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Page "William Thornton" ¶ 17
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consequence and winning
As a consequence of reaching the final, he climbed to number 5 in the world rankings for 1996 / 97, and in that same season he acquired his only ranking tournament victory ( after three previous losing finals ), the British Open, beating John Higgins 9 – 8 after needing a snooker in the final frame, winning the World Snooker Association Performance of the Year award for this achievement, although he has failed to maintain this level of performance.
The relative success of the party ( Pannella was very disappointed of the 1979 result ) was a consequence of the new line impressed by Pannella who moved the party's focus to issues like divorce and abortion, also by winning three referenda on those issues in 1974 and 1981.
Lacaita, who was an intimate friend both of Russell and his wife, succeeded, with the help of the latter, in winning over the British statesman just as he was about to accept the Franco-Neapolitan proposal, which was in consequence abandoned.

consequence and Capitol
The absence of the songs from a US Capitol album was partially a consequence of The Beatles ' unwillingness to include single releases on their contemporaneous albums, partially a consequence of their arrangement with United Artists in 1964, and partially due to the habit ( of EMI affiliates worldwide ) of recompiling The Beatles ' British releases for local markets.

consequence and competition
" The superiority of reward is not here the consequence of competition, but of its absence: not a compensation for disadvantages inherent in the employment, but an extra advantage ; a kind of monopoly price, the effect not of a legal, but of what has been termed a natural monopoly ... independently of ... artificial monopolies grants by government, there is a natural monopoly in favour of skilled labourers against the unskilled, which makes the difference of reward exceed, sometimes in a manifold proportion, what is sufficient merely to equalize their advantages.
A consequence of feeding in a flock is that foraging sites may be restricted to avoid competition with other species.
* Exhibition game or friendly match, in association football ; a game which has no consequence in a wider competition
In Europe, cryptography became ( secretly ) more important as a consequence of political competition and religious revolution.
This would have the consequence of reducing the probability of these sons engaging in unproductive competition with each other.
It is the consequence of national competition between Serbia and the other republics.
In consequence, he envisioned a positive and more extensive role for the state, as rule-maker, enforcer of competition, and provider of basic social security.
Evolution to increase their ejaculate size in the presence of sperm competition has a consequence on testis size.
A pupil of Jean-Baptiste Regnault, he carried off one of the three grands prix offered in 1796, in consequence of the competition not having taken place since 1793.
The classic conception of the economy as the monopoly seen as somehow semi-neutral, semi-necessary consequence of the competition in a capitalist system.
This effect is a consequence of competition as highly competitive species will negatively covary.
So, too, did European competition as a consequence.
He argues that antisemitism can be analysed as a consequence of resource competition between groups in which each group is rationally pursuing its own interests, rather than as a manifestation of irrational malice by non-Jewish out-groups, and concludes that Jews, particularly strongly identified Jews, will be relatively prone to self-deception by ignoring or rationalizing negative information about themselves and their in-group.
Thompson, numbers rose to 150 by 1876 and then declined as a consequence of agricultural depression and competition from other schools.
* Private ownership of the means of production (" private enterprise ") as effective private control and / or legally enforced ownership, with the consequence that investment and management decisions are made by private owners of capital who act autonomously from each other and, because of business secrecy and the constraints of competition, do not co-ordinate their activities according to collective, conscious planning.

consequence and was
`` This was not merely alleging errors, but was carried out by day-after-day allegations in memos, written charges of serious consequence.
Since the 1946 disaster there have been 15 tsunami in the Pacific, but only one was of any consequence.
He was courteous and casual about it, as though it were of no consequence.
In the most famous version of her myth, her birth was the consequence of a castration: Cronus severed Uranus ' genitals and threw them behind him into the sea.
In chemistry, Schrödinger, Pauling, Mulliken and others noted that the consequence of Heisenberg's relation was that the electron, as a wave packet, could not be considered to have an exact location in its orbital.
The most serious consequence of this battle was not the loss of their possessions in Gaul to the Franks ; with Ostrogothic help, much of the Gallic territory was recovered, Herwig Wolfram notes, perhaps as far as Toulouse.
In the summer of that year Pelopidas was again sent into Thessaly, in consequence of fresh complaints against Alexander.
As a consequence, Johnson assumed an attitude of white supremacy typical of one in his position in his town, and he was unable to shed this perspective during his life.
In part this was a consequence of the increasingly specialised forms of warfare practiced in the later period.
As a consequence of his vision and audacity, there was now a land free from kings, a vast continent for new beginnings.
However, one consequence of this shift in emphasis was that during the last years of his life, Dürer produced comparatively little as an artist.
There was fear that Britain would soon be at war with these powers as a consequence of the Batavian revolution in the Netherlands.
As a consequence, it was only in 1836 that England allowed suspects of felonies the right to have legal counsel ( the Prisoners ' Counsel Act 1836 ).
He was such a favourite with the latter, that, when Greece was visited by a drought in consequence of a murder which had been committed, the oracle of Delphi declared that the calamity would not cease unless Aeacus prayed to the gods that it might.
As a consequence, the labour was immensely augmented, and the number of Abbreviators necessarily increased.
In the pontificate of Pius II, their number, which had been fixed at twenty-four, had overgrown to such an extent as to diminish considerably the individual remuneration, and, as a consequence, able and competent men no longer sought the office, and hence the old style of writing and expediting the Bulls was no longer used, to the great injury of justice, the interested parties, and the dignity of the Holy See.
This star was seen to possess an apparent motion similar to that which would be a consequence of the nutation of the Earth's axis ; but since its declination varied only one half as much as in the case of γ Draconis, it was obvious that nutation did not supply the requisite solution.
As another consequence of the disturbances, a new constitution was accepted in 1831 which came into effect on 4 September of that year.
Pomponius Mela mentions it among the small towns of the district, probably as it was eclipsed by its neighbour Tarraco ( modern Tarragona ), but it may be gathered from later writers that it gradually grew in wealth and consequence, favoured as it was with a beautiful situation and an excellent harbour.
A major long-term consequence of the Third Reform Act was the rise of Lib-Lab candidates, in the absence of any committed Labour Party.

consequence and frequently
As those who have lived already, they have nothing to fear, and frequently will display how far past consequence and feeling they are when they come through in a service-eating glass, raw chillis, and anointing their sensitive areas with chilli rum for example.
As a consequence, the most frequently involved site of septic metastases are the lungs, followed by the joints ( knee, hip, sternoclavicular joint, shoulder and elbow ).
A consequence of the differential drag method is that if the aircraft manoeuvers frequently then it will frequently create drag.
Jagland, who was much ridiculed in the media for his quotes and statements and frequently portrayed as incompetent, resigned following the 1997 election, as a consequence of his much ridiculed 36. 9 ultimatum, even though his party won the most votes.
Franco's censors objected to the group, and as a consequence, they started touring Latin America more frequently.
The hero is frequently a historical figure of some military consequence in the history of the nation where the mountain is located.
As a consequence, numbers of this form show up frequently in computer software.
* In the Showtime series Dexter and in the related novels, serial killer Dexter Morgan frequently cites " Old Sparky " as the consequence of his being caught.
He frequently condemned both its aims and ideas, and was deeply concerned by the ability of Modernism to allow its adherents to go on believing themselves strict Catholics while having an understanding markedly different from the traditional one as to what that meant ( a consequence of the notion of evolution of dogma ).
A consequence of the short flight time of any peroxide-based pack is that the entire flight is below the minimum parachute altitude ( with the exception of the much more expensive ballistic-type parachute systems frequently used on ultra-light aircraft and some small passenger aircraft ).
As a consequence to Tony Secunda's financial activities in 1972, royalty cheques for Tyrannosaurus Rex had been arriving more frequently, and Took had received one that week.
Kilmallock was located in a position of some strategic importance, and in consequence the town frequently became a target during times of war.
Penelope was a child of fourteen when Sir Philip Sidney accompanied her distant cousin Queen Elizabeth on a visit to Lady Essex in 1575, on her way from Kenilworth, and must have been frequently thrown into the society of Sidney, in consequence of the many ties between the two families.
In consequence, largely, of the dangers attending its navigation, it was not visited by the European traders of the 16th-18th centuries so frequently as other regions north and east, but in the Rio Pongo, at Matakong ( a diminutive island near the mouth of the Forekaria ), and elsewhere, slave traders established themselves, and ruins of the strongholds they built and defended with cannon, still exist ( e. g., Fortin de Boké ).
They are frequently a consequence of mechanical heart valve prostheses.
He further advises his son to observe rigorously the laws of diet, lest he, like others, become ill frequently in consequence of intemperate and unwholesome eating, which would not fail to engender mistrust in him as a physician on the part of the general public.
In the Baltic they live within the influence of freshwater, and frequently become distorted in consequence.
As genetic drift occurs more frequently in small populations, diversity is an observed consequence of isolation.
As a further consequence of the lack of political centralization in Kolathunad, Naduvazhi and Desavazhis often fought one another and within themselves and frequently allied themselves with different royal houses as suited their needs of the moment.

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