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Page "Foreign relations of Bolivia" ¶ 3
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outgrowth and 1994
As an outgrowth of that work, in 1985 Sapoznik started " KlezKamp: The Yiddish Folk Arts Program ", the world's most important training venue for practitioners of this nearly lost art and, in 1994, founded Living Traditions to administer it.

outgrowth and Summit
It is an outgrowth ( and is now the corporate parent ) of The Summit Lighthouse, founded in 1958 by Prophet's husband, Mark L. Prophet.

outgrowth and hosted
Negotiations concerning the agreement, an outgrowth of the Madrid Conference of 1991, were conducted secretly in Oslo, Norway, hosted by the Fafo institute, and completed on 20 August 1993 ; the Accords were subsequently officially signed at a public ceremony in Washington, D. C., on 13 September 1993 in the presence of PLO chairman Yasser Arafat, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and U. S. President Bill Clinton.

outgrowth and conference
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.
‘ Ecomimicry ’ is a term he uses, adopted from a first use of the term in a paper called Leaning From Natue: The Ecomimicry Poject sent to him electronically by Dr. Alan Marshall ( based on Marshall's Poster Paper at a mid-2006 Environmental Education conference in Western Australia ) but the term is an obvious outgrowth from the terms ‘ biomimicry ’ and ' ecomimetics ', both used profusely before 2006.

outgrowth and on
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 ).
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.
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.
The Otago settlement, an outgrowth of the Free Church of Scotland, materialised in March 1848 with the arrival of the first two immigrant ships from Greenock on the Firth of Clyde -- the John Wickliffe and the Philip Laing.
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.
The remaining older, singly owned houses are as much as 45 years old, annexed to comparatively small parcels, again an outgrowth of the 1 / 2 acre limitation on homestead property area within municipalities as set forth in the Florida Constitution.
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.
Horse shows, hunts, and polo matches-long popular events on Army post-were a natural outgrowth of cavalry training.
The event is known as an outgrowth of the counter-culture movement, including an emphasis on cannabis use, as well using environmentally friendly practices during the fair.
* That the whole Yanomami project was an outgrowth and continuation of the Atomic Energy Commission's secret program of experiments on human subjects.
Structural functionalism also took on, and that the clan is an outgrowth, not vice versa.
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 ).
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 '.
Budding is a form of asexual reproduction in which a new organism develops from an outgrowth or bud on another one.
The development of a corps of full-time military professionals, working in peace and war on all aspects of operations and logistics planning, was the outgrowth of experience on the battlefield in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
The United Holy Church of America is an outgrowth of the great revival that began with the early outpouring of the Holy Ghost on the day of Pentecost, when the 120 were filled with the Holy Ghost ( Acts 2: 1 – 4 ).
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.
Both bodies are an outgrowth of the first mission work on the islands.

outgrowth and development
In vertebrates, landmarks of embryonic neural development include the birth and differentiation of neurons from stem cell precursors, the migration of immature neurons from their birthplaces in the embryo to their final positions, outgrowth of axons from neurons and guidance of the motile growth cone through the embryo towards postsynaptic partners, the generation of synapses between these axons and their postsynaptic partners, and finally the lifelong changes in synapses which are thought to underlie learning and memory.
Orthodox Judaism, as it exists today, is an outgrowth that claims to extend from the time of Moses, to the time of the Mishnah and Talmud, through the development of oral law and rabbinic literature, until the present time.
The city of Lathrup Village is an outgrowth of the development known as Lathrup Townsite, the dream of its developer Louise Lathrup Kelley.
Some landmarks of neural development include the birth and differentiation of neurons from stem cell precursors, the migration of immature neurons from their birthplaces in the embryo to their final positions, outgrowth of axons and dendrites from neurons, guidance of the motile growth cone through the embryo towards postsynaptic partners, the generation of synapses between these axons and their postsynaptic partners, and finally the lifelong changes in synapses, which are thought to underlie learning and memory.
It was the outgrowth of many years of development.
The " Enation theory " of microphyll development posits that small outgrowth, or enations, developed from the side of early axes ( such as those found in the Zosterophylls ).
As a direct outgrowth of Impressionism came the development of Post-Impressionism.
One outgrowth of the concentration of Jews in a circumscribed area was the development of the modern yeshiva system.
' For Winnicott, the sense of being is primary, the sense of doing an outgrowth of it ... Premature development of the ego-function means doing too much, being too little ': a false sense of self.
As the title suggests, the treatise gives a reconstruction of the development of medicine, assuming that it was an outgrowth of the discovery by ancient people that health could be promoted by the consumption of certain foods prepared properly.
Alpha-internexin is a brain and central nervous system filament that is involved in neuronal development and has been suggested to play a role in axonal outgrowth.
Through knockout studies using mice, the inhibition of α-internexin had no visible effect on development of the nervous system which suggests that axonal outgrowth is unaffected by α-internexin, however, the knockout study failed to rule out subtle differences that the protein may have caused.
Early stages of development in neurons is marked by the outgrowth of neurites and axons contributing to the cells asymmetric shape.
This observation gives particular validity to the theory that Shuadit is an outgrowth of a much older Judæo-Latin language, rather than an independent development within southern France, since the second step also occurred during the development of Latin from Proto-Italic.
Neurotrophic factors can influence development, survival, outgrowth, and branching.
Continued development of stochastic processes designed to graph neuronal signals as chaotic and non-linear has provided some algorithmic basis for analyzing how chaotic environmental signals are coupled to enhance selectivity of neural outgrowth or coordination in the dynamic core.

outgrowth and 1996
In 1996, Fox founded the University of Creation Spirituality in Oakland, an outgrowth of his institutes at Mundelein and Holy Names.
Safmarine has been headquartered and registered in Antwerp, Belgium, since 1996, when it completed its acquisition of the Belgian container line, CMBT, which in turn had been a outgrowth of CMB.
The project began as an outgrowth from a project designed to help provide accurate weather forecasts for the 1996 Atlanta Olympic Games ..
Founded in 1996, the Young People ’ s Project ( YPP ) is an outgrowth of the Algebra Project.

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