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Page "Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union" ¶ 45
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By and doing
By virtue of his self-reliance, his individualism and his freedom from external restraint, the private eye is a perfect embodiment of the middle class conception of liberty, which amounts to doing what you please and let the devil take the hindmost.
By the time Lilian had been graduated from public school, her parents were doing quite well.
By leaving me everything he wouldn't be doing me a favor, my father told him, and he didn't want to see his daughter involved in a lawsuit.
By political, economic, geographic and natural standards, they were justified in doing so.
By doing so, it links the holy past to the historical present and represents Alfred's law-giving as a type of divine legislation.
By doing this to the formula above, we find:
By doing this, Khrushchev was acknowledging a long forgotten fact ; the Presidium, the Secretariat and he himself were responsible to the Central Committee.
By the age of seven, Plato began doing television commercials, reportedly appearing in over 100 spots for companies as diverse as Kentucky Fried Chicken, Dole, and Atlantic Richfield.
By doing so, they " fill the need of a mostly female audience for fictional narratives that expand the boundary of the official source products offered on the television and movie screen.
By doing so Copleston makes clear that Aquinas wanted to put forth the concept of an omnipresent God rather than a being that could have disappeared after setting the chain of cause and effect into motion.
By doing so he and the German dukes gained time to fortify towns and train a new elite cavalry force.
By 1840, to protect the interests of the various nationals doing business in Zanzibar, consul offices had been opened by the British, French, Germans and Americans.
By doing so, the multi-billion dollar development cost of a new launch vehicle is avoided.
By doing this, Orange Alternative participants could not be arrested by the police for opposition to the regime without the authorities becoming a laughing stock.
By doing so, it reduces nitrogen losses by volatilization, accelerates mineralization and increases short-term nitrogen availability for transformation of organic matter into humus.
By doing so the victorious Spartans proved to be the most clement state that fought Athens and at the same time they turned out to be its saviour as neither Corinth nor Thebes at the time could challenge their decision.
By doing so, the plaintiff seeks a legal remedy, and if successful, the court will issue judgment in favor of the plaintiff and make the appropriate court order ( e. g., an order for damages ).
By doing so, the following statements become true:
By doing this he wishes to establish within the younger members of his community a scheme to discern right and wrong actions through the powers of the mind.
By establishing a pattern, sometimes with the use of a powerful computer, mathematicians may have an idea of what to prove, and in some cases even a plan for how to set about doing the proof.
By so doing, he claimed descent from the Minamoto clan.
By selling vast quantities of shrimp and catfish to the U. S., Vietnam triggered antidumping complaints by the U. S., which imposed tariffs in the case of catfish and was considering doing the same for shrimp.
By doing so, the king attempted to preempt any dispute after his death and legitimize his line on the throne of Georgia.
By forced division of labor Durkheim means a situation where power holders, driven by their desire for profit ( greed ), results in people doing the work they are unsuited for.

By and practically
By 1800, the term was practically extinct.
" His predisposition for benevolence is clear in the statement " We whites ... must necessarily appear to them in the nature of supernatural beings .... By the simple exercise of our will we can exert a power for good practically unbounded ".
By 1760, the domain of the Marathas stretched across practically the entire subcontinent.
By one single battle, the Battle of Agnadello on 14 May 1509, the dominion of Venice in Italy was practically lost.
By organizing the articles in a newsgroup according to threads of discussion, using headers that had long been present in Usenet articles but practically unused, a threaded newsreader would allow users to keep up with topics and discussions they were interested without having to explicitly deselect uninteresting threads.
By this time, the children were practically indistinguishable from the real children of the master, since they grew up regarding one another as brothers.
By 1824 the caucus system practically collapsed.
By 1995, practically every ski produced had more or less " shaping ", and for a time, carving became a sport onto its own.
By this analogy, it is suggested, the experience of free will emerges from the interaction of finite rules and deterministic parameters that generate nearly infinite and practically unpredictable behaviourial responses.
By calculating the area under the relevant portion of the graph for 50 trials, the archaeologist can say that there is practically no chance the site was inhabited in the 11th and 12th centuries, about 1 % chance that it was inhabited during the 13th century, 63 % chance during the 14th century and 36 % during the 15th century.
By 1999, Fish's wife, Americanist Jane Tompkins, had " practically quit teaching " at Duke and " worked as a cook at a local health food restaurant.
By the end of the 1960s there were virtually no isolated power systems remaining in the lower forty-eight states and southern Canada ; practically all power companies were attached to large interconnections.
By the morning of June 9 the division was reported as having been "... reduced to ' small groups '..." while the 726th Grenadier Regiment had "... practically disappeared.
By 1928, practically the only check on Mussolini's power was the King's right to dismiss him from office — though that right could only be exercised on the advice of the Fascist Grand Council, a body that could only be convened by Mussolini.
By the early 1980s, the company was practically insolvent, leading to its privatization in 1987.
By the mid-1970s, practically every large electronics company had teams working on bubble memory.
By resuscitating an argument that was exploded in the Hylton Case, and has lain practically dormant for a hundred years, it is made to do duty in nullifying, not this law alone, but every similar law that is not based upon an impossible theory of apportionment.
By the 10th century catacombs were practically abandoned, and holy relics were transferred to above-ground basilicas.
By the early 1960s, deployments of SAMs had rendered high-speed high-altitude flight in combat practically suicidal.
By the 1950s the once extensive narrow gauge system had practically become extinct.
By 1377 Vuk Branković acquired Skopje, and Albanian magnate Andrija Gropa became practically independent in Ohrid.
By 1916 the list of conditional contraband included practically all waterborne cargo.
# By mining the Gulf of Finland Finland's navy together with the Kriegsmarine before the start of Barbarossa locked the Leningrad fleet in, making the Baltic Sea and the Gulf of Bothnia practically domestic German waters, where submarines and navy could be trained without risks in addition of securing Finland's fundamental trade routes for food and fuel.
By the mid-1980s, CAW had practically ceased operation outside of Ukiah, California where the Zells relocated in 1985.

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