 people -5,791 -outside the United States -2005 -census -Hurricane Sandy -three -electric outages -Halloween nor'easter -98 percent -George W. Bush -running mate -five votes -corruption investigation -65 -4.1 percent -the bazooka -weaponry and supplies -Pratt & Whitney -Lend-Lease -political conservatism -Dwight and Noah Webster -1814 -Republican Party -Religious tensions -weapons and supplies -James H. Ward of Hartford -2801 -55,000 -thirty -J. P. Morgan -120,000 -New Haven -"The Consolidated," -steamship lines -1917 and 1918 -war bonds -Connecticut State Council of Defense -running at half capacity -soldiers -September 21, 1938 -"Long Island Express" -Old Saybrook and Stonington -Heavy rainfall -estimated 50,000 -Rhode Island -five -Puerto Ricans +132 urban acres +1991 +Windows 8 and Windows Server 2012 +1990 +1950 +1867 +before the second call +biomedical research, +justice +1989 +it is not unusual for compound surnames to be composed of separate words not linked by a hyphen +the rising air motion of a large-scale flow of moist air across the mountain ridge +rapidly rising payroll costs +raised blood sugar +Queen Elizabeth +Mirror neurons +various moral dilemmas Irish -French Canadians -Roman Catholic -Long Island Sound -the Catholic Church -96,506 -West Hartford -$60,847 -New York -third -7.32 percent -Hartford -All wages -New York and Massachusetts -a credit -they may owe taxes -the Connecticut tax exceeds the amount withheld by the other jurisdiction -6.35% -clothing under $50 -July 1, 2011 -no additional sales taxes -one week -All real and personal property -$300 -Connecticut -New Jersey -20% +development of socialism Finance and insurance -gross domestic product -16.4 -15 -The Hartford -Foxwoods Resort Casino and Mohegan Sun -170,000 jobs annually -Native American reservations -more than $14 billion in economic activity -Oyster harvesting -25 million pounds -19th century -the last oyster sloop built in Connecticut. -the oyster capital of the world -the Connecticut Turnpike -Connecticut Route 15 -A series of terrible crashes -U.S. Route 7 -56% -2,400 -the Atlantic Ocean -humid continental climate -subtropical climate -38 °F (3 °C) -29 °F (−2 °C) -50–60 inches (1,300–1,500 mm) -20–25 inches (510–640 mm) -Interstate 84 -81 °F (27 °C) -summer -87 °F (31 °C) -30 -one tornado per year -Adriaen Block -1614 -"House of Hope" -Versche Rivier -Algonquian -1633 -the Connecticut Colony at Hartford -Thomas Hooker -1636 -The Fundamental Agreement of the New Haven Colony -the "Constitution State" -1662 -King Charles II -the "Great Compromise" -the Connecticut Charter of 1662 -1787 -Roger Sherman and Oliver Ellsworth -the Virginia Plan and the New Jersey Plan -Virginia and New Jersey -the early 20th century -2018 -Central Corridor Rail Line -the Metro-North Railroad's New Haven Line -the Metropolitan Transportation Authority -Dannel Malloy -January 5, 2011 -Ella Grasso -Nancy Wyman -1818 -Mental Health and Addiction Services -Public Utility Regulatory Authority -Veterans Affairs -Emergency Management and Public Protection -Energy & Environmental Protection -declaring an affiliation to a political party -58% -about 8 unaffiliated for every 7 in the Democratic Party -for every 4 in the Connecticut Republican Party -town and/or city, state legislative districts for both houses, Congressional districts, and statewide -In almost all races -Several processes -on the basis of their respective performances in the most recent election covering the same constituency -every four years -the benefit of appearing in one of the top two rows on the ballot -belonging to the two parties that polled best, statewide, in the gubernatorial column -below major parties -a party convention for the office's constituency -members of the town party committee +Mid-Atlantic Women's Hockey League +Tin melts at a low temperature of about 232 °C (450 °F) +the late 4th century +Louis Andriessen +The player may also use alternate fingerings to bend the pitch +suburb of the economic and commercial centers in European Istanbul +snow +the saxophone family +Ice hockey +lowering taxes and reducing regulation +writing +Chetniks +between 900,000 and 1,150,000 +different programming languages +Indonesian military +flight suits +6–0 +French academics +Neurology +several hundred +to scrutinise government activity +Representatives or Senators +its diversity of plants and an annual tulip festival +119 +Peace Corps +Bulgaria +strict moralistic principles +HIV +Brian McHale +Communities +The curve +Patagonian orocline. +Josip Broz Tito +morality +Tiridates III +7,000 +ball +Rainforests +District councils +Greek Sing choose to endorse a candidate -the endorsed candidate and all who meet the threshold appear on the primary ballot -most winning candidates -"professionally managed" primary-election campaign -in a situation such as his win, the top "three" parties in the governor's race all became major parties -Lowell Weicker -Connecticut Western Reserve -people from Connecticut -Pennsylvania and New York -Northwest Territory -U.S. government -General Sir Henry Clinton -Redding encampment -winter encampment at Valley Forge, Pennsylvania -supply depot in Danbury -"Connecticut's Valley Forge." -Hudson River -Greenwich Bay -war -New Netherland -Westmoreland County -English Crown -Massachusetts Bay -void in political affairs -Charles II -New Haven -with a raid on a Pequot village +northeast and northwest +1898 +Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (RSFSR) +love, kindness, and social intelligence +Mercantilism +about 8 unaffiliated for every 7 in the Democratic Party +colour section +majority +Sterol lipids +quantified variables +400,000 km2 (150,000 sq mi) +a list of formulas, each of which is a logical axiom +is defined by an ordered pair of perpendicular lines (axes), a single unit of length for both axes, and an orientation for each axis. +war bonds +Immorality +1776 +BBC Radio 1Xtra +flags made for or by the U.S. federal government +the flag should be repaired or replaced +developed out of modernism and are primarily concerned with questions of ontology +The revolts +Mao Zedong +27% +Selling off or leasing lands +John Witherow +first-order +Penn Station and Grand Central Terminal +non-religious people +English +the pronunciation is reflected graphically by the capitalization scheme +Protestant +sociocultural evolution +1840 +Plants that rapidly shed their seeds on maturity +value +1532 +Medical Council of Iran +compiler +Schenley High School +Secondary +The meaning of decentralization may vary in part because of the different ways it is applied. +journals +an ordered triplet of lines (axes) that are pair-wise perpendicular, have a single unit of length for all three axes and have an orientation for each axis. +the 1990s +parish +the Rhine–Meuse–Scheldt river delta +infrastructure planning +examine interactions between the nervous system and the endocrine and immune systems +summer +Habits laid siege to Saybrook Colony's garrison -Pequot village on the Mystic River -between 300 and 700 Pequots -Fairfield -inflected language -root meaning and markers -markers specifying the grammatical use of the word -compact sentence elements -amō -changed by changing the markers -The semantic element does not change -express different grammatical functions -he or she will love -All natural languages contain ambiguities -five -a group of nouns with similar inflected forms -the genitive singular form of the noun -The fourth declension, with a predominant ending letter of u -the fifth declension -First and second declension adjectives -like second declension nouns -like a regular second declension neuter noun -like first declension nouns -Latin belongs to one of four main conjugations -the last letter of the verb's present stem -a class of verbs with similar inflected forms -stripping the -re (or -ri, in the case of a deponent verb) ending from the present infinitive form -Irregular verbs -a consonant -the i-stems -like the 4th conjugation -Indo-European languages. -six -two -the present, imperfect, and future tenses +US$1.1 billion +call the same subprogram without fear of interfering with each other +tribal morality +1304 +incorporated cities, towns, villages, and other types of municipalities the perfect, pluperfect, and future perfect tenses -272 BC -adopting features of Greek culture -hellenization -the Romans began hellenizing, or adopting features of Greek culture, -Sebastiane and The Passion of the Christ +the water cycle +timber +6 +15 +government +high tempos and heavy basslines +2.3 million +perfect nuclear family image depicted and strongly marketed at the time, she wrote, did not reflect happiness and was rather degrading for women. +granite rock +international pressure +metalogical +Expansions +July 2010 +mega-dumps +B♭ soprano saxophone +Robert G. Heft +London Metal Exchange (LME) +The Bolshevik government +1.56 +fast ice +Windows XP +Body checking +681,692 +moral philosophy +transverse +nisbah +merchandise for the sake of realism +estrogen +In the very elderly +Roman dominion +1637 +1970 +triple (X, Y, F) +Reinvigorating the labor movement +nanoscale +death appears to be long +Virginia and Maryland +1500 to 1750 +music and dance +Yosemite National Park +After PGI for the benefit of those who do not understand Latin. -for the sake of realism -Semper paratus -goddess of truth, -Salus populi suprema lex esto -To the stars through hardships -between long and short vowels -the apex -⟨I⟩ -macron -diphthongs -a sequence of two vowels in different syllables in aēnus -sequences of two vowels, or of a vowel and one of the semivowels -cuius [ˈkʊj.jʊs] -Old Italic alphabet -Phoenician alphabet -Celtic -Vietnamese -unity in phonological forms and developments -Christian (Roman Catholic) culture +truth is found through methodical, disciplined inquiry +the United States (with a high religiosity level) and "theistic" Portugal. +under French influence +increased over time +ranked among the top public universities in the United States +temperature gradient +In 1945 +$37 million +people of France +before the Pleistocene, instead of the Baltic Sea, there was a wide plain around a great river +seen are "squashed" flatter +CT +55,000 +insufficient size studies +formal semantics +A woman would then adopt her husband's full surname after marriage. +seven +Davos, Switzerland +diphtheria +US$30 million +interest groups +extending full affirmative action rights to women +from exposure to second-hand smoke. +relatively small +pulmonary hypertension with left heart disease +Structural engineers +Massachusetts Institute of Technology +Europe +Tropical rainforests +Reese/The Reese Project +1946 Moorish conquest of Spain -711 -largely cut off from the unifying influences -Medieval Latin -Latin continued without its natural spoken base -Holy Roman Empire and its allies -Germanic and Slavic nations -incipient Romance languages -auxiliary verbs -linguistic cohesion -many words have been changed -Medieval Latin -The Renaissance -Renaissance Humanists -Renaissance Humanists -producing revised editions of the literary works -15th century -Catholic Church -Tridentine Mass -Canon law -Vatican City -Latin -75 BC -Vulgar Latin -Classical Latin -comic playwrights -3rd century AD -several hundred -Loeb Classical Library -printing -Oxford Classical Texts -field of Classics -Meissner's -fairy tales -the Grinch -Latin -to garner popular interest -Old French -Saint Augustine of Canterbury -Greek -inkhorn terms -Latin -Roman dominion -Pliny the Elder -Galen -Roman engineering -legal Latin terms -the Classics -Instruction in Latin -Wheelock's Latin: The Classic Introductory Latin Course -1956 -Harvard University -as a means of both spoken and written communication -at the Vatican and at some institutions in the U.S. -The British Cambridge University Press -The British Cambridge University Press -the adventures of a mouse called Minimus -publications and grants -Via Facilis, a London-based charity -National Junior Classical League -more than 50,000 members -the American Classical League -some time before the Trojan War -There are no hard and fast rules of classification -different scholars emphasize different features -by subtle differences -the styles used by the writers of the Roman Catholic Church -the speech was uniform either diachronically or geographically -The Decline of the Roman Empire -in Christian writings of the time -This language was more in line with the everyday speech -vernacular Latin was free to develop on its own -computability theory -because the number of possible algorithms is -not computable -busy beaver function -Use of f(A) -square brackets -f−1[B] and f−1[b] -the domain is also an element of the domain -first applying f to x to obtain y = f(x) and then applying g to y to obtain z = g(y) -reading the notation as "g of f" or "g after f" -when the codomain of f is the domain of g -the function on the right, f, acts first and the function on the left, g acts second, reversing English reading order -overriding union -(f ⊕ g): (X ∪ W) → Y -associative operation -it has the empty function as an identity element -X → Y, by [X → Y], or by YX -|YX| = |Y||X| -enumerative combinatorics -uncountably many functions -function f from X to Y -there is exactly one element y -one ordered pair -x in X -the ordered pair (x, y) is contained in the subset -f. +the abundance of trees sgn(x) -the argument -The parentheses around the argument -v(t) -the specification of the domain and codomain -clear -f and g -f(x) = 4 − x -the maximal possible domain -a dot -a special symbol -{\displaystyle \scriptstyle a(\cdot )^{2}} -functional nature -variable -Functions -finite strings to finite strings -computable functions -Euclidean algorithm -two positive integers -function -read "f of x" -The output of a function f corresponding to an input x is denoted by -f(x) -Functions -the graph of the function -a table -a formula or algorithm -domain -codomain -graph -range -function spaces -a red triangle, a yellow rectangle, a green hexagon, and a red square -"color-of-the-shape function" -the "color-of-the-shape function" -to exactly one color -the argument -codomain -domain -value -two different ways -domain -codomain -codomain is not specified -set of ordered pairs with no specific codomain -f maps X into Y -f: X → Y -ordered triple -a type of relation -a set of ordered pairs -triple (X, Y, F) -a type of correspondence -correspondence -single-valued relations -recursion theory and functional analysis -x = 0 -a partial function -structure-preserving functions -category theory -well-defined function -empty function -requirement for sets to form a category -ordered pair -ordered pair -at ordered pair (0, 0) -signed distances from the origin -Cartesian -its origin -two -its origin -coordinate axis or just axis -Cartesian coordinates -n Cartesian coordinates -perpendicular -three mutually perpendicular planes -René Descartes -17th century -geometric shapes (such as curves) -algebraic -Cartesian coordinates -analytic -the concept of the graph of a function -Cartesian coordinates -1637 -did not -Pierre de Fermat -Frans van Schooten and his students -1649 -in parentheses and separated by commas -The origin -by the letters (x, y) in the plane, and (x, y, z) in three-dimensional space -This custom comes from a convention of algebra -given quantities -height -toward the viewer, biased either to the right or left -the presumed viewer or camera perspective -pointing "out of the page" towards the viewer or camera -right-handedness -(the Y-axis) -the X-axis -the Y-axis +small, poorly armed and without any infrastructure +Richmond, Fredericksburg and Potomac Railroad +Sweden +1917 +1807 +350 percent +Nothnagle Log House +insurance providers (the X-axis) +strains that retained their edible seeds longer +Communist Party of Yugoslavia (KPJ) +her mother Ma Braun θ -up -the x- and y-axes -horizontal -two -'right-handed' and 'left-handed' -a three-dimensional object is represented on the two-dimensional screen -the "middle" axis -The axis pointing downward -parallel -The red circle -right-handed -between a convex cube a -convex cube and a concave "corner" -ambiguity -imagine the x-axis as pointing towards the observer -x-axis and y-axis -versors -standard basis -x,y,z -There is no natural interpretation -z = x + iy -(0, 1) -imaginary unit -Cartesian -three -spatial size -origin -Kilometers -10,000 km -Prime Meridian -longitude = −73.985656, latitude = 40.748433 -40,000/2π -spatial apps -four or more variables -kilograms, seconds, pounds, etc -geometry of Cartesian coordinates -graph of a function or relation -sketch -calculus -a function or relation -origin -negative -one -its distance from O, -a straight line -length -An orientation -the origin -points -rectangular coordinate system -oblique -the x-axis is taken to be horizontal and the y-axis is taken to be vertical. -horizontal -vertical -rectangular coordinate system -the origin for both -is defined by an ordered pair of perpendicular lines (axes), a single unit of length for both axes, and an orientation for each axis. -oblique" axes, that is, axes that did not meet at right angles -an ordered triplet of lines (axes) that are pair-wise perpendicular, have a single unit of length for all three axes and have an orientation for each axis. -a single unit of length -perpendicular -a number line -a Cartesian plane. -pairs of real numbers -lists -Cartesian coordinates are unique and non-ambiguous -allow axes that are not perpendicular to each other, and/or different units along each axis -by projecting the point onto one axis along a direction that is parallel to the other axis -the computations of distances and angles -the Pythagorean formula -symbol Sn -10 stable isotopes -germanium and lead -obtained chiefly from the mineral cassiterite -has two possible oxidation states, +2 and the slightly more stable +4 -The first alloy used on a large scale since 3000 BC was bronze -corrosion-resistant tin plating of steel -was used for flatware from the Bronze Age until the 20th century -tin-plated metal was used for food packaging as tin cans -Tin is a malleable, ductile and highly crystalline silvery-white metal. -Tin melts at a low temperature of about 232 °C (450 °F) -a crackling sound known as the tin cry can be heard due to the twinning of the crystals -177.3 °C (351.1 °F) for 11 nm particles -β-tin (the metallic form, or white tin), which is stable at and above room temperature, is malleable. -α-tin (nonmetallic form, or gray tin), which is stable below 13.2 °C (55.8 °F) -Two more allotropes, γ and σ, exist at temperatures above 161 °C (322 °F) and pressures above several GPa -on the addition of Sb or Bi, the transformation may not occur at all, increasing the durability of the tin. -In cold conditions, β-tin tends to transform spontaneously into α-tin, a phenomenon known as "tin pest". -because of the inhibiting effect of the small amounts of bismuth, antimony, lead and silver present as impurities. -Tin tends rather easily to form hard, brittle intermetallic phases, which are often undesirable. -copper, antimony, bismuth, cadmium and silver increase its hardness. -Simple eutectic systems, however, occur with bismuth, gallium, lead, thallium and zinc. -Tin -to be studied -the Meissner effect -tin crystals -corrosion from water +any number and nature +big swing era bands +age 20 and under +placed after the personal or given name +for the convenience of Westerners +Northeast and Midwest +the FitzHugh–Nagumo model +analysis of the specific situation +Baby Boomer generation +the insurance premium +March 3, 1875 +inbreeding +the neural network underlying moral decisions is probably domain-global acids and alkalis -protective coat -protective oxide layer -a catalyst -ten -116Sn, 118Sn and 120Sn -NMR spectroscopy -120Sn (at almost a third of all tin), 118Sn, and 116Sn -115Sn -50 -50 -29 -100Sn -nuclides possessing a "doubly magic" nucleus -reconstructed Proto-Germanic -branches of Indo-European -Germanic languages -tinne -tenn -an alloy of silver and lead -plumbum candidum -tin -unknown -Cornwall -3000 BC -less than 2% -the Near East -health risks -early in the Bronze Age -SnO2 -Cassiterite -alluvial channels -granite -black, purple -both oxidation states -volatile molecular compounds -polymeric -iodides -polymeric solids -Tin(II) chloride -chlorine -SnCl2 and hydrogen gas -stannous chloride -comproportionation -50%/50% -resistance to corrosion -spotted metal -lead -tin -50%/50% -varying amounts of a tin/lead alloy -the pipe's tone -tin -spotted metal -pierced tin -Punched tin lanterns -central Europe -Paul Revere -pierced tin +The Partisans +main branch +The New York Times +August +two +socialist consumer society +The mixed halide-alkyls +two or more +Great Britain +using offline recovery images downloaded via a PC +strong vertical motions +Jose Maria Sison +tobacco, indigo and rice +90% +2006 +subtropical climate +12.7% +The Australian Democrats, a minor party +Alice Cornwell +adverse +20th-century +possessive abbreviations are often foregone +British, French, and Italian +molecular biology and genetics +reading the notation as "g of f" or "g after f" +Massachusetts and Plymouth +the branch of philosophy which studies morality in this sense. +yet another bloody acronym central Europe -Punched tin lanterns -Revere type lantern -Paul Revere -lead -used for joining pipes or electric circuits -on 1 July 2006 -a higher melting point, and the formation of tin whiskers causing electrical problems -leading to loss of the soldered joint -used for coating lead, zinc and steel to prevent corrosion. Tin-plated steel containers are widely used for food preservation -in London in 1812. -"cans" or "tin cans" -can of beer" -because it was first mass-produced in tin-plated steel -copper -Tin -bronze and/or brass alloys -Bronze is mostly copper (12% tin), while addition of phosphorus gives phosphor bronze -Bell metal -Nb3Sn -commercially used as wires for superconducting magnets -(25 T) -A superconducting magnet weighing as little as two kilograms is capable of producing magnetic fields comparable to a conventional electromagnet weighing tons -, due to the material's high critical temperature (18 K) and critical magnetic field (25 T) -negative electrode -Tin -catalyze decomposition of carbonate-based electrolytes -Li-ion -organotin -cyanide -"almost unknown" -toxic -organic -stannous chloride -Stille reaction -organotin -stannous fluoride -sodium fluoride -gingivitis -becomes biologically inactive -SnF2 -wood preservative -2003 -over 25 meters long -persistent organic pollutants -Sony -some crystalline facets of tetragonal -Nexelion cells -instability of the tin-organic electrolyte interface -stabilization of PVC plastics -labile chloride ions -organotin compounds -dibutyltin dichloride -tin -The Occupational Safety and Health Administration -2 mg/m3 -The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health -100 mg/m3 -Tin -cassiterite -when tin is heated in the presence of air -amphoteric -both the +2 and +4 -Stannane -tributyltin hydride (Sn(C4H9)3H) -Stannane (SnH4) -transient tributyl tin radicals -Organotin compounds -Organotin compounds -the organic derivatives -biocides -Edward Frankland -colorless -air and water -tetrahedral geometry -Tetraalkyl- and tetraaryltin compounds -by redistribution reactions -tetraorgano -The mixed halide-alkyls -The mixed halide-alkyls -recycling of scrap -1993 -1989 -14,000 -Secondary -recycling of scrap tin -nearly 14,000 -1993 -southern Mongolia -Seminole Group Colombia -2009 -in southern Mongolia -new deposits of tin were discovered in Colombia -the Seminole Group Colombia CI, SAS -London Metal Exchange (LME) -17 brands -8 -15,000 -renegade militia -The ten largest companies -15,000 tonnes -the mine at Bisie, Democratic Republic of the Congo -on the London Metal Exchange (LME) -complex "agreements" -essentially collapsed -Tin Council (ITC) -1973 through 1980 -complex "agreements" between producer countries and consumer countries -informal and sporadic -1985 -the International Tin Council -the "First International Tin Agreement" -in some areas of the Alps -Before the modern era -one to nine -hearts and tulips. -In America -wooden cupboards of various styles and sizes -floor standing or hanging cupboards -to discourage vermin and insects and to keep dust from perishable foodstuffs -North America -floating molten glass -float glass -on top of molten tin -Pilkington process -from various ores. -in does not occur as the native element -Cassiterite (SnO2) -granite rock -stannite, cylindrite, franckeite, canfieldite, and teallite -long S-process in low-to-medium mass stars -masses of 0.6 to 10 times -beta decay of heavy isotopes of indium. -10 times that of Sun -unusual -"inert pair effect -R2Sn, as seen for singlet carbenes) and distannylenes (R4Sn2) -Tin is often recovered from granules washed downstream -Because of the higher specific gravity -The most economical ways of mining tin are through dredging, hydraulic methods or open cast mining. -Most of the world's tin is produced from placer deposits -as little as 0.015% tin -mostly in China (110,000 t -About 253,000 tonnes -the dynamics of economic feasibility -the Earth will run out of tin that can be mined in 40 years -current consumption rates and technologies -the U.S. Government tin stockpile -late 1985 -1981–82 -a major "tin crisis" -$4 per pound -women -there are a disproportionate number of women who are nurses, -women, not men, should become nurses, -can be justified -Supreme Court -Virginia Military Institute -academic and leadership development for women -providing liberal arts and professional education -the elimination of publicly supported single-sex educational opportunities -ignoring the diverse pre-political and political developments -women's consciousness-raising groups -Anna NietoGomez -the oppressions women faced -hegemonic feminism -generational division of the second-wave -Baby Boomer generation -before World War II ended -to be generational differences -early 1960s to the early 1980s -new forms of consciousness -Maylei Blackwell -decentered and refocused -gaps and crevices of the second-wave -legal obstacles to gender equality (e.g.., voting rights, property rights), -overturning legal obstacles to gender equality (e.g.., voting rights, property rights) -sexuality, family, the workplace, reproductive rights, de facto inequalities, and official legal inequalities. -domestic violence and marital rape issues, establishment of rape crisis and battered women's shelters, and changes in custody and divorce law. -Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) to the United States Constitution, in which they were defeated by anti-feminists led by Phyllis Schlafly, -first-wave feminism focused mainly on suffrage and overturning legal obstacles to gender equality -sexuality, family, the workplace, reproductive rights, de facto inequalities, and official legal inequalities. -domestic violence and marital rape issues, establishment of rape crisis and battered women's shelters, and changes in custody and divorce law. -voting rights, property rights -passage of the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) to the United States Constitution -French writer Simone de Beauvoir -the notion of women being perceived as "other" in the patriarchal society. She went on to conclude that male-centered ideology was being accepted as a norm -1960 -This made it easier for women to have careers without having to leave due to unexpectedly becoming pregnant -The administration of President Kennedy made women's rights a key issue of the New Frontier -The Second Sex -The Feminine Mystique -she explicitly objected to how women were depicted in the mainstream media, and how placing them at home limited their possibilities -"The Problem That Has No Name" -perfect nuclear family image depicted and strongly marketed at the time, she wrote, did not reflect happiness and was rather degrading for women. -The movement is usually believed to have begun in 1963 -the movement lasted from the 1960s into the early 1980s, the exact years of the movement are more difficult to pinpoint and are often disputed -"Mother of the Movement" Betty Friedan -President John F. Kennedy's Presidential Commission on the Status of Women released its report on gender inequality -The report, which revealed great discrimination against women in American life, -the movement lasted from the 1960s into the early 1980s, the exact years of the movement are more difficult to pinpoint and are often disputed -The movement is usually believed to have begun in 1963 -"Mother of the Movement" Betty Friedan -President John F. Kennedy's Presidential Commission on the Status of Women released its report on gender inequality -The report, which revealed great discrimination against women in American life, -the movement lasted from the 1960s into the early 1980s, the exact years of the movement are more difficult to pinpoint and are often disputed -The movement is usually believed to have begun in 1963 -"Mother of the Movement" Betty Friedan -President John F. Kennedy's Presidential Commission on the Status of Women released its report on gender inequality -The report, which revealed great discrimination against women in American life, -the movement lasted from the 1960s into the early 1980s, the exact years of the movement are more difficult to pinpoint and are often disputed -"Mother of the Movement" Betty Friedan -The movement is usually believed to have begun in 1963 -President John F. Kennedy's Presidential Commission on the Status of Women released its report on gender inequality -The report, which revealed great discrimination against women in American life, -the movement lasted from the 1960s into the early 1980s, the exact years of the movement are more difficult to pinpoint and are often disputed -"Mother of the Movement" Betty Friedan -The movement is usually believed to have begun in 1963 -President John F. Kennedy's Presidential Commission on the Status of Women released its report on gender inequality -The report, which revealed great discrimination against women in American life, -the movement lasted from the 1960s into the early 1980s, the exact years of the movement are more difficult to pinpoint and are often disputed -"Mother of the Movement" Betty Friedan -The report, which revealed great discrimination against women in American life, -The movement is usually believed to have begun in 1963 -President John F. Kennedy's Presidential Commission on the Status of Women released its report on gender inequality -the movement lasted from the 1960s into the early 1980s, the exact years of the movement are more difficult to pinpoint and are often disputed -President John F. Kennedy's Presidential Commission on the Status of Women released its report on gender inequality -The report, which revealed great discrimination against women in American life, -"Mother of the Movement" Betty Friedan -The movement is usually believed to have begun in 1963 -the movement lasted from the 1960s into the early 1980s, the exact years of the movement are more difficult to pinpoint and are often disputed -The movement is usually believed to have begun in 1963 -"Mother of the Movement" Betty Friedan -President John F. Kennedy's Presidential Commission on the Status of Women released its report on gender inequality -The report, which revealed great discrimination against women in American life, -the movement lasted from the 1960s into the early 1980s, the exact years of the movement are more difficult to pinpoint and are often disputed -President John F. Kennedy's Presidential Commission on the Status of Women released its report on gender inequality -The report, which revealed great discrimination against women in American life, -"Mother of the Movement" Betty Friedan -The movement is usually believed to have begun in 1963 -the movement lasted from the 1960s into the early 1980s, the exact years of the movement are more difficult to pinpoint and are often disputed -The movement is usually believed to have begun in 1963 +The state +the galactosyldiacylglycerols, and sulfoquinovosyldiacylglycerol +November 1985 +El Dorado National Forest +Gordon Brown +Lκ∞ +Lithuania +This custom comes from a convention of algebra +bandy +whites from married couples with children living at home +Headington and Cowley Road areas +Armenian Apostolic Church +buckling +those at really low risk it is not recommended +theoretical and clinical study +mature low-pressure areas +Psychiatry +was appalled at the horrendous living conditions +insurer balance +The governor +the origin of morals, +No theory of structures existed +Megara +Localization +St. Lawrence River +Erasmus University Rotterdam (EUR) +rice +between the Sea of Marmara and the Black Sea +raised blood cholesterol The report, which revealed great discrimination against women in American life, -President John F. Kennedy's Presidential Commission on the Status of Women released its report on gender inequality -"Mother of the Movement" Betty Friedan +European technology, livestock, and crops +the big New York City firms +13 +more women voted than men the movement lasted from the 1960s into the early 1980s, the exact years of the movement are more difficult to pinpoint and are often disputed +American Revolutionary War +works of student composers +208,000 per month +Asia +16 +east of the Hel Peninsula on the Polish coast and west of the Sambia Peninsula in Kaliningrad Oblast +Queñua +a projecting image with a shallow overall depth +space was limited for writing +relatively little +19th-century +bebop +Special Assistant to President Ronald Reagan +Bolsheviks +Conservatives tend to oppose stimulus spending or bailouts, letting the free market determine success and failure. +for the convenience of Westerners +1980 +After its reestablishment as Constantinople in 330 CE +immoral +the nineteenth century +Westermarck +McKinney-Vento Act +The seat of the church (now known as the Catholicossate of the Great House of Cilicia) was first established in Sivas (AD 1058) +The Armenian Apostolic Church +300,000 +2 to 5 times +There are dramatic variations from one insurance group to the next +Paz y Miño Estrella +High dietary intakes of saturated fat, trans-fats and salt, and low intake of fruits, vegetables and fish +1995 +egalitarianism, asceticism, and self-sacrifice +filthy +Hyphens may or may not be used in all these terms +postmodernist +the mother's +African slaves +seven +annually +improved considerably +Volusia County +deconstruction and post-structuralism +the United States Supreme Court +questionable +UPMC The movement is usually believed to have begun in 1963 +Bolsheviks "Mother of the Movement" Betty Friedan -The report, which revealed great discrimination against women in American life, -President John F. Kennedy's Presidential Commission on the Status of Women released its report on gender inequality -NOW -many of NOW's leaders were convinced that the vast number of male African-Americans who lived below the poverty line were in need of more job opportunities -Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act to enforce more job opportunities among American women -Equal Employment Opportunity -1969 -In 1969 -1980 -1983 -failed negotiations with Barnard College for a merger -1963 -freelance -a Playboy Bunny waitress -the club was mistreating its waitresses in order to gain male customers +a special symbol +Bolsheviks, +the Earth will run out of tin that can be mined in 40 years +building roads and bridges +Between Falster and the German coast +Percy Grainger +"cordel" +in the 1970s. +Mark Nordenberg support for legalized abortion and federally funded day-cares -the issue of coeducation -Mount Holyoke should remain a women's college -against coeducation -Smith College -extending full affirmative action rights to women -sex-segregated help wanted ads -marital rape -1975 -the changing of social attitudes towards women -Harvard University -1970 -1963 -1999 -Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study in Women's Studies -sexist -Helen Reddy's song "I Am Woman" -created pop culture of their own -"feminist poster girl" or a "feminist icon". -to create 'positive' images of women -a "free school'" course on women -Heather Booth and Naomi Weisstein -National Conference of New Politics (NCNP) -Willam F. Pepper -Voice of the women's liberation movement -1968 -Seattle's first women's liberation group -by 'balling a chick together.' -the University of Washington -the early 1980s -the "boys' clubs" -gender discrimination -adding the Equal Rights Amendment to the United States Constitution -2011 -Ten states -half -increased over time -only 77% -the father's surname comes first, followed by the mother's surname -she usually keeps her birth names, or at least the last one +250,000 +3.5 million +due to jobs lost from international trade +early 1960s to the early 1980s +ordered pair +1874 +an overwhelming 283 votes for to 16 against +CompStat +first place with the CEMS Master in Management and a tenth place with its RSM Master in Management +The axis pointing downward +folk etymology +House +2nd lunar day of Heyangei +Koninginnebrug +failure to recognise differences and aim towards homogenous landscapes +10 times that of Sun +1987 +Camillo Golgi +West Hartford +prostaglandins +political, economic and administrative +visible injury (such as bleeding) +Kim Il-sung +The Congressional Budget Office +Art Deco +University of Tunis +Celtic +1956 +sarcophagi +Verrazano-Narrows Bridge +most Marxist–Leninist states this has taken the form of directly electing representatives to fill positions +nighttime residence +Richard Peters +English-speakers are not aware of the Hispanic custom of using two last names +Lucky Luciano +Kongolese king, Afonso I +manner, character, proper behavior +always have the same meaning +to mark the new Roman capital +analytic +The boards +Lowell Weicker +North America +McMaster University +nine +Wapping Dispute +User Account Control +skid row +$41.4 billion +2012 +1.3 million +David Bailey +Maoism +mid-19th century +relatively rare +there is exactly one element y +in a pre-clinical or clinical subject of a non-surgical nature +many words have been changed +There is no one blueprint +"intermediate technology" +oblique" axes, that is, axes that did not meet at right angles +GDP grew +the early 20th century +issues that underlie homelessness +labour shortage +irrigation +after the Turkish Republic shifted its focus toward Ankara +Governors Island +President Franklin D. Roosevelt +around five centuries +states legalized same-sex marriage in the 2010s +a four or five year undergraduate degree, +seaport cities +the original colonies +a suite of interrelated other-regarding behaviors that cultivate and regulate complex interactions within social groups +Carfax +cows +Democrats +Italy in the 1280s +most of Aragon, parts of the Levante and Andalusia, as well as in the stronghold of Anarchist Catalonia +A through E +NMR spectroscopy +Near East +in the polar medium +Sierra Nevada batholith +Income inequality +Democratic Party +with a raid on a Pequot village +tends to rise +the monarch +orogenic event +In 1929 +media +Baseball +convective +deporting illegal immigrants +17th +Religious tensions +mathematical and philosophical +markets +inner cylinder +the number of programs which unnecessarily required administrator rights +The brotherhood makes decisions concerning the inner affairs of the monastery +Republican +1977 +2,245 +alphabet soup +15,000 tonnes +the Atlantic Ocean +2007 +1763 +Tikrit +1942 +building engineering +Meyer Lansky +calling to a meal +recommend a reduction in saturated fat +Chetniks +Sony +Most of the world's tin is produced from placer deposits +structurally +Schmidt and meniscus +such as at sea, in industrial facilities or below ground +Atlantic Coast +A diet high in fruits and vegetables +1-6 +four parts +Marxist–Leninist communist parties have typically exercised close control over the electoral process +"dit" ("said") the father's name is the last, mother's coming first -Since 1977 -the traditions followed in countries like Brazil, Portugal and Angola are somewhat different from the ones in Spain -It spread in the late 19th century -under French influence -during the 1930s and 1940 -Nowadays, fewer women adopt, even officially, their husbands' names -in the upper classes -18th and 19th centuries -Short -filthy -pig man -local registrar -the end of the 19th century -known only by their first names -republicanism -A woman would then adopt her husband's full surname after marriage. -morning star -sapphire -branch -their slave masters -18th and 19th centuries -some bear only the last surnames of the parents -euphony, social significance or other reasons. -euphony, social significance -the child may have any other combination of the parents' surnames -village of origin -In India -surnames are placed as last names or before first names -village of origin, caste, clan, office of authority their ancestors held, or trades of their ancestors. -surnames are placed last -given name, followed by the father's name, followed by the family name -The majority of surnames are derived from the place where the family lived -Maharashtra and Goa -South India -t is a common in Kerala and some other parts of South India -the spouse adopts her husband's first name -in Kerala and some other parts of South India that the spouse adopts her husband's first name -Nguyen -40% -The last dynasty in Vietnam was the Nguyen dynasty -when a new dynasty took power in Vietnam it was custom to adopt that dynasty's surname -Greece -Poland -Podwiński -Vilkienė -Vilkaitė -Ryan -Li -English -little king -Lucania -12th -son of Lewis -Scotland -locational -MacLeod -true compound surnames are passed on and inherited as compounds -Spanish-speaking countries -Paz y Miño Estrella -Luis Telmo Paz y Miño Estrella -Chairman of the Supreme Military Junta of Ecuador -Paz y Miño -Telmo -Estrella -Ecuador -patronymic, normally a Spanish patronymic (i.e. from the Castilian language) -throughout Guipúzcoa, Navarra, Soria, Logroño, and most of Green Spain -local toponymic surname from Álava -runs along the coastal strip lying north of the Cantabrian and Basque mountains, along the Bay of Biscay -English and several other European cultures -it is not unusual for compound surnames to be composed of separate words not linked by a hyphen -with the prefix as a separate word -with the prefix as a separate word, as in "Fitz William", as well as "FitzWilliam" or "Fitzwilliam" -"Ó Briain" or "Mac Millan" as well as the anglicized "O'Brien" and "MacMillan" or "Macmillan." -classify European surnames -given name, occupational name, location name, nickname, and ornamental name -Giovanni -Beaton -O'Brien -Andersen -1,712 -1% -50% -Smith -the Social Security System -In Spain and in most Spanish-speaking countries -by the various combinations and permutations of surnames. -if "(José) GARCÍA Torres" and "(María) ACOSTA Gómez" had a child named Pablo -Pablo García Acosta -Spain -Spanish -Catalan -Catalonia -Spain -Spanish-speaking countries in Latin America -"de" (of) -her birth name -both parents +a catalyst +Naisbitt's 1982 book “Megatrends” was on The New York Times Best Seller list for more than two years and sold 14 million copies. +In 2001 +three years +progressive +12-week +International Film Festival +brewing trade +the 18th-century +Congress +12.4 million +smuggling +Virginia +memory +ship building +Australian Qualifications Framework +Manipur +fog and mist +only one name +genetic predisposition and environmental factors +these teams were divided into two conferences and four divisions +eight +Single Language +polymeric +The Decline of the Roman Empire +1933 +Alles nur aus Liebe +slave trade +Turkey has more hospitals accredited by the U.S.-based Joint Commission than any other country in the world +2013 +lipids +5,791 +1866 +Pierre de Fermat +"rewind" or "reload" or "lift up" +New England +catholic +the Yugoslav Army +Machu Picchu +The Chilean Army and Chilean Navy +by a comma +amount of decentralization, especially politically +coronary artery disease +occurred after emancipation, +by renaming the bound variable x of φ to something else, say z +∀x∃y L(x,y) +consumer +forces +Forbes and Fifth +capturing Africans from neighboring ethnic groups or war captives and selling them. +sound +GEICO's seven insurance companies +tactile consistency +the Yellow River basin +hazardous gases +Kop van Zuid +The 1972 Summit Series and 1974 Summit Series, two series pitting the best Canadian and Soviet players without IIHF restrictions were major successes, +29 percent +Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study in Women's Studies +clear +postmodernist +moderates +Stalin +in 1293 and continuing for more than six centuries, the city of Sis (mode +English law +Sax's patent expired in 1866 +Republican opposition. 1973 -1995 -Spain -Chile -Schneider -occupational name adopted by the servant of a vicar -medieval mystery -King, Lord, Virgin, and Death -19th century -"dit" ("said") -"nom-dit" ("said-name") -Verville -the nom-dit -The Icelandic system -A person's last name -Johansen (son of Johan) -matronymic -English -the inhabited location associated with the person given that name -type of settlement -habitational -different periods, different locations, or with being used with certain other elements -"farmstead", "village", "manor", or "estate" -In Russia and Bulgaria -Andrey -Sergeyev -Greece -"Monte" -large cities -"hill" -a village in County Galway -resident of Lucca -Ethiopia and Eritrea -the father -a pseudo-surname -rarely -"Mr Abraham." -geographical features -stone river -Yamamoto -above the well. -Hebrew patronymic names -adam -"son of" -Abraham ben Abraham -the city of origin -Tikrit -in Iraq -nisbah -Italian, French, Russian, German, etc -Spanish -old traditional families -rare -fathers' -Some state offices have started to use both last names -reduce the risk of a person being mistaken for others using the same name combinations -father then mother -2008 -only optionally in Spain, despite Argentina being a Spanish-speaking country -mother's last name ahead the father's last name -Portuguese-speaking countries and only optionally in Spain -Chile -in some circles, it is still customary for a wife to use her husband's name as reference, -people keep their birth names for all their life, no matter how many times marital status -no effect at all on either of the spouses' names -father followed by that of the mother -no known father and the mother is single -both of her mother's surnames or the mother's first surname followed by any of the surnames of the mother's parents or grandparents -always bear the surname of the father followed by that of the mother -Luis Paz y Miño -Luis Paz y Miño -Luis Telmo Paz y Miño -Luis Estrella, Telmo Estrella, or Luis Telmo Estrella, nor as Luis Paz, Telmo Paz, or Luis Telmo Paz -Paz -Paz y Miño -Paz y Miño -Estrella -Paz y Miño -the mother's -Anglosphere -Miño -around five centuries -the Hispanic world -hyphenated -one -Paz y Miño -Paz Miño -five centuries ago -Pazmiño -for the convenience of Westerners -the Baltic Fennic peoples and the Hungarians -the Baltic Fennic peoples and the Hungarians -Uralic peoples traditionally did not have surnames, perhaps because of the clan structure of their societies -to avoid their given name being mistaken for and used as a surname -for the convenience of Westerners -the Baltic Fennic peoples and the Hungarians -the Baltic Fennic peoples and the Hungarians -Uralic peoples traditionally did not have surnames, perhaps because of the clan structure of their societies -to avoid their given name being mistaken for and used as a surname -caste, profession, and village -surname -In telephone directories the surname is used for collation -In North Indian states -In south India -caste, profession, and village -surname -In telephone directories the surname is used for collation -In south India -In North Indian states -last, first middle," -"last, first middle," -by a comma -in citing the names of authors in scholarly papers -in citing the names of authors in scholarly papers -last, first middle," -"last, first middle," -by a comma -in citing the names of authors in scholarly papers -in citing the names of authors in scholarly papers -In most Spanish-speaking countries -Spanish ex-premier -Rodríguez -Zapatero -paternal -it is widely understood that the first surname denotes one's father's family -"Rodríguez Zapatero" is not considered one surname -the paternal surname of both father and mother are passed on -The father's paternal surname -the mother's paternal surname becomes the child's second surname -Pablo Ruiz Picasso and Spanish Prime Minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero -some -better fit into the non-Hispanic society they live or work in -"Picasso" and "Zapatero" -"Picasso" and "Zapatero" -hermana +President Obama Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints -legal marriage -sister -hyphenate their father's and mother's last names -mistake the first last name of the individual for a middle name -English-speakers are not aware of the Hispanic custom of using two last names -Esteban Álvarez-Cobos -Argentine Civilian Code -Argentina -police offices and passports -meaning they belong to their husbands -husband's last name -Juan Domingo Perón -Eva Duarte de Perón -little Eva -Eva Perón -surname -last name -a name added to a given name -because it is usually placed at the end of a person's given name -two or more -is placed before a person's given name. -placed before a person's given name. -placed before a person's given name. -placed before a person's given name. -given name -only one name -far from universal -mononym -individual's occupation or area of residence -medieval -a "byname" -relatively recent historical development -a byname would be used -placed after the personal or given name -the surname is placed first -first name -Japan, Korea, Taiwan, Vietnam and China -Hungary -placed after the personal or given name -the surname is placed first -first name -Japan, Korea, Taiwan, Vietnam and China -Hungary -placed after the personal or given name -first name -the surname is placed first -Hungary -Japan, Korea, Taiwan, Vietnam and China -the "Home" edition -April 14, 2009 -the "Professional" edition -April 8, 2014 -"Tablet PC" edition -Home and Professional -power users -Media Center -Tablet PC -2009 +some essential lipids cannot be made this way and must be obtained from the diet +John Watkins Chapman +Estrogen +December 25, 1991 +Howard Hughes Medical Institute +1980s +official style guide +equal +stored energy of triglycerides +Jonathan Kramer +Kadir Topbaş +the Metropolitan Transportation Authority +the Classics +soapbox derby +the Australian Constitution +available in many languages +myocardial infarction (commonly known as a heart attack). +the anthropological view 1985 -graphical user interfaces -Mac -Android -Android -September 1981 -Chase Bishop -November 1985 -MS-DOS Executive -overlapping windows -graphical shells -MS-DOS -file system services -cooperative multitasking -memory became scarce -1990 -2 million -Windows 3.0 -protected mode -several megabytes of memory -August 24, 1995 -four -December 31, 2001 -native 32-bit applications, plug and play hardware, preemptive multitasking, long file names of up to 255 characters -Start menu, taskbar, and Windows Explorer shell -Internet Explorer 5.0 and Windows Media Player 6.2 -Windows 98 SE -Windows 98 Second Edition -July 11, 2006 -Windows ME (Millennium Edition) -Windows NT -digital cameras -Windows ME -PC World -Region and Language Control Panel -automatically installed -East Asian languages, such as Chinese, and right-to-left scripts, such as Arabic -Third-party IMEs -Region and Language Control Panel -Region and Language Control Panel -Multilingual support -during Windows installation -Third-party IMEs -keyboard and the interface -Language Interface Packs (LIPs) -free for download -XP or later -translates the complete operating system -optional updates through the Windows Update service -Language Interface Packs -any edition of Windows (XP or later) -Full Language Packs -Windows Update service -8 -Windows NT 3.51 -1996 -Windows NT 3.1 -Windows NT 4.0 -Microsoft -Win32 -allowing existing Windows applications to easily be ported to the platform -Windows 3.0 -Windows 8 and Windows Server 2012 -Single Language -The PC Settings app -changes the language -emerging markets -Windows 8 and Windows Server 2012 +created pop culture of their own +moral epistemology +Moisture is removed +near the point +12-year +pineal gland secretion +six +President John F. Kennedy's Presidential Commission on the Status of Women released its report on gender inequality +$1.4 billion +dry air caused by compressional heating +The Sunday Times iPad app +halting +Oxford +precipitation increases +37 GHz +16.4 +Dahomey +career's contribution to the science or art of medicine +Luis Telmo Paz y Miño Estrella +Arundo donax cane +a major logistic and economic centre +non-profit organizations or associations +organic +Two processes +Post-structuralism +Chetniks +seven +Nikolay Rezanov +18th +Ending Chronic Homelessness through Employment and Housing +13×13 ft +both the +2 and +4 +labile chloride ions interface and input languages -PC Settings app -Mail, Maps and News -Windows XP -Windows XP -Windows NT -Windows XP -consumer -2007 -2006 -security features -Windows Server 2008 -early 2008 -2009 -Windows Vista -incremental upgrade -multi-touch support -HomeGroup -2012 -Microsoft's Metro design language -touch-based -cloud services -Windows Store -Windows 10 -2015 -user interface -2014 -Windows 7 with SP1 and Windows 8.1 -every month -Xbox OS -Xbox Live service -Xbox One's system also allows backward compatibility with Xbox 360, -using offline recovery images downloaded via a PC -Windows Update service -approximately once a month -versions of Windows after and including Windows 2000 SP3 and Windows XP -Service Pack 2 for Windows XP, as well as Service Pack 1 for Windows Server 2003 -memory -an administrator account -the number of programs which unnecessarily required administrator rights -the first user account created during the setup process was an administrator account -User Account Control -UAC will prompt for confirmation -a reduced privilege environment -requests higher privileges or "Run as administrator" is clicked -Windows NT 3 -easy changes to the account groups without reapplying the file permissions on the files and folders -AGLP/AGDLP/AGUDLP -Linux and NetWare -a Beta version of Microsoft AntiSpyware -Giant AntiSpyware -Windows Defender -Microsoft Security Essentials -Windows Malicious Software Removal Tool and the optional Microsoft Safety Scanner -Kevin Mitnick and marketing communications firm Avantgarde -a hardware or software firewall, running anti-virus and anti-spyware software, and installing patches as they become available through Windows Update -The AOL National Cyber Security Alliance -Windows XP system with Service Pack 1 -Windows XP Service Pack 2 -Windows NT -PowerPC, DEC Alpha and MIPS R4000 -Windows 2000 -IA-32 -64-bit -Windows XP 64-Bit Edition -Intel Itanium architecture -IA-64 -2005 -Server 2008 R2 -Daniel Zohary -between twenty and two hundred years -do not germinate in the first year -a very small number -the three cereals -Early agriculture -The Fertile Crescent -einkorn wheat, emmer wheat and barley -The Mediterranean climate -Fertile Crescent region -the paleolithic site of Ohalo II -Sea of Galilee -19,400 BP -Tell Aswad -Johanna Bakker-Heeres -Northern China -4500 years ago -southern -around 2500 BC -the Yellow River basin -three -7,000 BP -a "false dawn" -the Ethiopian highlands, the Sahel and West Africa -original Neolithic Revolution -hunter-gatherers -food -villages and towns -food-crop cultivation -non-nomadic -irrigation and deforestation -extensive surplus food production -their natural environment -writing -citation -Personal land and private property ownership -Middle Eastern Sumerian cities -Bronze Age -The Levant followed by Mesopotamia -10,000 BC -invention of the wheel -Mathematics -the Fertile Crescent -the Fertile Crescent -Southeast Asian peninsula -Subsaharan Africa -agrarian-based one -cereal grasses -Plants that rapidly shed their seeds on maturity -emmer, einkorn and barley -strains that retained their edible seeds longer -Plants that possessed traits such as small seeds or bitter taste -about 7500 BC -South America -Mexican highlands -farming -the formative period -the cultivation of taro and a variety of other crops -11,000 BP -the lowlands -taro -Carl Sauer -sedentary food production -The animals' size, temperament, diet, mating patterns, and life span -milk -leather, wool, hides, and fertilizer -East Asia -the dromedary camel -Henri Fleisch -that it could have been used by the earliest nomadic shepherds -the climate in the Middle East changed and became drier -the rest of Eurasia and North Africa -in part due to diseases and harder work -about 20 hours -The hunter-gatherers -Average height went down -the twentieth century -a denser population -Food surpluses -availability of milk -more-rapidly increase its size -governmental organization -animals -camel -personal possessions -trade unwanted surpluses with others -populations could grow -disease -animals -humans who first domesticated the big mammals -90% -Inca Empire -Europeans and East Asians -sedentary -firearms and steel swords -smallpox -Eurasian -human genetic markers -West Africa -Y-chromosome haplogroup E1b1a -Near East -E1b1b -12,000 millimetres (460 in) -between October and March -leeward -receive much more rainfall -Kauai -Extratropical -windstorms -overrunning snow -towards the North Pole -condenses -narrow lake-effect snow bands -deeper -snow showers -the air above -wet, or rainy, season -Tropical rainforests -Savanna -late afternoon and early evening -seasonal weight fluctuations -at the centre -clockwise -a year's worth -miles across -tropical savanna -20° and 40° degrees -1,750 and 2,000 mm -750 and 1,270 mm -steppe -Subarctic -west -cool oceans -rain -Drought -fungus growth -water -1900 -6.1% -1970s -East North Central -Hawaii -0.6 to 5.6 °C -shower and thunderstorm -48% and 116% -28% -The Quantitative Precipitation Forecast -Radar imagery forecasting -hydrologic forecast models -rain gauge measurements, weather radar estimates -the tropics -ascending -Rocky Mountains -Asia -Colombia -upslope flow due to the trade winds -Colombia -the tropics -Hadley cell -Rocky Mountains -standard rain gauge -plastic -metal -25 mm (1 in) -inner cylinder -wedge gauge -wedge and tipping bucket gauges -what ruler is used to measure the rain with -snow may sublimate -funnel -Bits of liquid or solid water in the atmosphere -virga -All precipitation types -precipitation measurement -two -cloud tops with a lot of small-scale variation -higher altitudes -information about cloud tops -approximately inversely related -Snow crystals -supersaturated -Wegener–Bergeron–Findeisen process -evaporate -due to their mass -Snow crystals -Because water droplets are more numerous than the ice crystals -Wegener–Bergeron–Findeisen process -Montana -snowflakes -scattering of light by the crystal facets and hollows/imperfections -−2 °C (28 °F) -broadly by the temperature and humidity at which it is formed -triangular snowflakes -SN -showers -drizzle, rain, sleet, snow, graupel and hail -fog and mist -any product of the condensation of atmospheric water vapor that falls under gravity -cooling the air or adding water vapor to the air -Two processes -showers -fog and mist -gravity -other rain drops or ice crystals -Precipitation is a major component of the water cycle -Approximately 505,000 cubic kilometres (121,000 cu mi) -398,000 cubic kilometres (95,000 cu mi) of it over the oceans and 107,000 cubic kilometres (26,000 cu mi) over land. -28.1 in -the water cycle +In 2010 +corrupt local elites +January 1, 1914 +key arrangement and fingering fresh water -Approximately 505,000 cubic kilometres (121,000 cu mi) -oceans -Köppen climate classification system -The movement of the monsoon trough, or intertropical convergence zone -within a cyclone's comma head and within lake effect precipitation bands -upslope flow is maximized within windward sides of the terrain at elevation. -dry air caused by compressional heating -Moisture overriding associated with weather fronts -convective clouds -desert climates -upward motion -within a cyclone's comma head -convective, stratiform, and orographic rainfall. -strong vertical motions that can cause the overturning of the atmosphere in that location within an hour and cause heavy precipitation -weaker upward motions and less intense precipitation +soldiers +$69.9 billion +moderates +extensive saltpeter deposits +sampled sources or synthesizers +Associated States +more likely in the Senate than in the House of Representatives +Rhode Island +function spaces +Quarter Cask of the Public Wine +party discipline +deck cabins +Jonathan Edwards +1960s +since the 1950s and 1960s +Structural engineering +bringing the jobs home +chimpanzees +Medieval Latin +Constantine the Great made it the new eastern capital of the Roman Empire in 330 CE +Spherical aberration +1945 +The Sinan Erdem Dome +reference assumed in this article to be usually figures, but sculpture in relief often depicts +1994 +middle-aged +popular music and world ethnic musical traditions +1,776 feet +a low-salt diet may be harmful in those with congestive heart failure +potato +Restrictions +slightly more than 3% +to perform during an earthquake. +'master in medicine' courses +Spain, Persia and the Maghreb +Spain +Newark Liberty International Airport +The remainder of the Baltic does not freeze during a normal winter, with the exception of sheltered bays and shallow lagoons such as the Curonian Lagoon. +their land +son of Lewis +2011 +in citing the names of authors in scholarly papers +raise interest rates marginally +by providing their goods to the agricultural population +axiom +July 1, 2011 +Deng Xiaoping +The first subdivision +amends and reauthorizes the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act +Trinity Church +gingivitis +1909 +devolving responsibilities to regional or local governments +20 – 30 mph +file system services +two-hundred +Ho Chi Minh +rate of employment fell +McGill +Paz Miño +free-standing sculpture +spatial size +One-fifth +Entry-level structural +University of the Philippines College of Medicine +he could call another constructor that accepts only color, +16.7 +industrial revolution +Paz y Miño +Ashmolean Museum +receive much more rainfall +Narragansett sachem, Canonicus +minimum wage +Skolem's paradox +certain virtues +resident of Lucca +3,000 BCE to 500 CE +family of woodwind instruments +350 percent +political conservatism +96,506 +Liceo Italiano +21 April +130 bpm +Istanbul's strategic position on the historic Silk Road +the United States of America +The first alloy used on a large scale since 3000 BC was bronze +King Edward III +patronage liquid water, liquid water that freezes on contact with the surface, or ice -snow, ice needles, ice pellets, hail, and graupel. -rain and drizzle -three categories -Frozen -convective, stratiform, and orographic rainfall -strong vertical motions -10 gigahertz to a few hundred GHz. -37 GHz -larger amounts of liquid emitting higher amounts of microwave radiant energy. -Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) and the Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) mission -deep, vigorous convection -mid- and high-latitude regions. -low Earth orbit satellites -exceeds three hours. -the tropics -two months or more -real- or near-real-time applications. -High Resolution Precipitation Product approach. -even a small amount of surface gauge data is very useful for controlling the biases that are endemic to satellite estimates. -The likelihood or probability of an event with a specified intensity and duration -historic data for the location. -extremely rare -return period and storm duration -average monthly values of temperature and precipitation. -A through E -mild mid-latitude -cold mid-latitude -oceanic climate -dynamic precipitation -thunderstorms -mature low-pressure areas -ice needles -Convective rain -convective -convective clouds have limited horizontal extent -baroclinic boundaries -convective -the windward side of a mountain -the rising air motion of a large-scale flow of moist air across the mountain ridge -windward -Moisture is removed -dew point -condensation nuclei -dust, ice, and salt -Stratus -altostratus or cirrostratus -four -Adiabatic -Conductive -Radiational -Evaporative -Coalescence -Bergeron process -producing larger droplets -rain -negligible -0.1 millimetres (0.0039 in) to 9 millimetres -they tend to break up -cloud droplets -more oblate -larger -Ice pellets -freezing rain -partial or complete melting -a warm layer partial or complete melting -hail -upper part -5 millimetres (0.20 in) -grêle -wet growth -1944 -Anti-Fascist Council for the National Liberation of Yugoslavia (AVNNOJ) -Communist Party of Yugoslavia (KPJ) -to create a federal multi-ethnic communist state in Yugoslavia -Communist Party of Yugoslavia -Unitary National Liberation Front (UNOF) -Communist Party of Yugoslavia (KPJ) -Anti-Fascist Council for the National Liberation of Yugoslavia (AVNNOJ) -1944 -Chetniks -Herzegovina -Muslims -October 1941 -Chetniks -Chetniks -Partisan forces -October 1941 -Chetniks -October 1941 -Chetniks -Partisan forces -200 Croatian civilians -Muslims -The Partisans -Serbs -northern Dalmatia -Italianization -late 1941 -Ustaše -Sarajevo -Muslims -Chetniks -Sarajevo -Kozara Mountain -Sabor -four -early 1943 -Jews -Croatian -Winston Churchill -Croatian Peasant Party -October 1943 -Serbs -Italy -the Partisans -100 -collaborationist militias -puppet Independent State of Croatia -the country experienced a breakdown of law and order, -Kopaonik Partisan Detachment Headquarters -area they controlled -4,500 +hearts and tulips. 1st Proletarian Assault Brigade (1. Proleterska Udarna Brigada) -estimated 236,000 soldiers -region and nationality, -quickly defeated by the Axis forces -Tito's offer of amnesty to all collaborators -Chetniks -Croatia -a guerrilla campaign -poorly armed -Yugoslav territory. -managed via the "People's committees -limited arms industries -agents of the western Allies -Tito's Partisans -Operation Schwarz -The intelligence gathered -Austria -foibe massacres -Italian fascists, and suspected collaborationists -suspected Hungarian, German and Serbian fascists -1944-1945 -brotherhood and unity -between 900,000 and 1,150,000 -Between 80,000 and 100,000 -30,000 -Marcus Tanner -Royal Yugoslav Army -Germans, Italians, Army of the NDH, Ustaše and the Chetniks -Karabiner 98k rifle, MP 40 submachine gun, MG 34 machine gun, Carcano rifles and carbines and Beretta submachine guns -Soviet Union and the United Kingdom -"Partisan rifle" and the anti-tank "Partisan mortar" -6,000,000 -two million -schools, hospitals and even local governments -600,000 -traditional folklore heroines -Greece -absorption and annexation -by naming the troops after important Slovene poets and writers -Nazi Germany, Fascist Italy, and Hungary -Ivan Cankar -Slovenia -absorption and annexation into neighboring Nazi Germany, Fascist Italy, and Hungary. -the Partisan movement -naming the troops after important Slovene poets and writers -the Ivan Cankar battalion -small, poorly armed and without any infrastructure -experience with guerrilla warfare -an Anti-Fascist resistance platform -on 26 April 1941 +morning star +legal Latin terms +Oakland +tribal peoples have demanded division of the present state into two or three Indian states along ethnic lines. +Old Italic alphabet +development of Drum and Bass +piety and devotion +155 +Ankara +Republican Party +Horse racing +Advancing technology +Annual Homeless Assessment Report +800 +obtained chiefly from the mineral cassiterite +three +The Sunday Telegraph, The Observer and The Independent on Sunday +Germany +helmet (cage worn if certain age or clear plastic visor can be worn) +Roger Sherman and Oliver Ellsworth +November 1922 +fat cell +Functions +on the London Metal Exchange (LME) +The movement is usually believed to have begun in 1963 +U.S. corporate after-tax profits +4,200 +1995 +Senator Susan Collins +Maribor +the movement lasted from the 1960s into the early 1980s, the exact years of the movement are more difficult to pinpoint and are often disputed +Israel +deposited with one of those seven insurance companies (the one that actually wrote their policy) +MBBS degree +William Dammond +lawyers +nearby Abingdon School +over 2 million +one point +two-fifths +Denver's infamously cold winters +Richard Nixon +Istanbul +The Sunday Times Fast Track 100 +1911 +cheer +Intolerable Acts +the Muslim Empire of the Middle East +"inert pair effect +historic seafood restaurants +Pablo Ruiz Picasso and Spanish Prime Minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero +A high fiber diet appears to lower the risk. +red +assists weight loss and improves blood glucose control, blood pressure, lipid profile and insulin sensitivity +Each brotherhood elects two delegates who take part in the National Ecclesiastical Assembly +knowledge of materials and their properties +premium vehicles +the maximal possible domain +Europeans and East Asians +longitude = −73.985656, latitude = 40.748433 +The Hartford +Sax +first-order +cooking facilities and warmth during the winter +kings Axidares, Khosrov I, and Tiridates III +Tronik House +clarity of the lake water +the White House (in Dutch Witte Huis) +imagine the x-axis as pointing towards the observer +Guggenheim Museum +elect their leaders and decide policy but that once policy was set, members would be obligated to have complete loyalty in their leaders. +terra sigillata in the Province of Ljubljana -3 October 1943 -120 -the 120-member Liberation Front Plenum -the Kočevje Assembly -Slovenian National Liberation Council -Slovene language -From 1942 till after 1944 -the Titovka cap -the Yugoslav Army -March 1945 -From 1942 till after 1944 -Slovene language -the Titovka cap +oblique +vote +No one is in charge of internet, and everyone is. +Norbert Wiener, Marshall McLuhan and Buckminster Fuller +Portugal, +in 1981 +Kentucky +quantification theory, and predicate logic +Martin Ivens +50%/50% +three years of professional practice +its origin +Nya Sverige +Liberals historically supported labor unions and protectionist trade policies. +Republican presidential candidates +building a Pedestrian village for the adult homeless +Standing Committee of the Central Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China +between twenty and two hundred years +Manhattan Country School and United Nations International School +their colony could not compete economically with the Carolina rice plantations +The New York Times +15 million +Postmodern designers +virga +Windows 10 +independent countries +1625 +New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission +Nighttown and WATT and smaller stages such as Waterfront, Exit, and Heidegger +chronic kidney disease and hypercholesterolaemia +750 and 1,270 mm +village of origin, caste, clan, office of authority their ancestors held, or trades of their ancestors. +least three skaters +Hugh Trevor-Roper +the Nationality Rooms program +44% +asymmetric +Mikhail Gorbachev +1355 +first two years +The statue stands near the Leuvehaven +one common rule of inference is the rule of substitution +one week +a general-purpose room where the family worked and ate meals +Windows 8 and Windows Server 2012 +job creation +in part due to diseases and harder work +1880 +because it adds tight coupling between the subroutine and these global variables +garage house +be projected on a screen +Stewart B. McKinney +Loafing +United States +until the time of the Greek physician Hippocrates +10.0% +Structural engineers +18 +to be generational differences +domain +infinite model +the International Tin Council +March 1917 +14 time national champ +İstiklal Avenue +The movement is usually believed to have begun in 1963 +from various ores. +−2 °C (28 °F) +negligible +organized +ordered pair +1787 +tenn +non-communicable +Paris the Yugoslav Army -March 1945 -The Partisans -the Balkans -1,152 -795 -356 -Partisans -by railway -In September 1943 -the German 1st Mountain and 104th Light Division -British -Partisans were courageous -1943 -German 1st Mountain Division had traveled from Russia by railway -the Partisans -Semič -Allied soldiers -Croatia -local civilians -1944 -The Partisans -British military +the anarchist territories during the Spanish Revolution and the Free Territory during the Russian Revolution +the 50 states +battery power with a small diesel generator +to the right, while the stripes flew to the left +correction of vision +by boycotting the Moscow Olympics +Wilmington, Delaware +Canada won in 2004. +Rhode Island +Office of Planning and Management +vertical +a new entry +Yugoslav territory. +Vitamin E and vitamin K +Districts +There has been considerable exploration of different timbres in the bass line region +free +Luis Telmo Paz y Miño +Chetniks +Pittsburgh Academy +cash crop +fungus growth +the depth to bedrock +wooden clapboard siding +15 +IA-32 +Willemsspoortunnel +criminal victimization rate +1969 +einkorn wheat, emmer wheat and barley +easy changes to the account groups without reapplying the file permissions on the files and folders +The term has no legal impact +Beacon High School +2007 +wood preservative +10-acre +the styles used by the writers of the Roman Catholic Church +Ottawa +17% +George Washington +Cassiterite (SnO2) +specialized to receive synaptic inputs from other neurons +U.S. +mechanical and structural properties +the Semester at Sea program +highlighted by the rarity +Armenian bishops wear mitres almost identical to those of Western bishops. +mixing points +Baptist and Methodist +Connecticut State Council of Defense +Nevada Triangle +Abdi İpekçi Arena southern Austria -British military -civilians -Operation Flotsam -Serbia -On 20 October -At the onset of winter -Belgrade Offensive -Operation Flotsam -the Red Army -1944 -Serbia -In 1945 -800,000 -the Battle of Poljana -15 May 1945 -in early April +semidecidable +corruption investigation +In the first decades of the 20th century +biocides +to accept pluralism and heighten awareness of social differences +sex-segregated help wanted ads +The term relief is from the Latin verb relevo, to raise +quonehtacut +18-month +Cornwall +In 1969 +The movement is usually believed to have begun in 1963 +caste, profession, and village +eight categories +recycling of scrap +United States Supreme Court +New York +requirement for sets to form a category +the Andes +Schenley Farms Historic District +Driving +German and Irish +ANAL +Everyone +simple computational models of evolution +the team with possession of the puck is allowed to complete the play +greater understanding of the science of structural engineering +German Drum and Bass DJ The Panacea +1633 +2002 +Connectedness +unincorporated +approximately US$1.27 billion worth of tickets +Lenin +if public safety is at stake +firearms and steel swords +computer analysis +6.1% +66 percent +the adventures of a mouse called Minimus +local registrar +(Quakers) +13,800 +large floods in the area +insurance premium 800,000 -the Battle of Poljana -Partisans and retreating Wehrmacht -1945 -132 -Raid at Ožbalt -Austria -Maribor -132 -Allied escape organization -Raid at Ožbalt -Over 100 -seven -19 September 1942 -made of fishing boats -9 or 10 armed ships -around 3,000 men -On 26 October 1943 -1942 -1942 -200 -30 +1204 +iron ore +19th century +Commission of Trade +significant collections of art and archaeology +first letter of their English names +10 million +Equal Employment Opportunity +that increasing complexity was simply a correlate of increasing group size and brain size +The Provisions State +116Sn, 118Sn and 120Sn +to avoid a name considered undesirable +Boston's Matthews Arena +20 +Aerospace structure +explicit +Philippines +adding the Equal Rights Amendment to the United States Constitution +a frontier +classical +(the M1 and M2 on the European side +by redistribution reactions +31.3% +Park Row Building +Gold +between 29th Street and Canal Street +535,447 +Crxn +Pierre Menard, Author of the Quixote +building and maintenance of schools +Friday +All precipitation types +'key touches' +Xtra Bass +1876 +the curvature of the two optical surfaces +to garner popular interest +Ethiopia +demographics +Pennsylvania +German +1965 +by the letters (x, y) in the plane, and (x, y, z) in three-dimensional space +does not use quantifiers +Rupert Murdoch +New England +evaporate +hypertension, diabetes, hyperlipidemia +(trying to thrust the reader's attention toward where the letters are coming from +"Connecticut's Valley Forge." +kebab 10 -about a hundred Partisans -eighteen guards -132 -two prisoners -Semič, in White Carniola, Slovenia -SFR Yugoslavia -the Balkan Air Force -the Soviet Union -the British -no foreign troops -primarily on issues of foreign policy -Tito-Stalin split -Trieste crisis -Yugoslav-Italian border -1956 -1942 -National Liberation Army and Partisan Detachments of Yugoslavia -National Liberation Army -Narodnooslobodilačka vojska -6 April 1941 -ten days -Belgrade -unconditional surrender of the Royal Yugoslav Army -the Army attempted to defend all borders -northern Slovenia -Province of Lubiana -Independent State of Croatia (NDH) -Hungarian Third Army -Bulgaria -1942 -lack of infrastructure -British Royal Air Force -19 -9,000 feet (2,700 m) -California -Mount Whitney -Yosemite National Park -4,421 m -Mount Morrison region -Paleozoic age -east of the crest and north of 37.2°N -the Nevadan orogeny -Cenozoic filling of the Great Valley -115 Ma to 87 Ma -subduction zone -eastern -Sierra Nevada batholith -western half -Mediterranean -snow -less than 25 inches -The highest elevations -North American Monsoon -electric power generation -20th -aqueducts -rain shadow -climate and ecology -crashed -downdrafts and microbursts -complex weather and atmospheric conditions -Nevada Triangle -2,000 -3,000 BCE to 500 CE -peaceful -Duck Pass -Sierra Miwok tribes -Mono tribe and Sierra Miwok tribe -Joseph Reddeford Walker -Humboldt -Yosemite Valley -Philadelphia -journals -James W. Marshall -Samuel Brannan -March 1848 -newspaper publisher -vial of gold -New York Herald -James Polk -deck cabins -forty-niners -August -1853 -Hydraulic -11 million ounces -hydraulicking -gravel deposits do not support plant life -The Gold Rush -Josiah Whitney -California Geological Survey -Theodore Solomons -Clarence King -1866 -1864 -John Muir -1890 -1906 -three times -50,000 -clarity of the lake water -Tahoe Regional Planning Agency -large-scale catastrophic wildfire -Rim Fire -El Dorado National Forest -Logging -Presidential election of 2012 -Barack Obama and Joe Biden -7 -Affordable Care Act and President Obama's stewardship of the economy -2 seats -Mitt Romney -Republicans -Obama and Biden -Republicans -Paul Ryan -prominence of the religious right -historically strongly opposed same-sex marriage (the party's overall attitude on civil unions is much more divided, with some in favor and others opposed) -As more states legalized same-sex marriage in the 2010s, Republicans increasingly supported allowing each state to decide its own marriage policy. -2015 -Republican Party has taken positions regarded by many as outwardly hostile to the gay rights movement -states legalized same-sex marriage in the 2010s -George W. Bush -strongly opposed same-sex marriage -a more muted stance -the prominence of the religious right in conservative politics -2010s -the prominence of the religious right in conservative politics +Andean condor +Third-party IMEs +landfill +comet-like +adopting features of Greek culture +more penalties +college games, the penalty is still enforced even if the team in possession scores +1917 +Esteban Álvarez-Cobos +fiscal +Estrella +There are no hard and fast rules of classification +219 +nonstandard +complex +Offshore of the landfast ice +34% +Department of the Interior's Office of Insular Affairs. +Portuguese +Beyoğlu +classical +the Connecticut Colony at Hartford +x +a dot +Morris Motors and Pressed Steel Fisher +4.1 percent +National Junior Classical League +Second Kamchatka +intentions and beliefs +the 1979 Challenge Cup and Rendez-vous '87. +exempt from employment taxes for a 24-month period employers who hire a employee who replaces another employee +the nom-dit +36 percent +increased risk of obesity and diabetes +29 °C (84 °F) +molecular, cellular, developmental, structural, functional, evolutionary, computational, and medical aspects of the nervous system +for the strength of its investigative reporting +This description meant that the whole of the Baltic Sea was covered with ice. +Church of England +Manhattan 2015 -George W. Bush -a more muted stance -formation of the conservative coalition -the conservative International Democrat Union as well as the Asia Pacific Democrat Union -25% -30% -1991 -classical liberalism and progressivism -Republicans and Republican-leaning independents -Alliance of European Conservatives and Reformists -16 -1991 -the Alliance of European Conservatives and Reformists -42% -historically advocated classical liberalism and progressivism. -International Democrat Union as well as the Asia Pacific Democrat Union. -1980 -more women voted than men -whites from married couples with children living at home -Unmarried and divorced women -+8 -Democrats -Democrats -Republicans -Republicans -Romney -under 15% -2010 -the late 1860s -New Deal -35% -44% -Bobby Jindal -35% -31% -Republican -Voters who attend church weekly -Protestants -Republican -Democratic -Thomas Jefferson -aristocracy and corruption -slavery -party's leading publicist -Liberty -Al Gore -media -red -After the 2000 election -Republicans -Taft-Hartley Act -corporations -labor union organizations -weaken -Republicans -President Richard Nixon -President Theodore Roosevelt -progressive -Republicans -President Ronald Reagan -The New Deal -early 1933. -Democratic Party -long-term unemployment -Northeastern -Republican -Civil Rights Act of 1964 -New Hampshire -10% -the Civil Rights Act of 1964 -Republican -10% -New Hampshire -Republican -Since the 1990s -44% -the scientific consensus -Republicans -few -The Old Right +the Great Belt Bridge in Denmark (completed 1997) and the Øresund Bridge-Tunnel +Free Visits +120 megawatts +slums, overcrowding, deteriorated infrastructure, pollution and disease +Medical Title +Austria +less government restriction of the private sector. +50% +epileptic +substance abuse +may require constitutional or statutory reforms +as little as 0.015% tin +distinguishes first-order logic from propositional logic. +Complete Conduct Principles for the 21st Century +UERMMMC College of Medicine +cradle scythe +the lost traditions and history +Foxwoods Resort Casino and Mohegan Sun +recently +centre line +more than twice as many copies +Carnegie Mellon University +Political divisions +Interstate 84 +British +civil servants +a Cartesian plane. +execution to suspend while another nested execution of the same subprogram occurs +Karen Koch +"Mother of the Movement" Betty Friedan +1990s +1501 +1883 +advanced stage of social relations and economic organisation +the old Croton Aqueduct system +2 × 3 ft. or 4 × 6 ft. (flag ratio 1.5), 2.5 × 4 ft. or 5 × 8 ft. (1.6), or 3 × 5 ft. or 6 × 10 ft. (1.667) +Pitt students +through government operations or leasing them to private businesses +1743 +the slave trade +Bachelor of Philosophy +not having to remember different names for each type of data +A separatist movement has been active in Manipur since 1964, when United National Liberation Front was founded. +House Speaker +the 2005 UEFA Champions League Final +1971 +The quality or pay of the job +both surfaces are convex +eastern side +editors +two players being assessed five-minute fighting majors +NCAA +general public and government officials +the Bolshevik revolution +78 miles (125.5 km) +stripes running horizontally +the European 6-year model +trade unwanted surpluses with others +"Mother of the Movement" Betty Friedan +The liturgical music is Armenian chant +The Renaissance +usually in the background +20–25 inches (510–640 mm) +on the addition of Sb or Bi, the transformation may not occur at all, increasing the durability of the tin. +predicate +generally amiable climate, though the winters can be a chilly +revolutions +as socially constructed +1967 until 1981 +Lend-Lease +Earth Institute +25 +towns +a "false dawn" +the Partisans +Giant AntiSpyware +Wethersfield 1936 -everything went awry -1940 -it represented class warfare and socialism -Arnold Schwarzenegger -George W. Bush -2007 -the Kyoto Protocols -limit greenhouse gas emissions -Vermont -moderates -South, Mountain West and Midwest -a former moderate Republican senator is an independent-turned-Democrat former governor of Rhode Island -Senator Susan Collins -Jim Jeffords -moderate Republican senator is an independent-turned-Democrat former governor -Senator Susan Collins, -the South, Mountain West and Midwest -moderates -proposed laws regulating carbon emissions -Some Republican candidates -unusual -cap-and-trade policy -in protected areas such as the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge -Senator Robert A. Taft -1970 -conservatives -20th century -Voters liked Ike much more than they liked the GOP -divided -2006 -a path to citizenship -deporting illegal immigrants -the theories of neorealism and realism -unilateralism -to act without external support -Axis of evil -1989 -2004 -1998 -Republican presidential candidates -in the 2002 elections -in the mid-term elections of 2006 -The Republican Party -The Republican Party -1976 -Theodore Roosevelt -believe in the power of government to improve people's lives -Alf Landon -Nelson -Northeastern -Nelson Rockefeller -1976 -Theodore Roosevelt -the power of government to improve people's lives -what they saw as Republicans' restricting of vital civil liberties while corporate welfare and the national debt hiked considerably under Bush's tenure -Special Assistant to President Ronald Reagan -Doug Bandow -the party's support for economic policies that they saw as sometimes in conflict with their moral values. -In March 2013 -Reince Priebus -National Committee Chairman -to reinvent themselves and officially endorse immigration reform -219 +3,400-square-foot (320 m2) +federal +chain-elongation of an acetyl-CoA primer with malonyl-CoA +1928 +, due to the material's high critical temperature (18 K) and critical magnetic field (25 T) +go into compression +"welfarist" +1461 +autumn +Christianity +1908 +Women +Mahmud II +Due to the historical nature +one year +1897 +SnO2 +biology +President John F. Kennedy's Presidential Commission on the Status of Women released its report on gender inequality +a communist society +Adriaen Block +widespread use of subroutines +Texas +academic and leadership development for women +British +$100 billion +King Henry II +failed negotiations with Barnard College for a merger +Saint Petersburg +does not appear to have an effect +joints +isopentenyl pyrophosphate and dimethylallyl pyrophosphate +the princely state of Manipur negotiated with the British administration its preference to be part of India, rather than Burma. +Republican opposition +about 1.5 million +(25 T) +copper, antimony, bismuth, cadmium and silver increase its hardness. +two-thirds +Peter Eisenmann +labor unionization +declaring an affiliation to a political party +after the invention of the microscope and the development of a staining procedure +The report, which revealed great discrimination against women in American life, +Hell's Kitchen +Structural building engineering +a three-dimensional object is represented on the two-dimensional screen +Hitler Diaries +New York +Literature +Jim Schmidt +quantification theory +17th +euphony, social significance +50s +Halloween nor'easter +Frank Giles +17.8 years +sterol-containing metabolites such as cholesterol +Francis Scott Key +a previous cardiovascular event +William Derham +14 +townships +deductive systems +76-95% +Sanitätsoffizieranwärter +Manipur +HDL cholesterol +seeking employment and improved living conditions under the age of 49 -Newt Gingrich -a particular divide -House Speaker -56% -incumbent President Barack Obama -Mitt Romney -the fifth time -spoke out against their own party -National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) +the VMPC +a shot that redirects a shot or a pass towards the goal from another player +no effective deduction system +breakthroughs in immunology and vaccine development +sequentially +The major international music labels have shown very little interest in the drum and bass scene. +Eastern College Athletic +East Asia +88 +Basil II +various ways +Voters liked Ike much more than they liked the GOP +serum total cholesterol level +Europe's largest port +two catholicoi +depend on the amount of alcohol consumed +careful, rational, and orderly +large animals formed from moulded bricks, glazed in colour +fire insurance +absorption and annexation +party whip +250,000 +leg pads +Connecticut Western Reserve +different regions have had different degrees of tectonic stress, uplift, and erosion. +triglycerides, cholesterol, and phospholipids +1924 +1.35 million +Puritan New England +Huys de Goede Hoop +three to eight +forces in compression +federal funds +5,922 +De Hef +in summer months, ranges from 20 to 65 mm (1 to 3 in) +Nova Roma" and its Greek version "Νέα Ῥώμη" Nea Romē (New Rome), +Montreal +above the well. The National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) -over $100 million -Governor Chris Christie of New Jersey -Republican Governors Association (RGA) -Manhattan -George Washington Bridge -Staten Island Ferry -Battery Park -Verrazano-Narrows Bridge -120,000 vehicles -the Hudson River -The Holland Tunnel -President Franklin D. Roosevelt -1940 -three -privately owned -West 30th Street Heliport -John F. Kennedy International Airport -Newark Liberty International Airport -Consolidated Edison -Edison Electric Illuminating Company -1882 -Time Warner Cable -Verizon Communications -two -1842 -the old Croton Aqueduct system -through New York City Water Tunnel No. 1, Tunnel No. 2, and Tunnel No. 3 -New York City Department of Sanitation -Fresh Kills Landfill -2001 -mega-dumps -New York City -Central Park -70-year-long -warmer in the winter -Governors Island -1624 -1625 -May 24, 1626 -New York City -Peter Stuyvesant -February 2, 1653 -the English -New York -New York +their land +44% +wax esters, fatty acid thioester coenzyme A +R2Sn, as seen for singlet carbenes) and distannylenes (R4Sn2) +Plymouth Colony +British +became increasingly convenient +Vladimir Zworykin +Magister Chirurgiae +very thin +saucer +lead designer on these structures +fringes of colour around the image +cells specialized for communication +the present, imperfect, and future tenses +a large conical brass instrument in the bass register with keys similar to a woodwind instrument +1,400 +1363 +functional nature +hip-hop +The technique involves considerable chiselling away of the background, which is a time-consuming exercise. +{\displaystyle \scriptstyle a(\cdot )^{2}} +early 2008 +it sparked a debate +the E♭ alto saxophone, the B♭ tenor saxophone, and the E♭ baritone saxophone +In most Spanish-speaking countries +US$510 million +They usually do not use a full iconostasis, but rather a sanctuary veil +March 1945 +to implement the numerus clausus +morality +single-reed +speculators +after high school +postmodernist +Windows 98 Second Edition +continuum +The report, which revealed great discrimination against women in American life, +income +a set of established rules +eight +high-profile leaders +standardized, routine +15,000 Manhattan -American Revolutionary War -November 16, 1776 -Great Fire of New York -November 25, 1783 -March 4, 1789 -Northwest Ordinance -Federal Hall -New York -1788 -$300 -South -three -July -119 -Pelé -2002 -$4.5 million -4,754 -less than five minutes -since 1978 -5.2-mile (8.4 km) -runs 24 hours a day, 365 days a year -The ferry has been fare-free since 1997 -Penn Station and Grand Central Terminal -cross-Canadian border service to Toronto and Montreal -Amtrak +The Bowery Mission +35% +f: X → Y +rarely +This made it easier for women to have careers without having to leave due to unexpectedly becoming pregnant +the notion that moral reasoning is related to both seeing things from other persons’ points of view and to grasping others’ feelings +Loeb Classical Library +Connecticut +Aging +a common inflammatory marker +"design for the other 90 percent" +risk factor of cardiovascular disease and mortality. +low A +This language was more in line with the everyday speech +include the Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC campus in the Lawrencevville neighborhood +United Nations Development Programme +wet, or rainy, season +the successful completion of an examination +British military and civilian officials +because of the inhibiting effect of the small amounts of bismuth, antimony, lead and silver present as impurities. +Carr-Harris Cup +PIPs +internships in a wide range of specialities in different clinics +latitude, altitude, and proximity to the sea two-thirds -100 feet (30 m)* wide, -east-west -almost exactly 20 blocks per mile -Twelfth Avenue -155 -220th Street -In much of Midtown Manhattan, Broadway runs at a diagonal to the grid, -continuing north into the Bronx -The Bronx -4 crosstown roads for travel through Central Park, -slowest service in New York City -Trans-Manhattan Expressway -1811 -59th Street and 110th Street -Warren G. Harding -16.7 -John Kerry -six -10021 -2,606 -September 11, 2011 -developed several life-threatening illnesses -2014 -1,776 feet -to escape poverty in their home countries. -gambling dens and brothels -between Broadway and the Bowery, northeast of New York City Hall -was appalled at the horrendous living conditions -1860 -Museum of Modern Art -extensive art collections -Guggenheim Museum -more than 200 art galleries -upcoming and established -a very short time -1908 -the densely populated immigrant neighborhoods on the Lower East Side in Israel Zangwill's play -1970s -2012 +Before the 1930s +structural engineering +primarily Portuguese traders +uplifting, faulting and folding of sedimentary and metamorphic rocks of the ancient cratons to the east. +Diploma of Specialised Studies +10-year plans +1968 +the Cold War +with the prefix as a separate word +the Postgraduate Institute of Medicine +3.5% +The Bay of Pomerania +construction of Marmaray and the Ankara-Istanbul high-speed line +Gevorkian Theological Seminary at the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin, and the Vaskenian Theological Academy at Lake Sevan +73 CE Lower Manhattan -hundreds of thousands -gasoline -seawalls and other coastal barriers -the Yankees -the Mets -1923 -1964 -public housing -National Invitation Tournament -1946 +Smithsonian Institution National Museum of American History +Republicans +The AOL National Cyber Security Alliance +job creation +by having the freedom to exercise their own initiative and creativity +District of Columbia Home Rule Act +Chichen Itza +Tin tends rather easily to form hard, brittle intermetallic phases, which are often undesirable. +56% +March 2010 +a pyramid is inherently stable +Several Pleistocene glacial episodes scooped out the river bed into the sea basin +Outside the Classroom Curriculum +2008 +Fethi Paşa Korusu +the United Nations Development Programme +Topkapı +May 14, 1607 +sexist +the movement lasted from the 1960s into the early 1980s, the exact years of the movement are more difficult to pinpoint and are often disputed +drizzle, rain, sleet, snow, graupel and hail +1900 +proper nouns +estrogen +The Marshall Islands +neck protector +Cornmarket Street and Queen Street +there is strong evidence that high dietary salt intake increases blood pressure and worsens hypertension +Robert Mugabe 1938 -69th Regiment Armory -landfill -1.2 million cubic yards -Battery Park City -over 30 acres -1968 -New York City -Park Row Building -Philadelphia City Hall -29 -1908 -TRIangle BElow CAnal Street -SOuth of HOuston -Haarlem -Avenues A, B, C, and D -Hell's Kitchen -1929 -927 -40 Wall Street -1,046 feet -Art Deco -Penn Station -Beaux-Arts style -1910 -New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission -1965 -West 110th Street -Calvert Vaux -843 -6 -7:00 pm -2.3 million -New York -white collar -Manhattan -Manhattan -the depth to bedrock -between 29th Street and Canal Street -economic factors -Midtown and Financial District -Meyer Lansky -Five Points Gang -Lucky Luciano -1933 -Cosa Nostra -80% -CompStat -seven -93% -503 -1929 -25x100 -Lower East Side -five-stories -"cockroach landlords" -852,575 -20.3% -37,345 -rent -Staten Island -November 2014 -northern New Jersey -pay-per-ride MetroCards +the democratic voice +the Kočevje Assembly +Fitzgerald +Thomas Hooker +March 3, 1875 +4th century +around 1700 +structural safety +the incremental development of moral complexity +$60,847 +1517 +prior to the introduction of modern medicines +Central governments +Helen Reddy's song "I Am Woman" +51 +Shell Downstream +The Last Days of Hitler +their form +Renaissance +wood, glass, crystal, porcelain, and even bone +1 percent +plumbum candidum +John F. Kennedy International Airport +fur-pelt +ranks, units, divisions, procedures +teenage girls who were indentured servants +the Chesapeake region +first two +decreases +Greenwich Bay +unitary, federal and confederal governments +one dimension +The total area covered by the state is 22,347 square kilometres (8,628 sq mi). +usually, but not always +awarding merchants (mostly from other countries) the license to trade enslaved people to their colonies +"electronic frontier" +16 +windstorms +Britain +abalone or stone keytouches +modifying data structures +Bard High School Early College +not recommended +unclear +Mohegan +A dome +New Englanders +computer classes four -289,000 -18.8 -2000 and 2030 -12.7% -elderly population is forecast to grow by 57.9% -2.11 -59.4% -27.0 -1.7% of the population over the age of 5 speak only English at home -7.8% of the population -Manhattan -Manhattan -The New York Times -Manhattan -59.98 -0.66% -Korean, 0.70% (10,496) -5 and older -40.02% (602,058) -many energy-efficient green office buildings -the Bank of America Tower -Platinum LEED Certification -Manhattan -US$914.8 billion -US$1.1 billion -Waldorf Astoria New York -six -US$510 million -The New York Times -Harlem -The Wall Street Journal -AM New York and The Villager -ABC, NBC, CBS, and Fox -1971 -1949 -WQHT -WNYC -Beacon High School -Bard High School Early College -Eleanor Roosevelt High School -Manhattan -City College -Upper East Side's Brearley School -Manhattan Country School and United Nations International School -The prestigious Regis High School -La Scuola d'Italia -Manhattan -Manhattan -New York City -Manhattan real estate -after the Civil War -New York -October 28, 1886 -people of France -social upheaval -1874 -1883 -1898 -Manhattan and the Bronx -January 1, 1914 -1874 -1883 -1898 -Manhattan and the Bronx -January 1, 1914 -1904 -New York City Subway -Great Migration -new skyscrapers -London -labor unionization -Fiorello La Guardia -some of the world's tallest skyscrapers -Art Deco -New York County -Kalawao County, Hawaii -New York County -Manhattan -1990s -2,245 -537 -the real estate market -60 million -Manhattan -Chinatown -Columbia University -Manna-hata -1609 logbook of Robert Juet -island of many hills -Lenape language. -Lenape Native Americans -King Francis I of France -Marguerite de Navarre -Bay of Santa Margarita -New York Bay -its role as the headquarters for the U.S. financial industry -the U.S. financial industry -securities industry -US$360,700 -approximately US$40 billion -New York Stock Exchange -at 165 Broadway -The NYSE MKT -New York Mercantile Exchange -NYSE Euronext -centered in Manhattan -over US$3.7 billion -New York City's position in North America as the leading Internet hub and telecommunications center -140 West Street in Lower Manhattan -a US$3 billion fiberoptic telecommunications upgrade -the city's strength in academic scientific research and public and commercial financial support -more than 700,000 square feet (65,000 m2)* -US$30 million -on East 29th Street -academic, medical, and research institutions -the landmarks of Manhattan -nearly 60 million visitors -approximately US$1.27 billion worth of tickets -a 10% increase from 2013. -1845 -Trinity Church -was destroyed by fire -1867 -astronomy and physics -10-acre -William Dammond -1889 -Andrew Carnegie and George Westinghouse -1904 -1908 -43 acres -Henry Hornbostel -Thaw Hall -1909 -14 acres -Heinz -tower whose great height, with open spaces all around -that its lines, like education, have no ending -16 m -epidemics of polio -in the basement of what is now Salk Hall -paralyzed -1962 -breakthroughs in immunology and vaccine development -1890 -Pitt Men's Glee Club -Europe -Pitt students -2011 -works of student composers -Dr. Davis -1969 -saxophon -1983 -1966 -Oakland -change to its charter -Pittsburgh Academy -Pitt -Atlantic Coast -East Atlantic -Eastern College Athletic -2013-14 -1909 -Popular as photo sites, there are ten representations of Panthers in and about Pitt's campus -and ten more painted fiberglass panthers placed around the campus -a year -four -Traditionally the most popular sport at the University of Pittsburgh, football -desegregating the Sugar Bowl -1890 -nine -88 -1905 -1927–28 and 1929–30 -"Doc" Carlson -1982 -2013 -800 m -Roger Kingdom -2005 -16 -Baseball -Three -Paul Lauterbur Wangari Maathai -Vladimir Zworykin -Ken Wahlster -132-acre -University of Pittsburgh Medical Center +Stille reaction +to gain access to his bank account records +"country" and "court" +a check to the head +31 May 2007 +altorilievo +total war +(very roughly) 9,000 +1984 +Panther Sendoff +Rodríguez +Mid-Atlantic Region +gambling dens and brothels +organotin +Radiational +in 1977 the People's Revolutionary Party of Kangleipak (PREPAK) was formed +2004 +a Playboy Bunny waitress +The Teutonic Order +to make clear the position of the churches concerning the Council of Chalcedon. +property +80% +2009 +155 +The coldest month is January, and the warmest July. 42-story -Gothic revival -Schenley Farms Historic District -$900 million -National Institutes of Health -UPMC -ranked among the top public universities in the United States -Association of American Universities -Hugh Henry Brackenridge -brick building -Pittsburgh Academy -a frontier -west -1819 -Thomas Mellon -1837 -vocational training -Philadelphia -Commonwealth of Pennsylvania -Due to the historical nature +The governor's council +lemmas +Smith College +2006 +The High +slaves +29 +151,000 +five centuries ago +to achieve full employment while maintaining a low rate of inflation +New York City Department of Sanitation +Applicants may have faced overcrowding, +Świnoujście harbour +first-order logic +Alf Landon +organotin +the inhabited location associated with the person given that name +the drum and bass Ibiza +90 +China +local healers +Turkish Grand Prix +iMonitor +Schneider +macron +Henri Fleisch +Treaty of Lausanne +resistance to corrosion +federal government +villages and towns +allow axes that are not perpendicular to each other, and/or different units along each axis +a party convention for the office's constituency archaeological excavation -to mark the significance of the University of Pittsburgh -Avella, Pennsylvania -Pittsburgh History and Landmarks Foundation -Gardner Steel -Allegheny -Heinz Memorial -Chancellor's -Schenley Fountain -Schenley High School +Blade length, thickness (width), and curvature (rocker/radius (front to back) and radius of hollow (across the blade width) +18 +there are significant differences inside volcanic zones +20 percent +Zermelo–Fraenkel set theory +seldom +"Mother of the Movement" Betty Friedan +the Connecticut Turnpike +the 120-member Liberation Front Plenum +The Republican Party +Paul Revere +powerful mayor, weak council +80% +Istanbul +five or more +arterial elasticity +a series of industrial disputes at its plant at Gray's Inn Road in London St. Nicholas Greek -Stephen Foster -Phipps Conservatory & Botanical -Oakland -Blawnox -Plum Boro Science Center -University of Pittsburgh Applied Research Center -Bradford, Greensburg, Johnstown, and Titusville -Fitzgerald -approximately $30 million -a new track and field and band complex -Heinz Field and the UPMC Sports Performance Complex. -Oakland -U.S. News & World Report's "Honor Roll" of America's top hospitals -include the Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC campus in the Lawrencevville neighborhood -in the Shadyside neighborhood adjacent to Oakland -for positive impact on its urban community -2009 -$1.7 billion -33,800 jobs -$822 million -1787 -private entity -1966 -setting its own standards for admissions, awarding of degrees, faculty qualifications, teaching, and staff hiring -The University's Board of Trustees -36 -The Governor of Pennsylvania, the President Pro Tempore of the Pennsylvania Senate, and the Speaker of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives -There are three or more regular meetings of the Board of Trustees per year. -The Board of Trustees -general administrative, academic, and management authority over the university -Provost and Senior Vice Chancellor, -Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools -Bigelow Bash -Pitt Program Council -Panther Sendoff -Sunday -Sunday -football -golden -Cathedral of Learning +relative depth of the elements shown is completely distorted +John Thornton +known only by their first names +In the spirit of best-versus-best without restrictions on amateur or professional status, the series were followed by five Canada Cup tournaments, +second-order logic +Eric Voegelin +certificates of attainment +George W. Bush +17 brands +Maharashtra and Goa +hydrate +Sir Edmund Andros +spherical surfaces +1773 +depth of the sea are diminishing +1876 +Surplus line insurers are supposed to underwrite only very unusual or difficult-to-insure risks. +“anticipatory democracy.” +660 BCE +Topkapı Palace +11 million people +Nancy Wyman +The Sunday Times Festival of Education +1990 and 1991 1950 -Panther Award -Pitt Dance Marathon -Greek Sing -Engineer Student Council -Friday -soapbox derby -1997 -Art Encounters -Free Visits -John Heinz -Mattress -University of Pittsburgh Stages -Shakespeare-in-the-Schools -Friday Nite Improvs -24 -2009 -Department of Philosophy -philosophy of science, philosophy of language, philosophy of mathematics, philosophy of mind -National Research Council -mathematical and philosophical -Pitt -four -Pitt -six +the end of the collective bargaining agreement on September 16, 2012. +the constructor with all the parameters passing in a set of default values for all the other parameters +1963 +branches of Indo-European +nearly twice as rapid +Armenian Apostolic Church +30% +better fit into the non-Hispanic society they live or work in +"Monte" +hire three -five -liberal arts -co-ops and internships -Bachelor of Philosophy -Outside the Classroom Curriculum -green -30 -the first and third floors -Peace Corps -five or more -U.S. Department of Education -University Center for International Studies (UCIS) -University Center for International Studies -certificates of attainment -undergraduate -undergraduate & graduate -over a hundred different countries -Panther Programs -the Nationality Rooms program -the Semester at Sea program -Sichuan University -37th -70th -41st -133rd -37th -organ transplantation -Wesley Posvar -Tony Dorsett +boarding +386 +hellenization +about 12 million +23 million people +primarily on issues of foreign policy +Massachusetts Bay +Turkish Offshore Racing Club +older adults +Boston Bruins +1819 +the first user account created during the setup process was an administrator account +Abraham ben Abraham +2013 and 2014, +a long, relatively wide, and slightly curved flat blade +statins +stop/period/point +courtyard +Helping Other People Everyday +not recommended in those at low risk who do not have symptoms +bright colours +a fall in circulation +these sentences are viewed as being unrelated +Tanzimat period +It can be accessed without cost. +Cardiovascular disease includes coronary artery diseases (CAD) such as angina and myocardial infarction Pennsylvania -subsidized tuition -Mark Nordenberg -2012 -12-year -Petersen Events Center -University of Pittsburgh Medical Center -132 urban acres -Oakland -Cathedral of Learning -the Professional Grounds Management Society -Oakland Civic Center/Schenley Farms National Historic District -bus and shuttle service -the west end of campus -Bellefield Avenue/Dithridge Street -Forbes and Fifth -four -Schenley Park -Carlow University -main branch -Oakland -Carnegie Mellon University -151,000 jobs -The Hamilton Project -Each month -320,000 -208,000 per month -the 2008-2009 recession -approximately 60 months -May 2013 -8.5 years -17.8 years -Unemployment -6% -circulatory health issues -Extended job loss -The Congressional Budget Office -August 2012 -long term budget outlook -Wells Fargo Economics -The Department of Labor's Employment and Training Administration -98,379 workers -280,873 -due to jobs lost from international trade -to achieve full employment while maintaining a low rate of inflation -for managing the unemployment rate. -policies designed to reduce unemployment can create inflationary pressure, and vice versa -the timing and extent of interest rate increases, as a near-zero interest rate target had remained in place since the 2007-2009 recession -the Fed decided to raise interest rates marginally in December 2015 -2007-2009 recession -This bids up bond prices, helping keep interest rates low, to encourage companies to borrow and invest and people to buy homes -essentially "printed money" to purchase large quantities of mortgage-backed securities and U.S. treasury bonds -2008-2014 -December 2012 -to improve job creation -infrastructure construction, clean energy investment, unemployment compensation, educational loan assistance, and retraining programs -Liberals historically supported labor unions and protectionist trade policies. -Liberals tend to be less concerned with budget deficits and debt -Keynesian economics -free market solutions -Conservatives tend to oppose stimulus spending or bailouts, letting the free market determine success and failure. -less government restriction of the private sector. -Conservatives historically have opposed labor unions -Conservatives generally advocate supply-side economics -The affluent -unemployment -40% -19% -fiscal -2007-2009 -The U.S. Federal Reserve -raise interest rates marginally -inflationary pressure -conservatives -job creation -job creation -liberals -12.4 million -liberals -conservatives -job creation -12.4 million -job creation -Unemployment -5.0% or 7.9 million people -U-6 unemployment rate -157.8 million -323 million -1940s -1% -25% -tends to rise -frictional unemployment -half -premature and misguided +African traditional rulers ... [can] accept blame +Structural building engineering +to opposing the slave trade and working for the abolition of slavery throughout the British Empire +Compact of Free Association +shinty +unilateralism +to discourage vermin and insects and to keep dust from perishable foodstuffs +Rie Mastenbroek +three major +generational division of the second-wave +20th century +Department of Philosophy +married women +the UK +the Romans began hellenizing, or adopting features of Greek culture, +physician-scientist +one first adds to the signature a collection of constant symbols +was founded in 1964, which declared that it wanted to gain independence from India and form Manipur as a new country. +tourism +Roger Kingdom +1890 +Gregory +postmodernist +the Social Security System +widespread problems 2013 -9% -cause the U.S. to enter recession in 2013 -Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED) -10 million -Over 10 million -George W. Bush -President Obama -756,000 -367,000 jobs -1.0 percent -GDP grew -tax cuts -U.S. corporate after-tax profits -corporate tax revenue -1.2% -Germany. -Japan and Germany -adverse -Public agenda -14 -job creation -Authors -14 -Authors -Public agenda +the city of origin +normally somewhat distorted adverse -job creation -building roads and bridges -upgrading the electricity grid -created or sustained millions of jobs -over 2 million -D+ -March 2011 -bringing the jobs home -Democrats -Republicans -manufacturing -by increasing infrastructure work, lowering taxes, helping small businesses, and reducing government regulation -jobs and the economy -jobs -lowering taxes and reducing regulation -One in four -26% -Republicans and Democrats -lowering taxes and reducing regulation -infrastructure stimulus and more help for small businesses -53% -76-95% -76-95% -50% -negative -53% -46% -95% -Republican opposition -Emergency Economic Stabilization -$430 billion -drop in the stock market -approximately $700 billion bailout package (later reduced to $430 billion) for the banking industry -failed -Republican opposition. -significant drop in the stock market and pressure from a variety of sources -Income inequality -The quality or pay of the job -declined considerably -Reinvigorating the labor movement -the labor force participation rate is falling -The extent to which persons are not fully utilizing their skills -aging -5.9% -10.0% -10 million -2 million -8 million -18-21 million -165,500 -77,000 jobs +The owners insisted on the players accepting a salary cap that would slow the rising payroll. +11 million ounces +1998 +only 77% +Lacerations to the head, scalp, and face +wood +Roni Size's Full Cycle Records +sketch +In September 1943 +triangular snowflakes +360% +Doctor of Medicine +two to four +1912 8.5 million -153,000 -Wells Fargo economists -250,000 -151,000 -63.8 percent, 63.6 percent and 63.6 percent -exempt from employment taxes for a 24-month period employers who hire a employee who replaces another employee -deny any tax deduction, deduction for loss, or tax credit for the cost of an American jobs offshoring transaction -eliminate the deferral of tax on income of a controlled foreign corporation attributable to property imported into the United States by such corporation -The Congressional Research Service -President Barack Obama -a variety of tax cuts and spending programs to stimulate job creation -September 2011 -$447 billion -$100 billion -2011 -generate more jobs -1-6 -aid to the unemployed -American Taxpayer Relief Act -spend -hire -Obama -$1 trillion -minimum wage -hiring -$7.25 -poverty level -$17 -minimum wage -$9 -Wal-Mart -15 million -poverty -sunset provisions -one-fifth -17% -16 -Inc. -subprime mortgage crisis -10% -5.0% -129.2 million -27% -American Recovery and Reinvestment Act -March 2010 -$800 billion -over 4.3 million -143.2 million -25% -younger workers -44 -rate of employment fell -rate of employment fell -Relief is a sculptural technique where the sculpted elements remain attached to a solid background of the same material. -The term relief is from the Latin verb relevo, to raise -The technique involves considerable chiselling away of the background, which is a time-consuming exercise. -a relief saves forming the rear of a subject, and is less fragile and more securely fixed than a sculpture in the round -bronze reliefs are made by casting -There are different degrees of relief depending on the degree of projection of the sculpted form from the field -more than 50% of the depth is shown and there may be undercut areas -where the plane is only very slightly lower than the sculpted elements -Ancient Egypt -The opposite of relief sculpture is counter-relief, intaglio -where the form is cut into the field or background rather than rising from it -Works in the technique are described as "in relief -Hyphens may or may not be used in all these terms -the work itself is "a relief". -throughout the world on the walls of buildings and a variety of smaller settings, -Relief is more suitable for depicting complicated subjects with many figures and very active poses, such as battles, than free-standing "sculpture in the round -Most ancient architectural reliefs were originally painted, which helped to define forms in low relief. -reference assumed in this article to be usually figures, but sculpture in relief often depicts -in the arabesques of Islamic art, -The distinction between high and low relief is somewhat subjective, and the two are very often combined in a single work -many single figures have heads in high relief -raised reliefs, whether high or low, were normally "blocked out" -usually in the background -a projecting image with a shallow overall depth -low relief -In the art of Ancient Egypt and other ancient Near Eastern and Asian cultures, and also Meso-America -relative depth of the elements shown is completely distorted -Berlin -Roman decorative plasterwork -large animals formed from moulded bricks, glazed in colour -relatively rare -classical style -Renaissance -pioneering classicist building -Leon Battista Alberti -any medium or technique of sculpture, stone carving and metal casting -20th-century -low-relief -high-relief -only up to half of the subject projects, and no elements are undercut or fully disengaged from the background field -half-relief -normally somewhat distorted -background areas of compositions -Italian Renaissance sculptor Donatello -Mid-relief -rock reliefs -narrate sacred scriptures -1,460 panels of the 9th-century Borobudur temple -scenes of daily life in the Khmer Empire -altorilievo -heads and limbs -at their full depth -seen are "squashed" flatter -free-standing sculpture -very "high" version of high-relief -fully free of the background, and parts of figures crossing over each other to indicate depth -in terms of durability -Western sculpture, also being common in Indian temple sculpture -private tombs, and smaller decorative areas such as friezes on large buildings -a drill -compositions extremely crowded with figures -strips of reliefs that wound round Roman triumphal columns -sarcophagi -in the Renaissance -high relief -aura or halo in the back of sculpture's head, or floral decoration -Khajuraho temple -voluptuous twisting figures -Lokapala devatas -Sunk or sunken relief -external walls, and for hieroglyphs and cartouches -a flat surface -linear -the background -repoussé -metalwork -a thin metal plate -Casting -the Renaissance -consular diptychs -the Gothic period -Paris -religious scenes -the New Testament -round mirror-cases, combs, handles -terra sigillata -bright colours -plaster or stucco -Islamic architecture -Japanese occupation forces -Democratic Federal Yugoslavia -Mao Zedong -Kuomintang -Josip Broz Tito -the Cold War -1948 -American -Kim Il-sung -Communists -Stalin -de-Stalinisation -conflict continued and escalated -Khrushchev -Gulag -Bolivia, Cuba, El Salvador, Grenada, Nicaragua, Peru, and Uruguay -Fidel Castro -the Soviet Union -Che Guevara -Pierre Laporte -Maoism -Richard Nixon -Deng Xiaoping -détente with the United States -Deng Xiaoping -the emancipation of the individual from alienating work -freedom from having to perform such labour -maximise individual liberty -advanced stage of social relations and economic organisation -for all positions within the legislative structure, municipal councils, national legislatures and presidencies -China, Cuba, and the former Yugoslavia -most Marxist–Leninist states this has taken the form of directly electing representatives to fill positions -usually a single communist party candidate is chosen to run for office in which voters vote either to accept or reject the candidate. -Marxist–Leninist communist parties have typically exercised close control over the electoral process -atheism -the universe exists independently of human consciousness -militant atheists. -several religions and their adherents were targeted to be "stamped out". -after Lenin's death during the regime of Josef Stalin in the Soviet Union -the Bolshevik ("Majority") faction of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party -1903 -Lenin -elect their leaders and decide policy but that once policy was set, members would be obligated to have complete loyalty in their leaders. -1905–7 -Lenin advocated mass action and that the revolution "accept mass terror in its tactics" -as a means to pressure the middle class to join and overthrow the Tsar. -conceive of the means of sponsoring communist revolution -Lenin -the contribution of the individual -from each according to his ability, to each according to his need -a communist society -universal social welfare -labour productivity -a communist society -knowledge -planned socialist economy -modernisation -"New Man" -the bourgeoisie -cultural backwardness and social atomisation -work -The state -scientific planning -The Marxist–Leninist state's huge purchasing power -social obligation -skill and intensity of work -development of socialism -a period of massive industrialisation -socialist consumer society -egalitarianism, asceticism, and self-sacrifice -"industrial pragmatism" -1936 -Stalin -Soviet of the Nationalities -1917 -eighteen -Ukraine -1941 -grain -7.5 million -Unemployment -Socialist Realism -1934 -religion -Lenin -1938 -September 1939 -Nazi Germany -Adolf Hitler -1933 -Allies -German -Axis -total war -Marxism–Leninism -Eastern -Lenin -bourgeois -Marxism–Leninism -1920s -Russian Communist Party -bolsheviks -First Five-Year Plan -revolutions -working class -the proletariat -the bourgeoisie -communism -production -Trotskyists -Eric Voegelin -Stalinism -Marx -the Soviet Union -1960s -China -Jose Maria Sison -Maoism -1976 -cautious with limited nationalisations of private property -Beginning in mid-1918 -by making efforts to coax them away from the Socialist Revolutionaries -an economic policy that aimed to replace the free market with state control over all means of production and distribution -drop in production -1921 -restoration of a degree of capitalism and private enterprise -91 percent -backward economic conditions in Russia +John Locke +New York County +not recommended +Virginia and New Jersey +an alloy of silver and lead +an open subroutine +Intel Itanium architecture +37,345 +852,575 +blurring +24 +Fort Schuyler +Stannane (SnH4) +Ceramides (N-acyl-sphingoid bases) +one internship year +centralization, especially in the governmental sphere, is widely studied +6,961 m +protected mode by 1924 -his testament of December 1922 -an order to remove Joseph Stalin from his post as General Secretary -January 1924 -ignored Lenin's order -In 1929 -rapid industrialisation, Socialism in One Country, a centralised state, the collectivisation of agriculture -In 1929 -a dissident Bolshevik ideology called Trotskyism -plotting against the Party's agreed strategy -totalitarian -members of the Party deemed to be traitors -the Communist Party -1.5 million -681,692 -Ho Chi Minh -Vietnam War -American forces -Western-backed client regime -1968 -Africa -1969 and 1980 -1969 and 1980 -Ethiopia -Robert Mugabe -1985 -Perestroika and Glasnost -Mikhail Gorbachev -Stalin -Cold War -1989 -The revolts -Gorbachev -Tianamen Square attacks -Yugoslavia -1990 -Slobodan Milošević -1980 -1990 -1990 and 1991 -Boris Yeltsin -Gorbachev -1991 -December 25, 1991 -Asia -Philippines -1968 -1996 to 2006 -1960s -1979 -by boycotting the Moscow Olympics -1980 -Mujahideen -1980s -1908 -Lenin usurped the all-Party Congress of the RSDLP -1912 -26 -1908 -Lenin usurped the all-Party Congress of the RSDLP -1912 -26 -1914 -Lenin -1917 -Germany's High Command -1914 -Lenin -1917 -Germany's High Command -March 1917 -Bolsheviks -Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (RSFSR) -Germany -March 1917 -Bolsheviks -Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (RSFSR) -Germany -March 1917 -Bolsheviks -Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (RSFSR) -Germany -March 1917 -Bolsheviks -Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (RSFSR) -Germany -Bolsheviks, -March 1917 -Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (RSFSR) -Germany -March 1917 -Bolsheviks -Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (RSFSR) -Germany -1924 -1919 -Mongolian People's Republic -1918 -1918 -Mongolian People's Republic -1919 -1924 -1918 -anti-Bolshevik -The Bolshevik government -118 -Lenin -the Tenth Amendment -separate sovereigns -the people -the people -dual sovereignty -through revolution -through revolution -through consent of the States -the States -The United States Supreme Court -commonwealths -Four -the public -The term has no legal impact -Kentucky -50 -traditional abbreviation -postal code abbreviation and the traditional abbreviation -postal code -the United States of America -counties -two -Alaska -boroughs -New England -Arlington County, Virginia -five -single -county government -counties -city -towns -historical -towns -Public Land Survey System -geographic -Townships -governments -metropolitan municipality -the boards -legislative -Michigan -The boards -Article IV -Section 3 -U.S. Congress -United States -insular areas -Organic Act -Federal Government -Department of the Interior's Office of Insular Affairs. -Congress -three -incorporated territories -unincorporated -organized -various ways -agencies -Chapter houses -Communities -Congress -1789 -Thirty-one -1959 -Palmyra Atoll -townships -subdivisions of a county in 20 states -New York and New England -Northeast and Midwest -Administrative divisions -Political divisions -The first subdivision -Article IV, Section 3 -incorporated cities, towns, villages, and other types of municipalities -a county government -Virginia -New England -insular areas -The Federal government -The Federal government -conservation districts and Congressional districts -enact -in the Westphalian sense -in the Westphalian sense -the member states -enact -in the Westphalian sense -in the Westphalian sense -the member states -Member states -counties -parish +green +tobacco results in 9% +members of the town party committee +100 years +one year +Caesarea +approximately $30 million +at any time during the game +Battery Park +cannot continue to blame the white men +the problematic implications of binary oppositions +Cinchona pubescens +milk +two- to four-fold +$28.5 billion +fifty small, white, five-pointed stars +Connecticut Route 15 +integrity, trustworthiness, benevolence, and fairness +fatty acid synthesis +lipids +scholarships +Players are not paid to play in the tournament, but insurance and expenses are covered from the tournament revenues. +wool and flax +King Jaja of Opobo +Indian security forces and insurgent armed groups +axial +on 26 April 1941 +Maoism +Wapping +American Samoa +at least 2400 years +Korean, 0.70% (10,496) +Unitary National Liberation Front (UNOF) +French fur trappers, missionaries, and military detachments +Windows XP system with Service Pack 1 +1691 +Doug Bandow +Danish islands +Rhine, Meuse and Scheldt +1807 +the fifth declension +divided +Father Junípero Serra +a god +1/8 of an inch thick +stone weapons +Podwiński +2008 +aristocratic +"Mother of the Movement" Betty Friedan +chromatic +1684 +acoustic problems +2010 +King William's War and Queen Anne's War +just over 800,000 +1649 +South Carolina +25 mm (1 in) +Constantine XI +A penalty shot +2013 +a "free school'" course on women +silver bowl +a negative answer +Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) to the United States Constitution, in which they were defeated by anti-feminists led by Phyllis Schlafly, +2014 +5 times +Department of the Interior +stannous chloride +Bartholomew +increase +assume turbulent form in the rainy season +April 14, 2009 +1997 +King Tubby, Peter Tosh, Sly & Robbie, Bill Laswell, Lee Perry, Mad Professor, Roots Radics, Bob Marley and Buju Banton +French and Belgian military bands +1927–28 and 1929–30 +failed borough -the state -In 1777 -the United States Supreme Court -The Constitution -in 1776 -October 1, 1994 -four -Northern Mariana Islands -Compact of Free Association -Territories -the Minor Outlying Islands -Village -Districts -American Samoa -Associated States -States of Palau -States of Micronesia -The Marshall Islands -unitary states -independent countries +The Irish edition of The Sunday Times +Republicans +Diplomate of National Board +minimum wage +perpendicular +To the stars through hardships +All wages +insoluble in water +Darkcore +foreign manager (foreign editor) and special writer +half +The majority of surnames are derived from the place where the family lived +Manhattan +1-year +Vietnam War +Thracian +seawalls and other coastal barriers +120,000 vehicles 1898 -The present Cuban government of Raúl Castro -only mutual agreement or United States abandonment of the area -Cuba was not truly sovereign at the time of the signing -becomes a state -Virginia -American Civil War -exclusive and universal -March 3, 1849 -U.S. Department of the Interior -The Interior Department -Interior Department -Indian Affairs (BIA) -Insular Affairs (OIA) -Department of the Interior -Department of the Interior -federal government -federal government -exclusive -concurrent -District of Columbia (DC) -Maryland and Virginia -Virginia -United States Congress -District of Columbia Home Rule Act -purity -Both groups gave care the highest over-all weighting -the cultural mix is greater -Both groups gave care the highest over-all weighting -how ought we to live -European -nationalist -Cistercian -behavior within a culture or community -widespread conformity to codes of morality -philosophy -morality -morality -may be independent -a god -hypothetical decrees of a perfectly rational being -reasoning about implied imperatives -moral universalism -Celia Green -Celia Green -tribal morality -tribal morality -private property -ics, religion and morality "are to be defined differently and have no definitional connections with ea -value systems -an almost automatic assumption -action guides -an "out-group" -it enhances group survival -Gary R. Johnson and V.S. Falger -conservatives -simple computational models of evolution -the categories of social rank, kinship, and stages of life -modern Westerners -monotheistic -contemporary secular frameworks -the anthropological view -certain virtues -love, kindness, and social intelligence -justice -wisdom / knowledge -non-religious people -non-religious people -complex relationship -the United States (with a high religiosity level) and "theistic" Portugal. -all secular developing democracies -piety and devotion -a man's morals -monotheistic -the greatest crimes -it "may be inevitable and indeed necessary" in certain circumstances -integrity, trustworthiness, benevolence, and fairness -finding common ground between believers and nonbelievers -Islam -the caste system -Bible -2008 -Denmark and Sweden -unclear -in various countries -lowest levels of corruption in the world -Fons Trompenaars -lie in order to protect the driver -different cultures had quite different expectations -various moral dilemmas -the action being observed -Mirror neurons -1996 -The inability to feel empathy -Jean Decety -John Newton -Eastern and the Western cultures -Complete Conduct Principles for the 21st Century -Chinese fine conduct spirits -morality forms in a series of constructive stages or domains -biology -a sense of responsibility to pursue such purposes -Sigmund Freud -guilt-shame avoidance -credentials -politically incorrect opinions -2001 -Monin and Miller -credentials as non-prejudiced persons -immoral behaviour -moral self-image -Moral self-licensing -self-image security -immoral -the VMPC -TMS -intentions and beliefs -an abnormal processing route +The US Department of Defense's Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency +Serbia +flannel petticoats +Alonzo Church +styles of dress, dance, and etiquette +1914 +30 years +first-order +20% +calculus +If each agent is connected +Tito's offer of amnesty to all collaborators +least a quartet of saxophones +Armenian, Georgian, and Caucasian Albanian bishops +Some other neighborhoods around İstiklal Avenue +Virginia Military Institute +goal judges, time keepers, and official scorers +Paul Ryan +reinsurance +not only that wars are entered into for the sole purpose of making slaves, but that they are fomented by Europeans TMS to the RTPJ -sociocultural evolution -morality -evolutionary biologists, particularly sociobiologists -"pro-social" emotions -empathy or guilt -human cooperation -restraining immediate selfishness -Human morality -restrict excessive individualism -moral codes -Westermarck -maternal bond -inbreeding -reciprocity in nature -to ensure a reliable supply of essential resources -animals living in a habitat where food quantity or quality fluctuates unpredictably -regurgitate part of their blood meal -other group members -all mammals living in complex social groups -empathy, reciprocity, altruism, cooperation, and a sense of fairness -a suite of interrelated other-regarding behaviors that cultivate and regulate complex interactions within social groups -chimpanzees -deception -the incremental development of moral complexity -stone weapons -that increasing complexity was simply a correlate of increasing group size and brain size -Christopher Boehm -by a quantitative large-scale meta-analysis of the brain activity changes -the network pertaining to representing others' intentions -in the moral neuroscience literature -the notion that moral reasoning is related to both seeing things from other persons’ points of view and to grasping others’ feelings -the neural network underlying moral decisions is probably domain-global -activation in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex -intuitive reactions to situations containing implicit moral issues -VMPC -the temporoparietal junction area -the differentiation of intentions, decisions, and actions between those that are distinguished as proper and those that are improper -moralitas -Latin -manner, character, proper behavior -moral ontology, -the origin of morals, -moral epistemology -knowledge about morals -a set of established rules -Immorality -unawareness of, indifference toward, or disbelief in any set of moral standards or principles. -opposition to that which is good or right -Immorality -moral philosophy -moral principles of a particular tradition, group, or individual. -questions of morality -deontological ethics -morality -personal or cultural values, codes of conduct or social mores -objective claims of right or wrong -only refers to that which is considered right or wrong -the branch of philosophy which studies morality in this sense. -Rotterdam (/ˈrɒtərdæm/ or /ˌrɒtərˈdæm/; Dutch: [ˌrɔtərˈdɑm] (listen)) is a city in South Holland, the Netherlands -the Rhine–Meuse–Scheldt river delta -for safety -a major logistic and economic centre -Europe's largest port +by projecting the point onto one axis along a direction that is parallel to the other axis +Cathedral of Learning +the Frontier +Tolland County +formula 5 is not a logical consequence of formula 2 +Germany +Article 8.1 of the Constitution of Armenia +lead to redundant acronym syndrome +University of Pittsburgh Stages +crustal shortening. +hillstars +8.9 million +Only the smallest insurers +1509 +Australian MBBS +de-Stalinisation +Allied escape organization +Wikis +common nouns do not take capital initials in standard English orthography +153,000 +30% +the relative curvatures of the two surfaces +European colonies +always bear the surname of the father followed by that of the mother +the Kingdom of Benin +Region and Language Control Panel +1910 +1920 +saving and restoring certain processor registers, allocating and reclaiming call frame storage +Cartesian coordinates +abroad +"Representative government +Belgrad Forest +Server 2008 R2 +used for joining pipes or electric circuits +health risks World War II (known as the Rotterdam Blitz) -the Academy of Urbanism. -architects -listed 8th -The city of Rotterdam is known for the Erasmus University -10th largest -Rhine, Meuse and Scheldt -"Gateway to Europe" -Rotterdam is the largest cargo port in Europe -its strategic location on the North Sea -'muddy water' -1260s +Colombia +saxophon +Taboo words +mechanisms by which neurons express and respond to molecular signals and how axons form complex connectivity patterns +rights, obligations or benefits +Yıldız Palace +1970s +a push towards decentralization...[but became,]in the end, an extension of centralization. +a hypothesis that has been assumed for the derivation at hand, or follows from previous formulas via a rule of inference +the timing and extent of interest rate increases, as a near-zero interest rate target had remained in place since the 2007-2009 recession +Sarayburnu +two-carbon fragments +by railway +Medical equipment +flexible and minimize bending +laws +Galleria Ataköy +March 4, 1789 +given name +right shoulder +within a cyclone's comma head +to Sis (1293), then-capital of the Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia. Beginning in 1293 and continuing for more than six centuries +Indian Affairs (BIA) +acting editor +Cardiovascular diseases +a steeper convex surface and is thicker at the centre than at the periphery +Avella, Pennsylvania +making panhandling a misdemeanor +flower flag ginseng +the climate in the Middle East changed and became drier +Insurance Services Office +increased property ownership and a return to small scale living +two +granite +London-based merchants +developing contrived acronyms to name projects +arities of function symbols and predicate symbols +Eclecticism and freedom of expression +1989 +for every 4 in the Connecticut Republican Party +nickel or gold +sunset provisions +Argentina +150 +the 2008-2009 recession +land grants +downdrafts and microbursts +overlapping windows +2011 Newspaper Awards +The National Association of Insurance Commissioners +the early 20th century +Tablet PC +1680 +underneath the ice +tribal and state warfare +provides more protection to the players +as individual letters: /ˌjuːˌɑːrˈɛl/ and /ˌaɪˌɑːrˈeɪ/, respectively; or as a single word: /ˈɜːrl/ and /ˈaɪərə/ +The Andes +drop in the stock market +incremental upgrade +larger +to operate on reals, complex values or matrices +English +Pittsburgh Academy +1630 +April 8, 2014 +HomeGroup +four players (plus a goalie) +Topkapı Palace and Yıldız Palace +bids for UEFA Euro 2012 and UEFA Euro 2016 +12th +Republicans +two different ways +two +Royal Yugoslav Army +reasonable or significant +Georgia the lower end of the fen stream Rotte -the construction of protective dikes and dams -large floods in the area -World War II -The statue stands near the Leuvehaven -Adolf Hitler -15 May 1940 -900 -1898 -In the first decades of the 20th century -the White House (in Dutch Witte Huis) -Brinkman en Van der Vlugt -The Van Nelle Factory +farming +lifting the puck easier +Claude Lévi-Strauss +their natural environment +Allied soldiers +tin +restoration of a degree of capitalism and private enterprise +labour productivity +input copy directly +300 +androgens such as testosterone and androsterone +in terms of centralization and decentralization +the Titovka cap +Conservatives generally advocate supply-side economics +a vesicle +Fair Trading Act +Hungarian Third Army +very young +1893 +between Christmas and New Year's Day +2007-2009 recession +transparent materials such as glass, ground and polished to a desired shape +Ten states +Tin +narrate sacred scriptures +The first armed opposition group in Manipur, the United National Liberation Front (UNLF) +GF +29 +House +Black Sea +capital-intensive +knowledge is articulated from local perspectives, with all its uncertainties, complexity and paradox +Bernard Katz +12.5% +Akmerkez +placed before a person's given name. +From 1942 till after 1944 +Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) +1946 +the Army attempted to defend all borders +1910 +431,541 +deep levels of subroutine nesting +Greece +Britain and the Continent +King Francis I of France +cloud forests +believed the heart was the center of intelligence and that the brain regulated the amount of heat from the heart +over one-fourth +no formula φ(x,y) +2–4 years +Wells Fargo economists +James Polk +three +Bolsheviks +La Scuola d'Italia +Martin Ivens +the Renaissance +according to the side of the chamber on which they sit +Aram Abrahamyan +Midtown and Financial District +Australian Senate +branch +Museum of Modern Art +New Jersey +2011 +1768 +Functions +rent +moral universalism +with the prefix as a separate word, as in "Fitz William", as well as "FitzWilliam" or "Fitzwilliam" 1898 -the White House (in Dutch Witte Huis) +1945 +Insurance Company of North America +59,000 +four +an outlying area of rugged hills and narrow valleys, and the inner area of flat plain, with all associated land forms +dry steppe +10.5 million +woods +other rain drops or ice crystals +are often called derivations in proof theory +late eighteenth century +liberals +like second declension nouns +the Gothic period +Chancellor's +the Mets +HDL cholesterol +migrants from across Anatolia have moved in and city limits have expanded to accommodate them +1906 +economic decline +cooling the air or adding water vapor to the air +knattleikr +Iberian monarchs. +culture, literature, art, philosophy, history, economics, architecture, fiction, and literary criticism. +California Geological Survey +the Alevis +SoundCloud and MixCloud +1862 +on top of molten tin +SFR Yugoslavia +leather, wool, hides, and fertilizer +the thirteen British colonies +107 +Catalan +five +1953 +American +Neuropathology +Army Institute of Heraldry +DESC +different periods, different locations, or with being used with certain other elements +inadequate financial resources +Lenin +Maize +The Fertile Crescent +Recep Tayyip Erdoğan +Walter Rodney +National teams representing the member federations of the IIHF compete annually in the IIHF Ice Hockey World Championships. +chapter XI +atherosclerosis and inflammation +placed before a person's given name. +Unmarried and divorced women +National Hockey League +170,000 jobs annually +Ihab Hassan +colour of the trace, starting x and y co-ordinates, trace speed +how neural substrates underlie specific animal and human behaviors +18 +1867 +Michael Kors, 7 For All Mankind, Calvin Klein, Hugo Boss, Tommy Hilfiger and the Dutch well known men's clothier Oger +20° and 40° degrees +Republicans +post-structuralism +Holy Roman Empire and its allies +Federal Government +the onset of the Andean orogeny +16th and 17th centuries +December 2010 +runs along the coastal strip lying north of the Cantabrian and Basque mountains, along the Bay of Biscay +New York City +deliberately designed to be especially apt for the thing being named +winter encampment at Valley Forge, Pennsylvania In the first decades of the 20th century -Brinkman en Van der Vlugt -The Van Nelle Factory -1908 -Feyenoord -World Cup for club teams in the same year. In 1974, they were the first Dutch club to win the UEFA Cup and in 2002 -European Cup -Feyenoord -Rotterdam -Düsseldorf -Utrecht -The Amaury Sport Organization (ASO) -in addition to it being another big city, like London, to showcase the use of bikes for urban transportation, it provided a location well positioned -Rotterdam's swimming tradition started with Marie Braun aka Zus (sister) Braun -Gold -her mother Ma Braun -14 time national champ -Rie Mastenbroek -Rotterdam The Hague Airport -the growth of the low-cost carrier market. -Environmental regulations make further growth uncertain. -Schiphol Airport and Eindhoven Airport -The Hague Airport offers advantages in terms of rapid handling of passengers and baggage. -Nieuwe Maas -De Hef -Noordereiland -the Van Brienenoordbrug -Willemsspoortunnel -Nieuwe Maas -Erasmus Bridge -De Hef -Noordereiland -Koninginnebrug -1950s -Kop van Zuid -European City of the Year -Academy of Urbanism -1980s +round mirror-cases, combs, handles +1940s and early 1950s +a tied vote is a real prospect +Some state offices have started to use both last names +1965 +Republicans +Cartesian coordinates +basic medical degree +Baltimore +16 m +decentralization, management by objectives, contracting out, competition within government and consumer orientation. +for the sake of realism +Quechua and Aymara +Institution of Structural Engineers Kop van Zuid -European City of the Year -windy and open -livable -1950s -Allianz, Maersk, Petrobras, Samskip, Louis Dreyfus Group and Aon -Pfizer -Unilever -Shell Downstream -Lijnbaan -Market Hall -Koopgoot -Michael Kors, 7 For All Mankind, Calvin Klein, Hugo Boss, Tommy Hilfiger and the Dutch well known men's clothier Oger -1953 -demographics -70% -singles -80% -income -Erasmus University Rotterdam (EUR) -29th globally and 7th in Europe -first place with the CEMS Master in Management and a tenth place with its RSM Master in Management -city's famous former inhabitants, Desiderius Erasmus -Rotterdam Philharmonic -Yannick Nézet-Séguin -Diergaarde Blijdorp -Oceanium -Rotterdam -non-industrialised -13% -Ahmed Aboutaleb -Kruiskade -"Summer Carnival", the Dance Parade, Rotterdam 666, the Metropolis pop festival and the World Port days -Nighttown and WATT and smaller stages such as Waterfront, Exit, and Heidegger -2005–2011 -International Film Festival -the dispersion of the lens material—the variation of its refractive index, n, with the wavelength of light. -fringes of colour around the image -an achromatic doublet (or achromat) -optical microscope -apochromat -If the separation distance is equal to the sum of the focal lengths -afocal system -the simplest type of optical telescope -afocal system -Lenses -They are usually shaped to fit in a roughly oval, not circular, frame; -myopia, hyperopia, presbyopia, and astigmatism -Sunglasses -lenses are sometimes paired up with curved mirrors -virtual -photographic film or an optical sensor -Schmidt and meniscus -at least 2400 years -Convex lenses -photovoltaic cells -ignition can be achieved even with a poorly made lens -transmissive optical device that affects the focus of a light beam through refraction -single piece of material -several simple lenses (elements) -transparent materials such as glass, ground and polished to a desired shape -earliest written records of lenses date to Ancient Greece -used by artisans for fine work, and for authenticating seal impressions -Aristophanes' play The Clouds (424 BC) -writings of Pliny the Elder (23–79) -Italy in the 1280s -Venice and Florence in the thirteenth century -correction of vision -around 1595 -1608 -Chester Moore Hall -1733 -England -Englishman John Dollond -spherical -their two surfaces are parts of the surfaces of spheres -convex (bulging outwards from the lens), concave (depressed into the lens), or planar (flat) -line joining the centres of the spheres making up the lens surfaces -Barlow lens +The Royal Road +2005 +over US$3.7 billion +transient tributyl tin radicals +1481 +because of interactions between free and bound variables that occur during syntactic manipulations of the formulas involved in the inference rule. +5.0% +insufficiently powerful +5.9% +Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) and the Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) mission +Home +127,336 +After 1945 +O'Brien +cloud tops with a lot of small-scale variation +dry +Society for Neuroscience (SFN) +stack frames +1638 +1788 +Theodore Roosevelt +golden +grime and dubstep a so-called virtual object -converging beam -focal length -angular -angular magnification -focal lengths -plate scale -Linear -5 times -linear magnification -meaningless -5 cm -Spherical aberration -blurring -spherical surfaces -aspheric lenses -plano-convex lens -Coma -comatic circle -comet-like -bestform -the curvature of the two optical surfaces -both surfaces are convex -both surfaces have the same radius of curvature -lens with two concave surfaces -one of the surfaces is flat -steeper concave surface and is thinner at the centre than at the periphery -the relative curvatures of the two surfaces -a steeper convex surface and is thicker at the centre than at the periphery +Over 10 million +1 +132 +attempting to take the puck from an opponent or to remove the opponent from play +Celia Green +Karabiner 98k rifle, MP 40 submachine gun, MG 34 machine gun, Carcano rifles and carbines and Beretta submachine guns +Ice pellets +the state +hands on training +Founded under the name of Byzantium on the Sarayburnu promontory around 660 BCE, +467.5 millimetres (57.78 in) +jump-up and Hardstep +nineteenth century +The Commission on Social Determinants of Health +In 1980, the Kangleipak Communist Party (KCP) was formed. These groups began a spree of bank robberies and attacks on police officers and government buildings. +that its lines, like education, have no ending +unity in phonological forms and developments +the New World +University of Pittsburgh Medical Center +two +converting present-day private productive property into common or public goods +AD 900 +northern Slovenia +"last, first middle," +Bradford, Greensburg, Johnstown, and Titusville +(all provable statements are true in all models +estimating counterfactual demographic developments in case the Atlantic slave trade had not existed. +US$360,700 +Valens Aqueduct +bus and shuttle service +4 million +In telephone directories the surname is used for collation +The Sunday Times +30,000 +In much of Midtown Manhattan, Broadway runs at a diagonal to the grid, +extensive art collections +New York and New England +bachelor's degree and a master's degree in Theology +New York +n Cartesian coordinates +Member states +Paul Revere +Mississippi River +Wegener–Bergeron–Findeisen process +in the 2002 elections +penalty shot +overriding union +centre red-line +1 year +built overnight +must be reentrant +Mouthpieces +Gyowondae +upgrading the electricity grid +1908 +as a means of both spoken and written communication +Anti-Fascist Council for the National Liberation of Yugoslavia (AVNNOJ) +unemployment +members of the Party deemed to be traitors +omega-6 +i18n +moral self-image +1459 +30 +25 +guó +Loktak Lake +Tahoe Regional Planning Agency +1609 logbook of Robert Juet +value systems +David Rittenhouse +eighth +Hagia Sophia +religious scenes +optical microscope +Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Rhode Island +Cartesian coordinates are unique and non-ambiguous +categorical +graph of a function or relation +Plum Boro Science Center +Local Integrated Software Architecture nonzero thickness -a meniscus lens must have slightly unequal curvatures -focuses a collimated beam -The plane perpendicular to the lens axis situated at a distance f from the lens is called the focal plane. -collimated beam by the lens -at infinity -whether the corresponding surfaces are convex or concave -rays reaching the surface have already passed the center of curvature -a surface's center of curvature is further along in the direction of the ray travel -convex surfaces -concave surfaces +Rotterdam is the largest cargo port in Europe +conservatives +39 districts +over 740 +maternal bond +in a situation such as his win, the top "three" parties in the governor's race all became major parties +empty function +commercially used as wires for superconducting magnets +postmodernism and conceiving the ideal of the ultimate parody +19,400 BP +historically also known as Constantinople and Byzantium image is formed on the opposite side of the lens from where those rays are being considered -be projected on a screen -a real object at the location of that virtual image -virtual image behind the magnifying glass -Between 1917 and 1939, the people of Manipur pressed for their rights against the British Rule. -the princely state of Manipur negotiated with the British administration its preference to be part of India, rather than Burma. -These negotiations were cut short with the outbreak of World War II. -On 21 September 1949, Maharaja Budhachandra signed a Treaty of Accession merging the kingdom into India. -The Shan or Pong called the area Cassay, the Burmese Kathe, and the Assamese Meklee. -Bhagyachandra and his successors issued coins engraved with "Manipureshwar", or "lord of Manipur", and the British discarded the name Meckley. -In the first treaty between the British East India Company and Meidingu Chingthangkhomba (Bhagyachandra) signed in 1762, the kingdom was recorded as Meckley. -Later on, the work Dharani Samhita (1825–34) popularised the Sanskrit legends of the origin of Manipur's name. -A separatist movement has been active in Manipur since 1964, when United National Liberation Front was founded. -tribal peoples have demanded division of the present state into two or three Indian states along ethnic lines. -This is considered one of India's "sensitive areas", due to its political troubles and isolated geography. -Foreign travelers must gain permission from the government to enter the state. -The first armed opposition group in Manipur, the United National Liberation Front (UNLF) -in 1977 the People's Revolutionary Party of Kangleipak (PREPAK) was formed -was founded in 1964, which declared that it wanted to gain independence from India and form Manipur as a new country. -the People's Liberation Army (PLA) was formed in 1978 which Human Rights Watch states as having received arms and training from China. -In 1980, the Kangleipak Communist Party (KCP) was formed. These groups began a spree of bank robberies and attacks on police officers and government buildings. -The total area covered by the state is 22,347 square kilometres (8,628 sq mi). -The state lies at a latitude of 23°83'N – 25°68'N and a longitude of 93°03'E – 94°78'E. -The mountain ranges create a moderated climate, preventing the cold winds from the north from reaching the valley -approximately 700 square miles (2,000 km2) surrounded by blue mountains and is at an elevation of 790 metres (2,590 ft) above sea level. -Almost all the rivers in the valley area -These rivers are corrosive -assume turbulent form in the rainy season -Maku, Barak, Jiri, Irang and Leimatak -Yu River Basin, include the Chamu, Khunou and other short streams. -Almost all the rivers in the valley area -These rivers are corrosive -assume turbulent form in the rainy season -Yu River Basin, include the Chamu, Khunou and other short streams. -Maku, Barak, Jiri, Irang and Leimatak -an outlying area of rugged hills and narrow valleys, and the inner area of flat plain, with all associated land forms -600 km2 -Loktak lake -40 m -2,994 m -the red ferruginous soil in the hill area and the alluvium in the valley -loam, small rock fragments, sand and sandy clay -5.4 to 6.8 +law, medicine, and science departments +unusual +South, Mountain West and Midwest +blame them for their situation, and feel that their requests for money or support (usually via begging) are unjustified. In the 1990s +the Kongo Civil War +1,712 +breakcore, ragga jungle, hardstep, darkstep, techstep +a group of English Lords Proprietors +Association of American Universities +There is no rule +the Metro-North Railroad's New Haven Line +HUD +compactness theorem +soup, soap, and salvation +European demand for slaves +Joseph C. Miller +top and bottom +$800 billion +The Nutrition Source +codified empirical +approximately 60 months +autocratic elite +suffrage +watery weeds +ten +The Bolivian Orocline area overlaps with the area of maximum width of the Altiplano Plateau +May 2010 +employees must be painstakingly trained to observe corporate formalities so that courts will not treat the entities in the group as alter egos of each other. +peace +most Senate votes cast in Western Australia were subject to a formal recount +Atlas, Delta, Titan +Mini for BMW +Tarskian semantics +Northeastern +social +This OFC concept was to establish an elective federal regulatory scheme that insurers could opt into from the traditional state system +The Amaury Sport Organization (ASO) +a museum +Winston Churchill +half +graph +Byzantine Soil on the steep hill slopes -very thin -790 meters above sea level -The maximum temperature in the summer months is 32 °C (90 °F) -generally amiable climate, though the winters can be a chilly -In winter the temperature often falls below 0 °C (32 °F) -The coldest month is January, and the warmest July. +compact sentence elements +Cudjoe Lewis, who died in 1935 +600,000 +About two to three million +"Mother of the Movement" Betty Friedan +Madison Square Garden +the governor +upslope flow is maximized within windward sides of the terrain at elevation. +1902 +its origin +in the Westphalian sense +$100 million +Philadelphia +15 +iron ores +Greek +Yamasee War +Structural building engineering +Alliance of European Conservatives and Reformists +Lenape language. +Relief is more suitable for depicting complicated subjects with many figures and very active poses, such as battles, than free-standing "sculpture in the round +ensure that the design is practically buildable within acceptable manufacturing +indentured servants +capitalism, providing not only influx of capital, but also disciplining hardship into workers (a form of "apprenticeship" to the capitalist industrial plant). +Tulihal Airport +Casting +model theory +can of beer" +private companies and corporations +public hospitals tend to be overcrowded +first 12 +committees +secede May until mid-October -467.5 millimetres (57.78 in) -Imphal -Tamenglong -Bay of Bengal -Meetei -Manipur -Kuki National Organisation -United Peoples Forum -Manipur -7.9 -25 -21 -107 +sitting fortnights +listed 8th +masonry +The Times +Hartford +score a goal +design and construct the structures +59.4% +varies greatly +the Y-axis +John Aldridge, Ray Houghton, Tommy Caton, Matt Elliott, Nigel Jemson and Dean Whitehead +engineering design and analysis +lipogenesis +51.2 million +environmental loads +E1b1b +Thomas Mellon +negative electrode +United States +2 +"G-spec" (for "government specification") flags +None +Andrew Neil +Suebi tribe +admit generalized signatures +Third-party IMEs +164 +If there is a loss of economies of scale +physical contact +In America 76 -Assam -167 -Tulihal -Tulihal Airport -National Highway 53 -watery weeds -30 -Bishnupur -Loktak Lake -Lake people -13×13 ft -courtyard -two -one -one table -4000 -600 +Swedes +French +reduce the risk of a person being mistaken for others using the same name combinations +2001 +three years of clinical internship +17th century +perpendicular +The Bush Administration +gold +a cause and effect relationship +Many communities and states across the country have created these plans +the MMI +plasma membrane +information about cloud tops +Mizar and Isabelle +direct trauma +since 1978 +"Mr Abraham." +January 1977 +Wells Fargo Economics +ever-expanding base of knowledge and the availability of increasingly sophisticated technical methods +Warren G. Harding +Loktak lake +Noordereiland +Governor-General +Joseph Inikori +European Trophy, Tampere Cup and the Pajulahti Cup +acetyl-CoA +brick building +1773 +In Spain and in most Spanish-speaking countries +1960s +less than 25 inches +Its commercial and historical center lies on the European side and about a third of its population lives on the Asian side +compact and elegant +Anglosphere +at the connections +1921 +through privatization of public owned functions and businesses +deception +1950s +by a comma +1733 +In the very elderly, age-related large artery pulsatility and stiffness is more pronounced among women than men. +all the states bordering on the Baltic Sea, and the European Community +January 5, 2011 +upslope flow due to the trade winds +at least half +Palmyra Atoll +1453 +invention of the wheel +Chief Justice of Connecticut +Service Pack 2 for Windows XP, as well as Service Pack 1 for Windows Server 2003 +elderly homeless population 1989 -15 -Krishna -graceful and slow -elegant -Radha -2 acres -25 -1987 -80-minute -calling to a meal -the women/invitees and to their children. -married women -2nd lunar day of Heyangei -1 November -peace and thanksgiving to the Almighty for the harvests -Kuki-Chin-Zomi -Harvest festival -About 41.3% -Vaishnavism school -by Meetei people -Garib Niwas -The Hindu -Christianity -in the 19th century -Western-type education. -Christian -Little Flower School in Imphal, Don Bosco High School in Imphal, St. Joseph's Convent, and Nirmalabas High School -about 8% -Sanamahism -the Sun God/Sanamahi -Umang Lai -Folk religions -58.6 percent -51 -three women -5,704 -70.5 percent -Manipur -Meeteis, Nagas, Kukis -Indian security forces and insurgent armed groups -They have formed splinter groups -UNLF, PLA and PREPAK -brain-damaged -were responsible for certain functions -localized -epileptic -John Hughlings Jackson -20th -David Rioch, Francis O. Schmitt, and Stephen Kuffler -at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research -in the 1950s -Massachusetts Institute of Technology -1952 -how they are initiated and propagated -1961–2 -Bernard Katz -the FitzHugh–Nagumo model -molecular biology, electrophysiology, and computational neuroscience -cells specialized for communication -through specialized junctions called synapses -electrical or electrochemical signals can be transmitted from one cell to another -axons -the central nervous system (brain and spinal cord), and the peripheral nervous system -brain -nervous system -one hundred trillion -the plasticity -too few test subjects -brain changes thought to be associated with a mental condition but without any of the symptoms -serious brain damages and neurodegenerative diseases -insufficient size studies -addiction medicine, and sleep medicine -Neurology -Psychiatry -Anesthesiology -Neuropathology -Society for Neuroscience (SFN) -1969 -40,290 -United States -83 -Brain Research Organization (IBRO) -Federation of European Neuroscience Societies (FENS) -every two years -32 -2006 -general public and government officials -Society for Neuroscience -International Brain Bee -Dana Foundation -McMaster University -from the molecular and cellular levels to the systems and cognitive levels -molecular level -molecular biology and genetics -biological functions -physiological -molecular and cellular levels to the systems and cognitive levels -mechanisms by which neurons express and respond to molecular signals and how axons form complex connectivity patterns -molecular identity -understand how neurons develop and how genetic changes affect biological functions -the scientific study of the nervous system -biology -neuroeducation, neuroethics, and neurolaw -neurobiology -broadened to include different approaches -expanded enormously, from molecular and cellular studies of individual nerve cells to imaging of sensory and motor tasks in the brain -the study of neural networks -molecular, cellular, developmental, structural, functional, evolutionary, computational, and medical aspects of the nervous system +the alto and tenor +Cardiovascular disease +a more difficult exercise +stannite, cylindrite, franckeite, canfieldite, and teallite +the Virginia Plan and the New Jersey Plan +1936 +120 +1874 +February or March +mishandle the puck into their own net +more subtle limitations +after Lenin's death during the regime of Josef Stalin in the Soviet Union +long term strategics +Lκλ +it is widely understood that the first surname denotes one's father's family +the Fertile Crescent +Calvert Vaux +defined as less than 5 x 30 minutes of moderate activity per week, or less than 3 x 20 minutes of vigorous activity per week +ketoacyl and isoprene groups +the growth of the low-cost carrier market. +phosphatidylinositols and phosphatidic acids +1.2 million cubic yards +vibrant political culture +a village in County Galway +MBBS degree +offensive +Tin is often recovered from granules washed downstream +5500 to 3500 BCE +Because of the higher specific gravity +too complex +the Partisan movement +a formula with free variables is said to be satisfied by an interpretation if the formula remains true +The affluent +Fairfield +pay-per-ride MetroCards +only optionally in Spain, despite Argentina being a Spanish-speaking country +Sea of Marmara, the Bosphorus, and the Golden Horn +Linux and NetWare +human genetic markers +a stronger player +Montreal +unary predicate symbol +more than $14 billion in economic activity +Spanish empire +single five-minute sudden death period +plaster or stucco +Spanish Florida +Long Island Sound +a tree +Chase Bishop +Persian king Darius +More than 40 +1980 +there is a unique parse tree +origin +restrict excessive individualism +using more saturated colors than the official cloth is not new +historic data for the location. +2.83 m (9 ft 3 in) +National Coalition for the Homeless +large-scale redevelopment projects +Above the line voting +French Connection United Kingdom. +boards surrounding the ice help keep the puck in play and they can also be used as tools to play the puck +Edison Electric Illuminating Company +team with the most goals +There is evidence that higher consumption of sugar is associated with higher blood pressure and unfavorable blood lipids "cranial stuffing" of sorts -In Egypt, -take a crooked piece of iron, and with it draw out the brain through the nostrils -the heart -until the time of the Greek physician Hippocrates -but was also the seat of intelligence -Plato -believed the heart was the center of intelligence and that the brain regulated the amount of heat from the heart -after the invention of the microscope and the development of a staining procedure -late 1890s -Camillo Golgi -The procedure used a silver chromate salt to reveal the intricate structures of individual neurons -led to the formation of the neuron doctrine -mechanisms of how neurons process signals physiologically and electrochemically -thin extensions from a neuronal cell body -specialized to receive synaptic inputs from other neurons -specialized to conduct nerve impulses called action potentials -cell bodies of the neurons containing the nucleus -reflexes, multisensory integration, motor coordination, circadian rhythms, emotional responses, learning, and memory -examine interactions between the nervous system and the endocrine and immune systems -how neural substrates underlie specific animal and human behaviors -how neural circuits are formed and used anatomically and physiologically to produce functions -how psychological functions are produced by neural circuitry -fMRI, PET, SPECT -neuroimaging (e.g., fMRI, PET, SPECT), electrophysiology, and human genetic analysis -address abstract questions such as how human cognition and emotion are mapped to specific neural substrates -how it works, how it develops, how it malfunctions, and how it can be altered or repaired -improvements in technology -ever-expanding base of knowledge and the availability of increasingly sophisticated technical methods -electron microscopy, computers, electronics, functional brain imaging, and most recently genetics and genomics -Oxford -1646 -1665–66 -1644 and 1671 -1642 -English Civil War -Charles II -fires -plague got too close -the South East region of England and the county town of Oxfordshire -159,994 -the oldest university in the English-speaking world -examples of every English architectural period since the late Saxon period -Oxenaforda -fords were more common than bridges -AD 900 -became an important military frontier town between the kingdoms of Mercia and Wessex and was on several occasions raided by Danes -the Norman Invasion -Robert D'Oyly -to confirm Norman authority over the area -The community never grew large -1139 -King Henry II -A grandson of King John -various important religious houses -Cistercian Order -12th century -St Edmund Hall -University College (1249), Balliol (1263) and Merton (1264) -1355 -as many as 93 -Great Western Railway -78 miles (125.5 km) -1851 -63.5 miles -100 mph (161 km/h) -18-month -Chiltern Railways -400 metres -Heart Thames Valley, Destiny 105, Jack FM and Jack FM 2 along with Oxide: Oxford Student Radio -Six TV: The Oxford Channel -Oxide: Oxford Student Radio -May 2005 -Radiohead -nearby Abingdon School -30 years -Oxford, and its surrounding towns and villages, -Oxford United -fourth -1985 -23 years -John Aldridge, Ray Houghton, Tommy Caton, Matt Elliott, Nigel Jemson and Dean Whitehead -relatively small -Carfax -Cornmarket Street and Queen Street +the "Constitution State" +stone river +Theodore Solomons +the labor force participation rate is falling +substantially reduce the cost of developing and maintaining a large program +Chile +289,000 +x in X +reconstructed Proto-Germanic +Oceanium +work +germanium and lead +in Kerala and some other parts of South India that the spouse adopts her husband's first name +a crackling sound known as the tin cry can be heard due to the twinning of the crystals +on East 29th Street +RARS +axiom systems +surnames are placed last +Southeast Asian peninsula +Mitt Romney +1563 +American Civil War +East North Central +its initial +Oriental Orthodoxy +12 +Thailand +107 +they may owe taxes +Social Services +comic playwrights +Department of the Interior +the White House (in Dutch Witte Huis) +1962 +bourgeois +disease +long-term joblessness +On 26 October 1943 +70% +levied taxes, built roads, and elected officials who managed town affairs +eastern +The report, which revealed great discrimination against women in American life, +six +WQHT +tinne +373 +Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (RSFSR) +Manhattan +African scholar +1773 +the coast of West Africa +as a means to pressure the middle class to join and overthrow the Tsar. +medieval 1738 -The High -two -The Clarendon Centre and the Westgate Centre -the original West Gate in the city wall, -at the west end of Queen Street -2011 -Ashmolean Museum -Ashmolean Museum -1678–1683 -significant collections of art and archaeology -2015 -20 -4,930 -from Thornhill and Water Eaton -battery power with a small diesel generator -15 July 2010 -Stagecoach and Oxford Bus Company -flywheel energy storage (FES) -FES uses a high-speed flywheel -mass-produce cars -Morris Motors and Pressed Steel Fisher -William Morris -Mini for BMW -left bank of Cowley -Oxford -27% -10,000 -Headington and Cowley Road areas -nine +to create a federal multi-ethnic communist state in Yugoslavia +49,000 +ignition can be achieved even with a poorly made lens +UNIVersal Automatic Computer. +the classical Greek period +10% +two altos, one tenor, and one baritone +whistles. +beta decay of heavy isotopes of indium. +10,000 BC +Ancient Armenia's +assemblies and county governments +The Bronx +30 +Northeastern University +Bolsheviks +many-sorted +The "Big Six" +King Charles II 13 -brewing trade -railways -1743 -1998 +raw sugar was turned into granulated sugar and the molasses distilled into rum +Portugal, Spain, the Italian kingdoms, England, France and the Netherlands. +changing on the fly +FES uses a high-speed flywheel +a formula or algorithm +1,000 km (620 mi) +Most nationwide newspapers Richard Tawney -Michael Cannon -luxury apartments -Murdoch -Fair Trading Act -1981 -Thomson Corporation +Grandmaster Flash, Roger Troutman, Afrika Bambaata, Run DMC, Mac Dre, Public Enemy, Schooly D, N.W.A +A Plan, Not a Dream: How to End Homelessness in Ten Years +two patriarchs, plus primates, archbishops and bishops, lower clergy and laity serving the Church. +2011 +Francisco Coronado +If some free variable of t becomes bound, then to substitute t for x it is first necessary to change the bound variables of φ +60 million +1440 to about 1833 +has two possible oxidation states, +2 and the slightly more stable +4 +in citing the names of authors in scholarly papers +Haarlem +2,000 +John Paul Jones +troops from the colonies and tax funds from Britain +5 April +unconditional surrender of the Royal Yugoslav Army +1987 +10th largest +Windows NT 3.51 +The Portuguese +1999 +Amtrak +The Interior Department +complex weather and atmospheric conditions uneconomic businesses -Evans -Hugh Trevor-Roper -Frank Giles -Hitler Diaries -The Last Days of Hitler +First Five-Year Plan +specialized to conduct nerve impulses called action potentials +costs and benefits +2010 +politically incorrect opinions +Internet Explorer 5.0 and Windows Media Player 6.2 +1835 +Roulston Lake in Plaster Rock, New Brunswick, Canada +these models do not have the force of law and have no effect unless they are adopted by a state. +3.45 percent +capitalist property relations +shorter +Walter Gropius and Le Corbusier +everything went awry +Harold Evans +The report, which revealed great discrimination against women in American life, +polymeric solids +Montana +by variables such as p and q +Che Guevara +transform biology from a descriptive to a predictive field of science +VMPC +to stand up safely +number of functions with the same name, but operating on different types of data, or with different parameter profiles +Eurasian +log cabin +Saint Louis University International School of Medicine +deciding on the constitutionality of the law or cases +five years of study +the construction of aqueducts and roads +modernisation +Tiger Bay Village +Homeless Emergency Assistance and Rapid Transition to Housing +1730s and 1740s +Ethiopia and Eritrea +clothing company +In July 2010 +Almost all the rivers in the valley area +a real object at the location of that virtual image +15 m +hanging-chain +chinchillas +ceramides, phosphosphingolipids, glycosphingolipids and other compounds +1630s +to Belize +M's P +44 +people with substance abuse problems or mental health issues +their form +his testament of December 1922 +Food surpluses +Republican +5 millimetres (0.20 in) +the American Classical League +phosphatidylcholine (also known as PC, GPCho or lecithin), phosphatidylethanolamine (PE or GPEtn) and phosphatidylserine (PS or GPSer) +Princeton +640 kilometres +convective +categorical +The Congressional Research Service +anti-microbial, anti-parasitic, and anti-cancer +Recep Tayyip Erdoğan +177.3 °C (351.1 °F) for 11 nm particles +one-fortieth +giving each saxophone a range of two and a half octaves. +Yannick Nézet-Séguin +many single figures have heads in high relief +Language Interface Packs +more than 60,000 +1898 +Herzegovina +younger workers +in the city +Kilometers +Schenley Fountain +Penn Station +Inca Empire +3.5 million +zero tolerance +liver +25% +Phipps Conservatory & Botanical +12.4 million +the oyster capital of the world +Cartesian +fMRI, PET, SPECT +for safety +Congress +codomain is not specified +Metamath +age, gender or family history +Congress +isoprene units +Republican +$4.5 million +Edge Essential Mix +mutually desired +Africa's population almost immediately began to rapidly increase, +1959 +like first declension nouns +(all statements which are true in all models are provable). +the Battle of Poljana +the Port of Haydarpaşa, the Port of Ambarlı, and the Port of Zeytinburnu +every month +1985 +the movement lasted from the 1960s into the early 1980s, the exact years of the movement are more difficult to pinpoint and are often disputed +1820 +Windows Vista +clockwise +First Great Awakening +Windows 2000 +HDL cholesterol +dirty +West Africa +formalization of mathematics into axioms and is studied in the foundations of mathematics +place of long tidal river +The causes, prevention, and/or treatment of all forms of cardiovascular disease +The Awakening +in Karaköy +Connecticotian +Panther Programs +"House of Hope" +African slaves +the entirety +Entire Agreement +(NAIC) adopted several model reforms for state insurance regulation +1941 +to act without external support +60% decrease in federal spending +steppe +The movement is usually believed to have begun in 1963 +Andrew Carnegie and George Westinghouse +Lake people +automatic testing of the subroutine's return code, or the handling of exceptions that it may raise +19th +37 +three categories +231 lb +late 1941 +styling of the degree title +approximately once a month +1889 +fiscal federalism +absence of improvement after antibiotic use +33 percent +three years +nearly 60 million visitors +crustal shortening. +heads and limbs +euphony, social significance or other reasons. +penalties +four years +were not successful +homeless numbers remained stubbornly high +lower total cholesterol +The Holland Tunnel +Modernism +variables +Franklin D. Roosevelt +2000 +19 +more than 30 churches. +oceans +corporations +a US$3 billion fiberoptic telecommunications upgrade +1969 +infinitary logics and higher-order logics +ice hockey +much lower than that of ocean water (which averages 3.5%) +website of the U.S. embassy in London +Windows NT 3 +1.2% +Virginia General Assembly investigations -Sunday Telegraph -Andrew Neil -Israel -HIV -print workers -Wapping -input copy directly -Wapping Dispute -1987 -Funday Times -Neil -Style & Travel -Culture -acting editor -Driving -2012 -John Witherow -Home -Fifa -Marie Colvin -1.3 million -siege of Homs -Foreign Reporter of the Year -1.3 million -just over 800,000 -59,000 -a fall in circulation -Martin Ivens -John Witherow -Martin Ivens -the possible merger of the two Times titles -January 2013 -May 2010 -The Times -The Sunday Times -July 2010 -to reflect their distinct brand identities -December 2010 -Apple's Newsstand platform -August 2011 -500MB -allowing automated downloading of the news section. -The Sunday Times iPad app -twice -2011 Newspaper Awards -Various -iMonitor -It can be accessed without cost. -Sunday Times Driving -premium vehicles -editorial content from the newspaper -specially commissioned articles. -Alan Ruddock and John Burns -The Irish edition of The Sunday Times -third biggest-selling -John Burns -127,336 -2003 -Travel -164 -The Sunday Times Travel Magazine -Britain -phone hacking scandal -employing "known criminals" -to gain access to his bank account records -Gordon Brown -The Sunday Times -25 -freelance columnists -four -editors -extensive Irish coverage -than 20 years -Scottish television schedules -Jason Allardyce -"Scottish Focus" -about a dozen -William Harrison Ainsworth's Old St Paul's -1838 -the coronation of Queen Victoria -wood -a novel -Alice Cornwell -1893 -the Observer -his wife, Rachel Sassoon Beer -Rachel Sassoon Beer -William Berry and his brother, Gomer Berry -23 November 1930 -21 January 1940 -Lord Camrose -Viscount Kemsley -1943 -The Sunday Times -Kemsley Newspapers Group -Kemsley Newspapers Group -Ian Fleming -foreign manager (foreign editor) and special writer -28 September 1958 -12 November 1945 -publish two sections regularly -Lord Thomson -Denis Hamilton -colour section -Jean Shrimpton -David Bailey -Clive Irving -1964 -The Sunday Times -Thomson -Times Newspapers Ltd -Harold Evans -1967 until 1981 -19 May 1968 -birth defects -a series of industrial disputes at its plant at Gray's Inn Road in London -to buy out obstructive practices and overmanning -resisting attempts to replace the old-fashioned hot-metal and labour-intensive Linotype method -November 1978 -November 1979 -had been on full pay during the suspension -more money -felt betrayed -Rupert Murdoch -he thought had a better chance of dealing with the trade unions. -a subsidiary of News UK -The Sunday Times -owned by News Corp. Times Newspapers -since 1966 -in 1981 -The Sunday Times -just under one million -The Sunday Telegraph, The Observer and The Independent on Sunday -Monday to Saturday -more than twice as many copies -Insight team -for the strength of its investigative reporting -Jeremy Clarkson, A. A. Gill and Bryan Appleyard -the equivalent of 450 to 500 tabloid pages -Travel, Home and Driving -Forbes 400 -The Sunday Times Fast Track 100 -Parent Power -The Sunday Times Festival of Education -The Sunday Times Bestseller List -18 February 1821 -The New Observer -21 April -Henry White -Daniel Whittle Harvey -sequence of program instructions that perform a specific task -a procedure -callable unit -subroutine -different programming languages -invention of this concept, which they termed a closed subroutine -an open subroutine -branch back -macro -the same way as a computer program -programming tool -substantially reduce the cost of developing and maintaining a large program -objects and methods -libraries -use of subroutines -modifying data structures -A subprogram with side effects may return different results each time it is called -widespread use of subroutines -a random number function -available in many languages -Pascal -Fortran, Ada -in expressions -C and Lisp -as statements -Small-Scale Experimental Machine and the RCA 1802 -programmers to use the call sequence -deep levels of subroutine nesting -a series of instructions -a calling convention -punched paper tape -kept indexed collections of such tapes or card decks for collective use -punched cards -by a separate piece of tape, loaded or spliced before or after the main program -a special case of the stack data structure -to implement subroutine calls and returns -a new entry +a particular divide +"Summer Carnival", the Dance Parade, Rotterdam 666, the Metropolis pop festival and the World Port days +Smith +meaning that they have been formally admitted to a state's insurance market by the state insurance commissioner +1.7% of the population over the age of 5 speak only English at home +the Liberal/National Coalition, the Australian Greens, and Nick Xenophon +seven +1981–82 +8 +the larger instruments +Barlow lens +1969 and 1980 +seasonal weight fluctuations the private data of the corresponding call -to save precious memory -the private data of the calls that are currently active -the earliest and simplest method for automatic memory management -parameters, return address, and local variables -could save significant amounts of memory. -delay the use of a call stack until it is really needed -leaf procedures or leaf functions -return without making any procedure calls themselves -If procedure P returns without making any other call -termed functions or subs -an unspecified variable is registered as a variant type -ByRef (default) or ByVal -methods when associated with a class -any number and nature -to simplify some complex algorithms, and breaking down complex problems -a subprogram may even call itself -execution to suspend while another nested execution of the same subprogram occurs -call stack structure is formed -one activation record for each suspended subprogram -stack frames -PL/1 and C -a subprogram can function properly even when called while another execution is already in progress -must be reentrant -call the same subprogram without fear of interfering with each other -slightly less restrictive -to operate on reals, complex values or matrices -number of functions with the same name, but operating on different types of data, or with different parameter profiles -not having to remember different names for each type of data -one to return a real when the parameter is positive, and another to return a complex value when the parameter is negative -an object that will accept directions -colour of the trace, starting x and y co-ordinates, trace speed -he could call another constructor that accepts only color, -the constructor with all the parameters passing in a set of default values for all the other parameters -that each subroutine should have minimal dependency on other pieces of code -because it adds tight coupling between the subroutine and these global variables -unwise -to refactor subroutines to accept passed parameters instead -can affect code readability -passing the arguments, branching to the subprogram, and branching back to the caller -saving and restoring certain processor registers, allocating and reclaiming call frame storage -automatic testing of the subroutine's return code, or the handling of exceptions that it may raise -a significant source of overhead -if the procedures may have side effects -twice -because the two calls may return different results -before the second call -inline expansion -avoid the call overhead, but it also allows the compiler to optimize the procedure's body more effectively -by taking into account the context and arguments at that call. -compiler -military bands -Sax -French and Belgian military bands -least a quartet of saxophones -insufficiently powerful -the E♭ alto saxophone, the B♭ tenor saxophone, and the E♭ baritone saxophone -two altos, one tenor, and one baritone -B♭ soprano saxophone -the first alto saxophonist -Percy Grainger -Classical saxophone quartets -the soprano saxophone, alto saxophone, tenor saxophone, and baritone saxophone -the nineteenth century -Sousa -Conservatoire de Paris -the early 20th century -big swing era bands -call-response patterns -Lester Young -bebop -soprano saxophone -largely fell out of favor -Dave Brubeck -Sidney Bechet -smooth jazz/contemporary pop -Adolphe Sax -1840 -family of woodwind instruments -The series pitched in B♭ and E♭, -Instruments from the so-called "orchestral" series, pitched in C and F, -a Belgian instrument maker +1838 +pioneering classicist building +Linear +photographic film or an optical sensor +freedom from having to perform such labour +Windows XP +behavioral disorders, and lack of attendance in school +ordered triple +full semantics +151 +Oakland Civic Center/Schenley Farms National Historic District +Garib Niwas +local efficiency, equity and development +1908 +the notion of women being perceived as "other" in the patriarchal society. She went on to conclude that male-centered ideology was being accepted as a norm +slavery +old traditional families +molecular and cellular levels to the systems and cognitive levels +In North Indian states +five and a half years +George Hasting +federal government +Frequent consumption of high-energy foods, such as processed foods that are high in fats and sugars, promotes obesity +the question is resolved in the negative +the windward side of a mountain +awol +1944 +the network pertaining to representing others' intentions +Mount Whitney +November +9 and 10 +physiological +quantified variables +appointed by the metropolitan mayor and the Council +Marcel Mule +between June and August +this has no basis in standard English orthography, which reserves capitals for maintaining the common-versus-proper distinction +rain +job creation +Willam F. Pepper +the "Home" edition +40 to 70 m +commonwealths +University of Pittsburgh Medical Center +England and Scotland +After obtaining the first postgraduate degree +some of the world's tallest skyscrapers +allowing automated downloading of the news section. +100 mg/m3 +volatile molecular compounds +Partisans +Bolsheviks +500 CE +"Mother of the Movement" Betty Friedan +National Liberation Army +surname +20th-century +Roots Homecoming Festival +unusual +large-scale catastrophic wildfire +leading to loss of the soldered joint +comproportionation +Beams +Pratt & Whitney +2004 +Connecticut +bottom-up +the father +academic, medical, and research institutions +Between 80,000 and 100,000 +the boards +the power of government to improve people's lives +Trieste crisis +63 +An orientation +Albuquerque +JPEG /ˈdʒeɪpɛɡ/ and MS-DOS /ˌɛmɛsˈdɒs/ +Education of homeless youth +60% +food +one of the surfaces is flat +bottlenose dolphins, orcas, and beaked whales +infrastructure construction, clean energy investment, unemployment compensation, educational loan assistance, and retraining programs to establish his musical instrument business -a large conical brass instrument in the bass register with keys similar to a woodwind instrument -overblow at the octave, unlike the clarinet, which rises in pitch by a twelfth when overblown. -An instrument that overblew at the octave, would have identical fingering for both registers. -received, a 15-year patent -patent encompassed 14 versions of the fundamental design, split into two categories of seven instruments each -split into two categories of seven instruments each, and ranging from sopranino to contrabass +the 18 letters that come between the first and the last in internationalization +production +The distinction between high and low relief is somewhat subjective, and the two are very often combined in a single work +penalty shootout +Paso Internacional Los Libertadores +breakbeat-based +Windows XP +2010 +756,000 +Democrat +Bergeron process +concrete flat slab +the argument +Tiridates +Christopher Robert +one can conclude φ[t/x] from φ provided that no free variable of t becomes bound +governmental organization +Africa's population stagnated during this period +niacin, fibrates and CETP Inhibitors +BMETs +callable unit +30 +by digits rather than initial letters +first applying f to x to obtain y = f(x) and then applying g to y to obtain z = g(y) +furniture designs +average monthly values of temperature and precipitation. +Stores selling English manufactures such as cloth, iron utensils, and window glass as well as West Indian products like sugar and molasses +earliest written records of lenses date to Ancient Greece +second-order logic +in expressions +Funday Times +indentured or criminally bonded +aging +New England +2001 +instruction in foreign languages +Homeless advocate and urban designer +Pascal +The Sunday Times +French +no known father and the mother is single +Sunday +personal identification number +United States Medical Licensing Examination +Logging +Tuesday +mathematics +Pilkington process +The McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act +aristocratic families and the established church +SnF2 +Art and drama +1842 +Suneung The C soprano saxophone was the only instrument to sound at concert pitch. -giving each saxophone a range of two and a half octaves. -Sax's patent expired in 1866 -The first substantial modification was by a French manufacturer -extended the bell slightly and added an extra key to extend the range -Using alternate fingerings will allow the player to play easily and as fast as they can. -The player may also use alternate fingerings to bend the pitch -which was based on the Triebert system 3 oboe for the left hand -A substantial advancement in saxophone keywork was the development of a method by which the left thumb operates both tone holes with a single octave key -Further developments were made by Selmer -most radical, however temporary, revisions of saxophone keywork was made in the 1950s by M. Houvenaghel of Paris, -a number of notes (C♯, B, A, G, F and E♭) to be flattened by a semitone simply by pressing the right middle finger. -the forefront of creative exploration -Sheets of sound, tonal exploration, upper harmonics, and multiphonics -the exploration of non-western ethnic sounds on the saxophone -John Coltrane, Ornette Coleman, Sam Rivers and Pharoah Sanders -B♭ and E♭ -the C soprano and C melody -F -the late 1920s and early 1930s -saxophone -acoustic problems -tactile consistency -Two -saxophone -At rest -keytouches pressed by the fingers -joints -closed keys -Leblanc System -costs -make half-step shifts -Leblanc System -chromatic -Jim Schmidt -individual order -chromatic -closed keys -4 -low A -low A -Selmer Paris -F -the larger instruments -the saxophone family -the alto and tenor -U-shape -right -key arrangement and fingering -E♭ -three -clef substitution +livable +the origin +Mary Brosnaham, +by the Marmaray tunnel +a credit +Woodrow Wilson screw pins -'key touches' -abalone or stone keytouches -1920 -VibratoSax -Thailand -higher copper alloys -Yanagisawa's 902 and 992 -Chateau, Kessler, Saxgourmet, and Bauhaus Walstein -silver plate -oxidation -nickel or gold -gold -single-reed -clarinet -Arundo donax cane -brands, styles, and strengths -wood, glass, crystal, porcelain, and even bone -Larry Teal -Mouthpiece design -Mouthpieces -classical -high baffle -chamber shape and tip design, and metal construction -Marcel Mule -concave -music that follows aesthetic and philosophical trends of postmodernism -Jonathan Kramer -Umberto Eco and Jean-François Lyotard -the postmodernist movement -a work can either be modernist, or postmodern, but not both -music with simple textures and relatively consonant harmonies -classical -John Cage -popular music and world ethnic musical traditions -in the 1960s -Eclecticism and freedom of expression -rigidity and aesthetic limitations -Louis Andriessen -anti-romantic -Eclecticism and freedom of expression -rigidity and aesthetic limitations -Louis Andriessen -anti-romantic -Postmodern designers -did not consist of one unified graphic style -postmodern graphic designers -in the 1970s -the movement was an expressive and playful time -deconstruction -techniques of close reading without reference to cultural, ideological, moral opinions -Peter Eisenmann -a postmodern movement called deconstructivism -the problematic implications of binary oppositions -modernism -late-20th-century -knowledge is articulated from local perspectives, with all its uncertainties, complexity and paradox -culture, literature, art, philosophy, history, economics, architecture, fiction, and literary criticism. -deconstruction and post-structuralism -around the 1880s. -J. M. Thompson, -a quarterly philosophical review) -John Watkins Chapman -Walter Truett Anderson -as socially constructed -truth is found through methodical, disciplined inquiry -found in the heritage of American and Western civilization -through attaining harmony with nature and/or spiritual exploration of the inner self -Postmodernist ideas in philosophy and the analysis of culture and society -since the 1950s and 1960s -1968 -the Social Revolution -post-structuralism -the perceived blandness and failed Utopianism of the Modern movement -Walter Gropius and Le Corbusier -the pursuit of a perceived ideal perfection, and attempted harmony of form and function, and dismissal of "frivolous ornament." -the attributes of perfection and minimalism themselves were subjective -Modernism -industrial mass production -failure to recognise differences and aim towards homogenous landscapes -urban planning -planners predating Postmodernism -disregard of resident or public opinion -slums, overcrowding, deteriorated infrastructure, pollution and disease -in the 1960s -Advocacy planning and participatory models of planning -to expand the range of participants in urban interventions -Jane Jacobs -at 3:32pm on 15 July in 1972 -architect Minoru Yamasaki -to accept pluralism and heighten awareness of social differences -the lost traditions and history -Pierre Menard, Author of the Quixote -postmodernism and conceiving the ideal of the ultimate parody -Samuel Beckett -Vladimir Nabokov -"high modern" -Ihab Hassan -Constructing Postmodernism -developed out of modernism and are primarily concerned with questions of ontology -Brian McHale -1987 -French academics -Post-structuralists -Louis Althusser -50s -postmodernist -Post-structuralism -French -Reductionism and Epiphenomenalism -Claude Lévi-Strauss -Andrew Hoberek -Twentieth Century Literature -Raoul Eshelman -Nicolas Bourriaud -Victoria and Albert Museum -obscurantism -Hume -Noam Chomsky -postmodernist -postmodernist -postmodernist -Comparative Literature -environmental -to stand up safely -ensure that the design is practically buildable within acceptable manufacturing -cracking or failure of fixtures -extremely complex -interaction of structures with the shaking ground, -foresee the consequences of possible earthquakes -design and construct the structures -to perform during an earthquake. -El Castillo -Earthquake-proof structures are not necessarily extremely strong -Chichen Itza -poor seismic performance. -lead designer on these structures -often the sole designer -structural safety -designs for dams -temperature, dynamic loads such as waves or traffic -high pressures from water or compressed gases -extreme forces -such as at sea, in industrial facilities or below ground -struts and ties -A truss -Gusset plates -flexible and minimize bending -at the connections -many collapses and failures -obvious negligence -Rev. Fortin Augustin -three -94 people -two -concrete flat slab -continuum -computer analysis -codified empirical -careful study -greater understanding of the science of structural engineering -box girders -structural knowledge and practice -building engineering -Structural building engineering -Structural building engineering -architecture -Structural building engineering -an end which is aesthetic, functional and often artistic -loads -mathematical -yield line theory -Plasticity -an unsafe prediction -ensure that the assumed collapse mechanism is realistic -The architect -a structural engineer -structurally -their form -their form -forces in compression -A dome -hanging-chain -catenary -static and dynamic -a four or five year undergraduate degree, -three years of professional practice -Institution of Structural Engineers -international -2700 B.C.E. -the step pyramid -almost infinitely -a pyramid is inherently stable -Imhotep -structural stability -compressive strength -limestone -structural stability -forces in compression -masonry -the line of thrust of the force -to increase the bountifulness of any structure -master builder -No theory of structures existed +right +Northern Crusades +usually a single communist party candidate is chosen to run for office in which voters vote either to accept or reject the candidate. +Versche Rivier +1879 +the i-stems +Cycling +rate on line +They are usually shaped to fit in a roughly oval, not circular, frame; +Yu River Basin, include the Chamu, Khunou and other short streams. +Irregular verbs +were responsible for certain functions +50% +so that each new constant symbol is assigned to its corresponding element of the domain +grêle +Rodney +No record exists +The mountain ranges create a moderated climate, preventing the cold winds from the north from reaching the valley +Atlantic grey whales +the three cereals +Lenin usurped the all-Party Congress of the RSDLP +Celia Green +people who were already church members +x = 0 +clarify the relationship between the Armenian and Georgian churches +a single mother and children +eastern part +George W. Bush +30 +“Whenever something is wrong, something is too big” +explorers and sailors +In 1929 +seat of government during the late Ottoman period, +Anesthesiology +convex surfaces +only finitely +snow, ice needles, ice pellets, hail, and graupel. +As long as companies are averse to incompatible standards +Pitt +Various +"one vote one value" +as many as 15,000 individuals +1994 +$4 per pound +unwise +1985 +field hockey +portfolio +Aristophanes' play The Clouds (424 BC) +lens with two concave surfaces +that it could have been used by the earliest nomadic shepherds +the addition of an apostrophe is necessary when pluralizing all abbreviations +the speech was uniform either diachronically or geographically +tower whose great height, with open spaces all around +political values +1991 +militant atheists. +Manhattan +the right-wing Justice and Development Party (AKP) +there is no perfect way to convert them +Culture +the British +economic problems in Greece +climate and ecology +phrase that is constructed "after the fact" from a previously existing word +singles +ice hockey is a full contact sport in men's hockey, body checks are allowed so injuries are a common occurrence +"kernel". +tens of thousands +public housing and Section 8 +Mono tribe and Sierra Miwok tribe +1908 +Eastern and the Western cultures +interaction of structures with the shaking ground, +Advancing technology +Tito-Stalin split +2009 +the early decades of the Turkish Republic +tin +the Istanbul Water and Sewerage Administration +not recommended +Sassanids +change to its charter +Swedes +the Coalition for the Homeless, +four years +2018 +its insureds in states in which it is nonadmitted will not enjoy certain types of protection available to insureds in states in which the insurer is admitted. +(f ⊕ g): (X ∪ W) → Y +five +Japan and Germany +on the basis of their respective performances in the most recent election covering the same constituency +50,000 +Mehmed II +MS-DOS +University of New Mexico +her birth name +Blawnox +the Fikirtepe mound +fatty acid synthases +3 Liberal, 1 Labor, 1 Green, 1 Palmer +plano-convex lens +406 +1936 +focal length +to mark the significance of the University of Pittsburgh +October 1943 +complex "agreements" between producer countries and consumer countries +the People's Liberation Army (PLA) was formed in 1978 which Human Rights Watch states as having received arms and training from China. +367,000 jobs +codomain +177 +Spanish-speaking countries +October 1941 +Traditionally the most popular sport at the University of Pittsburgh, football +an Anti-Fascist resistance platform +relatively little +1999 +NYSE Euronext +The first substantial modification was by a French manufacturer +mass-produce cars +1929 +southern Mongolia +planters +Sigmund Freud +between October and March +2 years +algae +a subsidiary of News UK +1968 +private tombs, and smaller decorative areas such as friezes on large buildings +2001 +1816 +the West Indies +Spanish-speaking countries in Latin America +Avenues A, B, C, and D +A substantial advancement in saxophone keywork was the development of a method by which the left thumb operates both tone holes with a single octave key +West Africans +1.3 million +pointing "out of the page" towards the viewer or camera +RHS +Microsoft's Metro design language +Deng Xiaoping +bottom-up +The father's paternal surname +63.8 percent, 63.6 percent and 63.6 percent +25% +Germanic languages +1940 empirical evidence of 'what had worked before' -seldom -guilds -the Industrial Revolution -No record exists -concrete -the Renaissance -the 1970s -their form -transverse -a tightrope -cable or fabric structures -A fabric -Structural engineering -to understand and predict how structures support and resist -empirical and theoretical -the 1990s -environmental loads -Structural engineering -their properties -support -resist loads -knowledge of materials and their properties -Structural engineers -Structural engineers -Structural engineers -serviceability and performance -a number of simple structural elements -Structural engineers -Structural engineer -applied physical laws -Entry-level structural -More experienced engineers -Entry-level structural engineers -engineering design and analysis -Structural engineers -Structural engineers -Structural engineers -Structural engineers -structural engineering -static structures -geometry -fatigue -static structures -nanostructure -nanoscale -one dimension -three dimensions -magnetic technology -Aerospace structure -Atlas, Delta, Titan -thin -Hypersonic vehicles -components -structural design -boat or aircraft -machine -thousands -forces -Medical equipment -Diagnostic Medical Equipment -biomedical equipment technician -Diagnostic equipment -BMETs -axial force - compression - or both axial force and bending -beam-column -the axial capacity of the element, and the buckling capacity -buckling -the effective length of the column -top and bottom -real length -degree of bending it is subjected to -complex non-linear -axial -interaction chart -beam -line elements -applied loads -simple -Beams -compression part -go into compression -resist the tension -glucosamine -seven -sugar backbone -Kdo2-Lipid A -a monosaccharide -adipose tissue -fat cell -the activation of hormone-sensitive enzyme lipase -stored energy of triglycerides -4 kcal/g -in the polar medium -the polar molecules (i.e., water in an aqueous solution) become more ordered around the dissolved lipophilic substance -a form of lamellar phase lipid bilayer -Phase behavior -a vesicle -secondary metabolites and natural products -glycosylation, methylation, hydroxylation, oxidation, and/or other processes -cyclic molecules -anti-microbial, anti-parasitic, and anti-cancer -animal, plant, bacterial, fungal and marine sources -membrane-bound organelles -plasma membrane -glycerophospholipids -sphingomyelin and sterols -the galactosyldiacylglycerols, and sulfoquinovosyldiacylglycerol -Neural tissue -components of the lipid bilayer of cells, as well as being involved in metabolism and cell signaling -various neurological disorders -phosphatidylcholine (also known as PC, GPCho or lecithin), phosphatidylethanolamine (PE or GPEtn) and phosphatidylserine (PS or GPSer) -dialkylether variants -phosphatidylinositols and phosphatidic acids -binding sites -complicated family of compounds -ceramides, phosphosphingolipids, glycosphingolipids and other compounds -sphingosine -16 to 26 carbon atoms -Ceramides (N-acyl-sphingoid bases) -Sterol lipids -estrogen -androgens such as testosterone and androsterone -progestogens as well as the glucocorticoids and mineralocorticoids -40 carbons -simple isoprenoids that function as antioxidants and as precursors of vitamin A -Vitamin E and vitamin K -linear alcohols, diphosphates, etc. -the amphiphilic nature -hydrophobic or amphiphilic small molecules -vesicles, multilamellar/unilamellar liposomes, or membranes in an aqueous environment -ketoacyl and isoprene groups -eight categories -fats are a subgroup of lipids called triglycerides -triglycerides -sterol-containing metabolites such as cholesterol -some essential lipids cannot be made this way and must be obtained from the diet -chain-elongation of an acetyl-CoA primer with malonyl-CoA -fatty acid synthesis -a polar, hydrophilic end, and a nonpolar, hydrophobic end -insoluble in water -between four and 24 carbons long -Docosahexaenoic acid -eicosanoids -wax esters, fatty acid thioester coenzyme A -fatty amides -mono-, di-, and tri-substituted glycerols -triacylglycerol -they function as an energy store -hydrolysis of the ester bonds of triglycerides and the release of glycerol and fatty acids from adipose tissue -steroid -cell signaling -sphingosine-1-phosphate -PIPs -prostaglandins -fat-soluble -liver and fatty tissues -mitochondria -oligosaccharides -Cardiolipins +the universe exists independently of human consciousness +Spanish ex-premier +12,000 millimetres (460 in) +it served as an imperial capital +But as far as most layperson customers know, they are simply dealing with GEICO +thunderstorms +in the Åland Islands +Germany +examples of every English architectural period since the late Saxon period +Anatolia +1 in 3 +Eva Perón +three +2000s +July 4 triglycerides -lipogenesis -liver -fatty acid synthases -isoprene units -isopentenyl pyrophosphate and dimethylallyl pyrophosphate -mevalonate pathway -lanosterol -Beta oxidation -fatty acid synthesis -two-carbon fragments -acetyl-CoA -106 ATP -triglycerides, cholesterol, and phospholipids -omega-6 -omega-3 fatty acid -18 -trans fats -The Nutrition Source -eight-year -increased risk of obesity and diabetes -49,000 \ No newline at end of file +26 +five minutes +1959 +low-paying jobs +Viscount Kemsley +capacity issues plagued property and casualty insurers +third +egalitarian and free-market libertarian +rainy and warm +a conscience vote +Lokapala devatas +1729 +March 1917 +in the late 1980s +Ahmed Aboutaleb +deep sub-bass musical pattern which can be felt physically through powerful sound systems due to the low-range frequencies favoured. +1986 +said to have family who could house them +State Medical Councils +grain +like the 4th conjugation +the Ethiopian highlands, the Sahel and West Africa +early in the Bronze Age +Slobodan Milošević +President John F. Kennedy's Presidential Commission on the Status of Women released its report on gender inequality +Greece +the member states +recycling of scrap tin +up +as head +directly from English law +A few high-tech companies +the movement lasted from the 1960s into the early 1980s, the exact years of the movement are more difficult to pinpoint and are often disputed +delayed penalty +around two thousand +35% +Bosphorus +"nom-dit" ("said-name") +1991 +Mount Holyoke should remain a women's college +The movement is usually believed to have begun in 1963 +she usually keeps her birth names, or at least the last one +free association +Basilia +desegregating the Sugar Bowl +Slave Coast +1803 +wooden cupboards of various styles and sizes +Paul Lauterbur +the Fed decided to raise interest rates marginally in December 2015 +The ice cover +Latin +in the arabesques of Islamic art, +SOSes +liberal arts +The United States +the 1970s +Robert D'Oyly +Yamamoto +offside rules +an object that will accept directions +biomarkers +Westmoreland County +is placed before a person's given name. +inline expansion +The Federal Reserve Act of 1913 +Christians +both teams will have only four skating players +the 15th century +Estrella +a period of massive industrialisation +Atatürk Olympic Stadium \ No newline at end of file