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Page "Carnegie Corporation of New York" ¶ 24
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outgrowth and report
" A minority report by Massimo Teodori concluded that P2 was not just an abnormal outgrowth from an essentially healthy system, as upheld by the majority report, but an inherent part of the system itself.
The program is an outgrowth of the 1986 National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act ( NCVIA ), which requires health care providers to report:
The discontinuance was the outgrowth of a DOT report compiled during the Carter Administration that recommended the reduction of services on several routes that did not meet a metric for cost coverage.

outgrowth and was
As a natural outgrowth of this approach it was often suggested that the doctor should complete the preparation for painless intercourse by dilating the vagina.
The St. Olaf College Choir was established as an outgrowth of the local St. John's Lutheran Church, where Christiansen was organist and the choir was composed at least partially of students from the nearby St. Olaf campus.
San Diego's Chicano Park, home to the largest collection of murals in the world, was created as an outgrowth of the city's political movement by Chicanos.
The Maronite-Druze conflict in 1840 – 60 was an outgrowth of the Maronite Christian independence movement, directed against the Druze, Druze feudalism, and the Ottoman-Turks.
A transitional constitution was drafted in May as an outgrowth of a national political conference in March-April and later revised by a constitutional committee.
MIRV was an outgrowth of the rapidly shrinking size and weight of modern warheads and the Strategic Arms Limitation Treaties which imposed limitations on the number of launch vehicles ( SALT I and SALT II ).
Rousseau wrote that morality was not a societal construct, but rather " natural " in the sense of " innate ," an outgrowth from man's instinctive disinclination to witness suffering, from which arise the emotions of compassion or empathy.
The first simple, two-pole magnetron was developed in 1920 by Albert Hull at General Electric's Research Laboratories ( Schenectady, New York ), as an outgrowth of his work on the magnetic control of vacuum tubes in an attempt to work around the patents held by Lee De Forest on electrostatic control.
Pattern welding was an outgrowth of laminated or piled steel, a similar technique used to combine steels of different carbon contents, providing a desired mix of hardness and toughness.
His advanced work in these fields was an outgrowth of his early career as a telegraph operator.
The modern Conservative Party was founded in 1834 and is an outgrowth of the Tory movement or party, which began in 1678.
The modern Liberal Party had been founded in 1859 as an outgrowth of the Whig movement or party ( which began at the same time as the Tory party and was its historical rival ) as well as the Radical and Peelite tendencies.
The Spaghetti Western genre was a direct outgrowth of the Kurosawa films.
Taken together, these books outlined Fromm's theory of human character, which was a natural outgrowth of Fromm's theory of human nature.
Originally an outgrowth of Knight and Wilhelm's Milford Writers ' Conference, held at their home in Milford, Pennsylvania, USA, it was founded in 1968 by Robin Scott Wilson at Clarion State College in Pennsylvania.
The AppleScript project was an outgrowth of the ( now discontinued ) HyperCard project.
It was founded in 1807, as an outgrowth of Henderson County.
" Robin was an outgrowth of a conversation I had with Bob.
The F-1 was an outgrowth of the Air Force E-1 engine research program that transitioned into NASA's Saturn V rocket.
The Tehachapi Community Orchestra Now called the Tehachapi Symphony Orchestra, was founded in 1997 by Joan Samara and Deborah Hand as an outgrowth of the Da Camera Players String Ensemble, and incorporated in 1998 by Gayel Pitchford.
Ardencroft was founded in 1950 as an outgrowth of Arden and Ardentown with a conceptual lifestyle based on Henry George's Single tax movement and William Morris ’ s Arts and Crafts principles.
Ardentown was founded in 1922 as an outgrowth of Arden with a conceptual lifestyle based on Henry George's Single tax movement and William Morris ’ s Arts and crafts principles.

outgrowth and establishment
The period from 1928 – 36 saw the establishment of the Johnson Motor Company / Outboard Marine ( the makers of motorised boat engines ) as an outgrowth of the original industry.
One substantial outgrowth of this revision is the establishment of an active database which allows individual mailings of pertinent information to each AIAS member.
It was an outgrowth of the Bandung Conference, held in Indonesia during April, 1955, which led to the establishment of the Asian Legal Consultative Committee ( ALCC ).

outgrowth and year
The company's original dominant market was in polarized sunglasses, an outgrowth of Land's self-guided research in polarization after leaving Harvard University after his freshman year — he later returned to Harvard to continue his research.
The Bruisers were an outgrowth of the Chicago Politicians, a team put together by Jim Foster to play an exhibition game to prove the feasibility of the sport the previous year.
The company was an outgrowth of the Verkehrsbahn-Studiengesellschaft ( Transit Railway Study Group ), which had already presented its first monorail designs and prototypes in the previous year.

outgrowth and later
In contrast, they were intimately familiar with the English Romantics, and the transcendental movement may be partially described as a slightly later, American outgrowth of Romanticism.
After borrowing $ 5, 000 from his parents, the label was an outgrowth of Tom Silverman's Disco News bi-weekly publication ( later titled Dance Music Report ), which spanned 14 years, beginning in September 1978.
It was an outgrowth of George J. Gould's attempts to create a transcontinental railroad and later proposals made to the Interstate Commerce Commission for a " Fifth System " to supplement the four major systems ; the consolidations planned to form those systems were stopped by the Great Depression.
Orthodox Christianity, according to them, was not the predecessor to Gnosticism, but a later outgrowth that rewrote history in order to make literal Christianity appear to predate the Gnostics.

outgrowth and National
National pricing is an outgrowth of increased competition in the T-carrier market space and the commoditization of T-carrier products.
The National Wild and Scenic Rivers Act was an outgrowth of the recommendations of a Presidential commission, the Outdoor Recreation Resources Review Commission ( ORRRC ).
For the last decade of his life, he reported on word histories on National Public Radio's Morning Edition, as an outgrowth of his series of books of etymologies, A Browser's Dictionary ( 1980 ), A Second Browser's Dictionary ( 1983 ) and Good Words to You ( posthumously published in 1987 ).
It was written by a team of lawyers and scientists, including the first appointed head of the Council on Environmental Quality ( CEQ ), an outgrowth of NEPA ( The " National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 " ) Dr. Russell E. Train.

outgrowth and Board
The Board of Selectmen is an outgrowth of, or an agent of, the major decision-making body, the Town Meeting.

outgrowth and for
The Articles in this section and in the section on the Church plant Anglicanism in the via media of the debate, portraying an Economy of Salvation where good works are an outgrowth of faith and there is a role for the Church and for the sacraments.
In the last few years, these properties have been purchased by new owners who sought to and did demolish them in order build small, ornate homes worth much more, many being valued to amounts on the order of as much as a few million dollars, a peculiar outgrowth of the unlimited-in-value homestead exemption for principal residences from forced sale provided to homesteaders under the Florida Constitution.
The idea behind it was an outgrowth of the guild system, as guilds were monopolistic enterprises: they regulated trade within towns by controlling the creation of goods, regulated themselves through their system of apprenticeship, kept outside traders from selling goods in the town, and forced outsiders to pay tolls and other types of payments for the privilege of doing business in that town.
For Camp Fire, Native American symbolism was a natural outgrowth of an appreciation for differences and cultural inclusiveness.
This was, fundamentally, an outgrowth of historical materialism, which predicted the inevitable triumph of communism and which reduced the world to physical laws and processes which could be manipulated for " building socialism.
Incorporated in 1969 by the Trustees of the University of Pennsylvania as a " not for profit " organization, WEFA Inc was an outgrowth of the Economics Research Unit ( ERU ) located in the economics department of the University of Pennsylvania.
Mediation committees were established originally in communist areas during the Chinese Civil War ( 1945 – 49 ) as a natural outgrowth of traditional preferences for local mediation of disputes.
D. W. Winnicott distinguished what he called the " true self " from the " false self " in the human personality, considering the true self as based on a sense of being in the experiencing body: ' for Winnicott, the sense of being is primary, the sense of doing an outgrowth of it '.
African-American music was often adapted for white audiences, who would not have as readily accepted black performers, leading to genres like swing music, a pop-based outgrowth of jazz.
The most successful WordAlone outgrowth is Lutheran Congregations in Mission for Christ, a post-denominational association of 724 congregations in ten countries, with 656 of them in the United States.
From its beginning as an outgrowth of the efforts to obtain the Republican vice presidential nomination for a conservative in 1960 up through its determined campaign to ensure that a conservative vice president was renominated in 1992, YAF was a major player in the politics of late 20th century America.
The University of Puerto Rico was created by an act of the Legislative Assembly on March 12, 1903 emerging as an outgrowth of the Normal School, which had been established three years earlier to train teachers for the Puerto Rican school system.
The meaning of Chigurh's coin-flipping is left ambiguous ( in both the book and the film ), and has led to considerable discussion: commentators suggest, for example, that Chigurh views himself as simply following the will of the universe, or is " merely cruel ," or that it is an inevitable outgrowth of his ( perceived ) atheism or that Chigurh is in fact a stand-in for fate, or alternatively that his adherence to chance is a way for him to deny responsibility for his actions or to displace that responsibility onto his victims.
Threatening behaviors may be conceptualized as a maladaptive outgrowth of normal competitive urge for interrelational dominance generally seen in animals.
The American Heritage Dictionary traces the passage of the words bunk ( noun ), debunk ( verb ) and debunker ( noun ) into American English in 1923 as a belated outgrowth of " bunkum ", of which the first recorded use was in 1828, apparently related to a poorly received " speech for Buncombe " given by North Carolina representative Felix Walker during the 16th United States Congress ( 1819 – 1821 ).
The use of squares depicting birds for civil officials and animals for military officials was an outgrowth of the use of similar squares, apparently for decorative use, in the Yuan Dynasty.
An early outgrowth of the effort to enhance party unity was the creation, in 1874, of a Steering Committee to prepare a legislative schedule for consideration by the Conference.
The program was an outgrowth of the desire by both US Army and Navy special operations forces for a rifle with greater effective range than an M4 carbine but still shorter in length than a standard issue M16A2 / A4.

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