Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Columbus (ISS module)" ¶ 45
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

compromise and Integrated
The institutional compromise was the creation of the Bureau for Integrated Planning, which was attached to the Executive Committee and limited to an advisory role on coordination of members ' development plans.

compromise and Columbus
Spain's " national day " had moved around several times during the various regime changes of the 20th century ; establishing it on the day of the international Columbus celebration was part of a compromise between conservatives, who wanted to emphasize the status of the monarchy and Spain's history, and Republicans, who wanted to commemorate Spain's burgeoning democracy with an official holiday.

compromise and was
The departure of the Southerners gave Lincoln's party firm control of Congress, but no formula for compromise or reconciliation was found, and the war came.
" The failure of the Peace Conference of 1861 signaled that legislative compromise was implausible.
From the start, it was clear that bipartisan support would be essential to success in the war effort, and any manner of compromise alienated factions on both sides of the aisle, such as the appointment of Republicans and Democrats to command positions in the Union Army.
This was a compromise arrangement for a broadcast time scale: a linear transformation of the BIH's atomic time meant that the time scale was stable and internationally synchronised, while approximating UT1 means that tasks such as navigation which require a source of Universal Time continue to be well served by public time broadcasts.
Senator Lyman Trumbull of Illinois, leader of the moderate Republicans and Chairman of the Judiciary Committee, was anxious to reach a compromise with the President.
The moderate senators and representatives ( who constituted a majority of the Union party ) asked him for only a slight compromise ; their action was really an entreaty that he would unite with them to preserve Congress and the country from the policy of the radicals.
When the CCITT ( now ITU-T ) was standardizing ATM, parties from the United States wanted a 64-byte payload because this was felt to be a good compromise in larger payloads optimized for data transmission and shorter payloads optimized for real-time applications like voice ; parties from Europe wanted 32-byte payloads because the small size ( and therefore short transmission times ) simplify voice applications with respect to echo cancellation.
Nevertheless the sources show that this compromise between supporters of ahimsa and meat eaters was shaky and hotly disputed.
Use of two guns was therefore a reasonable compromise, as this allowed one gun to be cocked as the other is being fired, in practical terms doubling the rate of fire and the available number of bullets.
Modern Bulgarian was based essentially on the Eastern dialects of the language, but its pronunciation is in many respects a compromise between East and West Bulgarian ( see especially the phonetic sections below ).
: According to the BIS, " The choice of Switzerland for the seat of the BIS was a compromise by those countries that established the BIS: Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom and the United States.
This, however, drew the Presbyterians closer to the Church of England in their common desire to resist ' popery '; talk of reconciliation and liturgical compromise was thus in the air.
These interventions were meant to put an end to democratic liberalization efforts and uprisings that had the potential to compromise Soviet hegemony inside the Eastern bloc, which was considered by the Soviets to be an essential defensive and strategic buffer in case hostilities with NATO were to break out.
Due to disagreements between French President Charles de Gaulle and the Commission's agriculture proposals, among other things, France boycotted all meetings of the Council bringing work to a halt until it was resolved the following year by the Luxembourg compromise.
With what can crudely be summed up as a clash of ideologies between an expansion of ITV's commercial ethos and a public service approach more akin to the BBC, it was ultimately something of a compromise that eventually led to the formation of Channel 4 as launched in 1982.
The Wexford County seat of government, originally located in Sherman, was moved to Manton in 1881, as the result of a compromise between the feuding residents of Cadillac and Sherman.
This compromise was a pragmatic measure to regain power, but also the result of the early successes of central planning and state ownership forming a cross-party consensus.
A compromise was reached in Worms in 1122, by which the emperor abandoned investiture “ by ring and staff ” to the pope, and promised to respect the freedom of elections and consecrations, but kept for himself the right to invest bishops with the temporalities of their sees “ by scepter ”.
The pope, who was weak and had few supporters was forced to suggest a compromise, the abortive Concordat of 1111.
The investiture issue was still contentious, but a compromise at Bec Abbey in 1107 was essentially identical to the Concordat of Worms.
The Concordat of London in 1107 was a forerunner of the compromise that was taken up in the Concordat of Worms.

compromise and invented
His name is a compromise between Faenor ( in Tolkien's fictional language of Sindarin ) and Fëanáro, meaning " Spirit of fire " ( in Quenya, another of Tolkien's invented languages ).
Drop frame timecode dates to a compromise invented when color NTSC video was invented.

compromise and meaning
On August 10, 1410, civil unrest forced a compromise ( German: Rezeß, literally meaning: withdrawal ).
He said whilst he wanted a peaceful solution, the resolution's meaning " seems to be of a negotiated settlement or compromise between two incompatible positions -— between the position which exists in international law, that the Falkland Islands and their dependencies are British sovereign territory and some other position altogether ...
Warner's " compromise " ( approved by a Republican majority ) authorized the President to establish permissible interrogation techniques and to " interpret the meaning and application " of international Geneva Convention standards, so long as the coercion falls short of " serious " bodily or psychological injury.
In the Talmud, the Zealots are the non-religious ( not following the religious leaders ), and are also called the Biryonim ( בריונים ) meaning " boorish ", " wild ", or " ruffians ", and are condemned for their aggression, their unwillingness to compromise to save the survivors of besieged Jerusalem, and their blind militarism against the Rabbis ' opinion to seek treaties for peace.
The meaning of the term is illustrated in the apocalyptic literature by people under extreme moral and psychological stress to compromise an element of their faith in return for worldly gain, and sometimes in return for their lives.
Although it points to a kind of middle ground between the plain meaning ( or literal ) rule and the mischief rule, the golden rule is not, in a strict sense, a compromise between them.
As one would expect from a warrior, Gnarl loves to fight, knows not the meaning of compromise, and shows no mercy to anyone.
It is important, however, not to compromise the richness and clarity of the business meaning depicted in the domain model by expressing it directly in a form influenced by design or implementation concerns.

compromise and split
In 2006 ICS and INQUA reached a compromise that made Quaternary a subera, subdividing Cenozoic into the old classical Tertiary and Quaternary, a compromise that was rejected by International Union of Geological Sciences because it split both Neogene and Pliocene in two.
At a very tense four-hour meeting, of fierce arguments and recriminations between Kember and Pierce, Palmer finally managed to obtain a compromise with Kember conceding split song-writing credits for ' Suicide '.
Austen's appointment was largely a compromise solution to the bitter division of the two Unionist heavyweights, which threatened to split the coalition between supporters of Chamberlain's Imperial Tariff campaign and Balfour's more cautious advocacy of protectionism.
The party's stance, under the leadership of Ebert and other " moderates " like Philipp Scheidemann, in favour of the war with the aim of a compromise peace, eventually led to a split, with those radically opposed to the war leaving the S. P. D.
" This kind of uncompromising ethos characterized the group in its early stages ; eventually it led to a split between those in the group who wanted to remain wholly independent and those who saw opportunities for compromise and progress by " going inside institutions and systems they were fighting against.
However, since this compromise may lead to muddy-sounding chords in sections of a piece that stray from the main key ( e. g., a bridge section that modulates a semitone down ), some performers choose to make a broader compromise, and " split the difference " so that all chords will sound acceptable.
A split in the Labour Party came about when Boffa, who was ready for compromise and moderation with the colonial authorities, resigned and formed the Malta Workers Party and Mintoff refounded the Labour Party as the " Malta Labour Party " of which he assumed leadership.
He became the first Republican elected president of the Senate in 118 years in November 1992, but agreed to serve only one year instead of the usual two, as a compromise between Republicans and Democrats who were evenly split in the Senate that year.
As a compromise, the Joint Board on Interstate Highways approved a split configuration — U. S. Route 50N and U. S. Route 50S — in January.
Although the organisers publicly sought other venues in the meantime, a compromise was reached in which the event was split into two concerts in order to spread the crowds over two nights.
* 1952 – 1958: The PRC and PPC split between those who argue for revolution and support Castro, and those who seek compromise with Batista and support free and fair general elections.
The Flemish want to split BHV, while French-speakers are opposed to such a split unless parts of the compromise reached in 1970 on the static system ( see above ) are revised at the same time.
In 1997, however, the two railroads, CSX Transportation and the Norfolk Southern Railway, struck a compromise agreement to jointly acquire Conrail and split most of its assets between them, with Norfolk Southern acquiring a larger portion of the Conrail network via a larger stock buyout.
Lynch, however, did not want a split in the republican movement and hoped to reach a compromise with those who supported the Treaty (" Free Staters ") by the publication of a republican constitution for the new Irish Free State.
Faced with an impending split between its monarchists and republicans, a compromise was brokered at the 1917 Ard Fheis ( party conference ) whereby the party would campaign to create a republic, then let the people decide if they wanted a monarchy or republic, subject to the proviso that if they wanted a king, they could not choose someone from Britain's Royal Family.
However, the split of the National Liberals from the Liberals apparently offered a compromise which suited the voters, and St Ives was thereafter a safe seat for that party, and later for the Conservatives when the National Liberals finally merged with them in the 1960s, until the formation of the Liberal Democrats re-invigorated the competition in the 1990s.
Fearing a split in OPEC, Yamani decided on a compromise that put oil at $ 11. 65, four times the price of a barrel prior to October 16.
* In 1991, the National Hockey League conducted a dispersal draft in order to split a new team, the San Jose Sharks, off of the Minnesota North Stars as a compromise when the Minnesota owners requested permission to move the franchise to the San Francisco Bay Area.
As a compromise between linear and branching stories, there are also games where stories split into branches and then fold back into a single storyline.

5.349 seconds.