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after and implementing
Due to his close proximity with Jacques Doriot's fascist Parti Populaire Français ( PPF ) during the 1930s and his role in implementing eugenics policies during Vichy France, he was accused after the Liberation of collaborationism, but died before the trial.
Although a digital filter can be an IIR filter if the algorithm implementing it includes feedback, it is also possible to easily implement a filter whose impulse truly goes to zero after N time steps ; this is called a finite impulse response ( FIR ) filter.
This interest led to attending several conferences ( Financial Cryptography 98, various MIT presentations ), participating on mailing lists such as " cypherpunks " and " dbs ", and eventually implementing patented Chaumian digital cash in an underground library, HINDE, with Ian Goldberg, named after Hinde ten Berge, a Dutch cypherpunk also present at FC98.
Zambia was active in the Congolese peace effort after the signing of a cease-fire agreement in Lusaka in July and August 1999, although activity diminished considerably after the Joint Military Commission tasked with implementing the ceasefire relocated to Kinshasa in September 2001.
However, after 1968, it was revived as a stronger body and became responsible for implementing political repression, most notably in the case of the Solidarity movement, the leader of which, Lech Wałęsa, was under constant SB surveillance, until its replacement by the Urząd Ochrony Państwa in 1990 after the fall of communism.
Where program developers had originally had access to run their own jobs on the machine, they were supplanted by dedicated machine operators who looked after the well-being and maintenance of the machine and were less and less concerned with implementing tasks manually.
Resentment towards Vosill continues to build, particularly after King Quience begins implementing somewhat radical reforms, such as permitting commoners to own farmland without the oversight of a noble, reforms which Vosill has discussed with the King publicly and at length.
Subsequently, a comprehensive study of the question by Amsterdam economist Gerwin Griffioen concludes that: " for the U. S., Japanese and most Western European stock market indices the recursive out-of-sample forecasting procedure does not show to be profitable, after implementing little transaction costs.
Soon after, it signed similar agreements with Canada, Peru, Guatemala, and Mali and demonstrated leadership in implementing the 1970 UNESCO Convention.
He undertook this by first implementing a relief program during the Great Tenmei Famine, which not only undermined the effectiveness of the bakufu to look after their subjects, but also focused the subjects ' attention back to the Imperial household.
After implementing the root squash, the authorized superuser performs restricted actions after logging into an NFS server directly and not just by mounting the exported NFS folder.
In 1617, for the only time after his accession in England, James returned to Scotland in the hope of implementing Anglican ritual.
Shortly after their election, the divide between Chandler and Laffoon widened over the issue of implementing a state sales tax.
On 4 October 1939, a few days after the city's surrender to the Nazis, Czerniaków was made head of the 24 member Judenrat ( Jewish Council ), responsible for implementing Nazi orders in the new Jewish Ghetto.
Two years after the Labour Party lost the 1949 elections, the goal of implementing " the socialisation of the means of production, distribution, and exchange " was removed from the party's policy platform.
The store showed that it was implementing the policy strictly, when it ejected celebrity butcher Jack O ' Shea's at Christmas 2011 and terminated his contract in the food hall, after a reporter for the Evening Standard recorded workers at his counter store selling foie gras to customers who knew the codeword " French fillet ".
The attempt to impose conscription jointly linked with implementing Home Rule disgusted the wider Irish public and resulted in an immediate swing of support to Sinn Féin which precipitated their election landslide after the war.
In Aristophanes ' earlier plays, i. e., The Acharnians and The Birds, the protagonist is victorious prior to the parabasis and after the parabasis is usually shown implementing his reforms.
In 1995 the DHA began implementing a U. S. District Court order that came about after a mid-1980s challenge to desegregate the city's public-housing units.
In the eighteen months after the bill's signing, HUD had to begin implementing the new McKinney-compliant programs.
As CGS, he was responsible for implementing the Strategic Defence Review after the new Labour Government came to power as well as providing strategic military advice to the British Government on the deployment of troops for the Kosovo War and in connection with the formation of the United Nations Transitional Administration in East Timor before he retired from the British Army in 2000.
Meanwhile the Scottish Rugby Union ( SRU ) is under new management, Chief Executive Phil Anderton ( known as ' Firework Phil ' for his pre-match entertainment spectacles ) was leading the way back to financial solvency and implementing major reforms to reverse the decline of the game in Scotland, but he resigned in January 2005 after his boss David Mackay was forced to resign by the SRU's general committee.

after and welfare
While mostly in opposition during the 1930s, they embraced economic liberalism, but accepted the welfare state after the war and participated in governments supportive of state intervention and protectionism.
" Another form of Soviet subsidizing that greatly affected Hungary after the fall of communism was the loss of social welfare programs.
However, soon after making such investments, international prices for many of North Korea's native minerals fell, leaving the country with large debts and an inability to pay them off and still provide a high level of social welfare to its people.
He showed a great concern for the welfare of his men, and on their retirement, provided funds for many of them to establish taverns, which were subsequently named after him.
Though Soong May-ling initially avoided the public eye after marrying Chiang, she soon began an ambitious social welfare project to establish schools for the orphans of Nationalist soldiers.
While the American welfare state expanded more than threefold after WWII, it has been at 20 % of GDP since the late 1970s.
Marshall founded the " Cambridge School " which paid special attention to increasing returns, the theory of the firm, and welfare economics ; after his retirement leadership passed to Alfred Pigou and John Maynard Keynes.
In mainstream economics, economic surplus ( also known as total welfare or Marshallian surplus after Alfred Marshall ) refers to two related quantities.
To assuage voters ' discontent, he made the claim that he would abandon some unpopular economic reforms and boost welfare spending, end the war in Chechnya, pay wage and pension arrears, and abolish the military draft program ( he did not live up to his promises after the election, except for ending the Chechen war, which was halted for 3 years ).
When Gunner Rivers, anxious about his son's welfare, went to the cockpit to ask after him the young man called out from the other side of the deck, " Here I am, Father, nothing is the matter with me ; only lost my leg and that in a good cause.
According to historian René Rémond's famous classification of the right-wings in France, this libérale tradition belongs to the Orleanist inheritance, while Gaullists inherited from Bonapartism and a tradition of state intervention issued from the National Council of Resistance ( CNR )' s welfare state program after the war.
In all endurance events there are rigorous vet checks, conducted before, during and after the competition, in which the horses ’ welfare is of the utmost concern.
While effects cinematographer Don Dow wanted to go to sea and record plumes of water created by exploding detonating cords in the water, the team decided to create the probe's climatic effect in another way after a government fishing agency voiced concerns for the welfare of marine life in the area.
In the African colonies after 1920 there were occasional appearances of a ' colonial chartism ' which called for improved welfare, upgraded education, freedom of speech and greater political representation for natives.
His wife and children were forced to rely on welfare and help from family and friends, and after five years without contact, Patricia Rosenberg divorced Erhard for desertion and remarried.
Several more changes were made in 2011, the rule changes were announced after six animals died at the 2010 Stampede and were met with mixed reactions from both cowboys and animal welfare groups.
An extraverted intuitive type, " the natural champion of all minorities with a future ", orients to new and promising but unproven possibilities, often leaving to chase after a new possibility before old ventures have borne fruit, oblivious to his or her own welfare in the constant pursuit of change.
There are growing concerns that Japan's welfare system can be exploited by unscrupulous family members keen to continue receiving benefits after the pensioners die.
His book In Darkest England and the Way Out not only became a best-seller after its 1890 release, it set the foundation for the Army's modern social welfare schemes.
The Poor Law system was in existence until the emergence of the modern welfare state after the Second World War.
Immediately after taking power, Al-Bakr introduced subsidies on basic commodities, and introduced tax relief and a limited social welfare programme.
Once Finland gained her independence in 1917 the University was given a crucial role in building the nation state and, after World War II, the welfare society.
The Association of American University Professors ( AAUP ), meeting in Cleveland, passed a resolution that the remaining Mississippi professors would " be regarded as retired members of the profession ," after finding that the dismissals of employees had been made " for political considerations and without concern for the welfare of the students ".
Changed attitudes in reaction to the Great Depression were instrumental in the move to the welfare state in many countries, a harbinger of new times where " cradle-to-grave " services became a reality after the poverty of the Depression.

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