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Vacancy and are
All things leave behind them the Obscurity ( out of which they have come ), and go forward to embrace the Brightness ( into which they have emerged ), while they are harmonised by the Breath of Vacancy.

Vacancy and which
Vacancy appointees who fill the first half of a state senators term must stand for election at the next even year November election for the remainder of the state senate term for the seat to which the state senator was appointed.

Vacancy and be
By July 1, six weeks from now, motel-keepers all over the nation will, by 6 p.m., be switching on that bleak -- to motorists -- sign, `` No Vacancy ''.

Vacancy and .
Other books on Le Fanu include Wilkie Collins, Le Fanu and Others ( 1931 ) by S. M. Ellis, Sheridan Le Fanu ( 1951 ) by Nelson Browne, Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu ( 1971 ) by Michael H. Begnal, Sheridan Le Fanu ( third edition, 1997 ) by W. J. McCormack, Le Fanu's Gothic: The Rhetoric of Darkness ( 2004 ) by Victor Sage and Vision and Vacancy: The Fictions of J. S. Le Fanu ( 2007 ) by James Walton.
Most recently the subject has been addressed in British film director Bernard Rose's film Snuff-Movie ( 2005 ), the Nimród Antal film Vacancy ( 2007 ) and also in the WWE film The Condemned ( 2007 ) and the Gregory Hoblit film Untraceable.
Vacancy in offices of both President and Vice President ; officers eligible to act.
Luke Cunningham Wilson ( born September 21, 1971 ) is an American actor known for his roles in films such as Old School, Bottle Rocket, The Royal Tenenbaums, Legally Blonde, Idiocracy, Vacancy and Death at a Funeral.
In early 2007 Wilson took a role opposite Kate Beckinsale in the thriller Vacancy.
Universi Dominici Gregis (' the Lord's whole flock ', from the opening statement ' The Shepherd of the Lord's whole flock is the Bishop of the Church of Rome, ...'), subtitled On the Vacancy of the Apostolic See and the Election of the Roman Pontiff, deals with the vacancy of the Chair of St Peter and Bishop of Rome namely the Pope.
Dewey Finn ( Jack Black ) is a rock singer and guitarist in the fictional rock band No Vacancy.
Despite the strong reception from the audience, including Ms. Mullins and the students ' parents, the class loses to No Vacancy, but accept their defeat due to Dewey's proclamation that they were not here to win and that they were going to play " one great show ".
* Theo ( Adam Pascal )-Theo is the leader of Dewey's old band No Vacancy.
* Spider ( Lucas Babin )-Spider is the guitarist who replaces Dewey in No Vacancy.
* Neil ( Lucas Papaelias )-Neil is the bass guitarist of No Vacancy.
His novella " Vacancy " won a Shirley Jackson Award in 2008.
Vacancy information is also available through the UK government's direct. gov. uk portal.

defects and are
The crystal lattice of solid americium and its compounds contains intrinsic defects, which are induced by self-irradiation with alpha particles and accumulate with time ; this results in a drift of some material properties.
These defects are created during plastic deformation, such as hammering or bending, and are permanent unless the metal is recrystallized.
Informally known as " The Big Book " ( with its first 164 pages virtually unchanged since the 1939 edition ), it suggests a twelve-step program in which members admit that they are powerless over alcohol and need help from a " higher power "; seek guidance and strength through prayer and meditation from God or Higher Power of their own understanding ; take a moral inventory with care to include resentments ; list and become ready to remove character defects ; list and make amends to those harmed, and then try to help other alcoholics recover.
** Congenital adrenal hyperplasias are genetic defects of enzymes involved in cortisol production and can affect sex characteristics of affected patients.
Defects in the cell cycle are thought to be responsible for certain tumor cells resisting chemotherapy or radiation, so a virus that can induce apoptosis despite defects in the cell cycle is useful for cancer treatment.
In the U. S., ACE inhibitors are required to be labeled with a " black box " warning concerning the risk of birth defects when taken during the second and third trimester.
User tests, which are usually performed by clients or end-users, do not normally focus on identifying simple problems such as spelling errors and cosmetic problems, nor showstopper defects, such as software crashes ; testers and developers previously identify and fix these issues during earlier unit testing, integration testing, and system testing phases.
CNTs are readily aligned in a high density geometry ( i. e., a vertically aligned forest ) but lack high charge density surfaces — the sidewalls of the CNTs are similar to the basal plane of graphene and exhibit low charge density except where edge defects exist.
Congenital heart defects are defects in the structure of the heart which are present at birth.
Moore dealt with casuistry in chapter 1. 4 of his Principia Ethica ; he claimed that " the defects of casuistry are not defects of principle ; no objection can be taken to its aim and object.
Crystals of BPO < sub > 4 </ sub > can also precipitate from the flowing glass on cooling ; these crystals are not readily etched in the standard reactive plasmas used to pattern oxides, and will result in circuit defects in integrated circuit manufacturing.
Recordable CDs are an alternative to tape for recording music and copying music albums without defects introduced in compression used in other digital recording methods.
Pits are much closer to the label side of a disc, enabling defects and contaminants on the clear side to be out of focus during playback.
The regular patterns are interrupted by crystallographic defects.
Point defects are defects that occur only at or around a single lattice point.
Strict limits for how small a point defect is, are generally not defined explicitly, but typically these defects involve at most a few extra or missing atoms.
Larger defects in an ordered structure are usually considered dislocation loops.
For historical reasons, many point defects, especially in ionic crystals, are called centers: for example a vacancy in many ionic solids is called a luminescence center, a color center, or F-center.

defects and lattice
* Dislocations are linear defects around which some of the atoms of the crystal lattice are misaligned.
A successful mathematical classification method for physical lattice defects, which works not only with the theory of dislocations and other defects in crystals but also, e. g., for disclinations in liquid crystals and for excitations in superfluid < sup > 3 </ sup > He, is the topological homotopy theory.
Small amounts of defects or impurities ( about one per million of lattice atoms ) color diamond blue ( boron ), yellow ( nitrogen ), brown ( lattice defects ), green ( radiation exposure ), purple, pink, orange or red.
The domains do not go back to their original minimum energy configuration when the field is removed because the domain walls tend to become ' pinned ' or ' snagged ' on defects in the crystal lattice, preserving their parallel orientation.
Blue phases have a regular three-dimensional cubic structure of defects with lattice periods of several hundred nanometers, and thus they exhibit selective Bragg reflections in the wavelength range of visible light corresponding to the cubic lattice.
In the presence of dissolved impurities, the defects in the lattice that function as cleavage points may get blocked and the material becomes harder.
Natural sources of radiation in the environment knock loose electrons in, say, a piece of pottery, and these electrons accumulate in defects in the material's crystal lattice structure.
A perfect crystal lattice, with low enough thermal motion and no deviations from periodic structure, would have no resistivity, but a real metal has crystallographic defects, impurities, multiple isotopes, and thermal motion of the atoms.
This transport is limited by elastic scattering of acoustic phonons by lattice defects.
At the macroscopic scale, introduction of extended defects to the crystal lattice, such as grain boundaries, hinders flow of the material under applied stress thereby increasing its hardness.
Applications for this method include the identification of lattice defects in crystals.
Such approaches to reduce lattice thermal conductivity fall under three general material types: ( 1 ) Alloys: create point defects, vacancies, or rattling structures ( heavy-ion species with large vibrational amplitudes contained within partially filled structural sites ) to scatter phonons within the unit cell crystal.
The medal has on occasion been awarded to multiple people at a time ; in 1938 it was won by John Cockcroft and Ernest Walton " for their discovery that nuclei could be disintegrated by artificially produced bombarding particles ", in 1981 by Peter Higgs and Tom Kibble " for their international contributions about the spontaneous breaking of fundamental symmetries in elementary-particle theory ", in 1982 by Drummond Matthews and Frederick Vine " for their elucidation of the magnetic properties of the ocean floors which subsequently led to the plate tectonic hypothesis " and in 1988 by Archibald Howie and M. J. Whelan " for their contributions to the theory of electron diffraction and microscopy, and its application to the study of lattice defects in crystals ".
In some materials, these states are trapped, or arrested, for extended periods of time by localized defects, or imperfections, in the lattice interrupting the normal intermolecular or inter-atomic interactions in the crystal lattice.
Most Argyle diamonds are classified as type 1a ( see material properties of diamond ), and have low levels of nitrogen impurities, their colour resulting instead from structural defects of the crystal lattice.

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