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Page "Blitzkrieg" ¶ 99
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By and imposing
By November 1997, rapid currency depreciation had seen public debt reach US $ 60 bn, imposing severe strains on the government's budget.
By contrast, tribal morality is prescriptive, imposing the norms of the collective on the individual.
By dividing reservation lands into privately-owned parcels, legislators hoped to complete the assimilation process by forcing the deterioration of the communal lifestyle of the Native societies and imposing Western-oriented values of strengthening the nuclear family and values of economic dependency strictly within this small household unit.
By limiting the ability of “ shadow banks ” to compete with traditional banks in creating “ money-like ” instruments, Hoenig hopes to better assure that the safety net is not ultimately called upon to “ bail them shadow banks such as Bear Stearns and AIG during the financial crisis out in a crisis .” He proposes to deal with actual commercial banks by imposing “ Glass-Steagall-type boundaries ” so that banks “ that have access to the safety net should be restricted to certain core activities that the safety net was intended to protect — making loans and taking deposits — and related activities consistent with the presence of the safety net .”
By maturity, the top branches form an imposing crown that stands out over all other native trees, dominating the forest canopy.
By separation of variables, two differential equations result by imposing Laplace's equation:
By the early 1930's Bolivar village boasted an imposing new school, well-paved streets, a modern sewage treatment facility, and a thriving Main Street economy.
By the 1890s, an imposing wall of buildings was constructed on the west side of Michigan Avenue downtown, including the Auditorium Building and the main branch of the Chicago Public Library ( now the Chicago Cultural Center ).
By imposing additional conditions ( in form of suitable identities ) on these operations, one can then indeed derive the underlying partial order exclusively from such algebraic structures.
By 1942, the present crest was in circulation and was adopted, the explanation behind its heraldry being rather less imposing than its appearance.
By imposing more conditions on G than the number of colors it needs, it may be possible to prove the existence of larger minors than K < sub > k </ sub >.
By imposing professional advertising practices on his department, Steve led a renaissance in television marketing among the major networks.
By 1890, imposing houses in neat tree-lined roads stood on what had been grazing land and cornfields – Meads had become the smart end of town.
By May 1781 Fort Motte was a small but imposing wood and earth fortification of palisades ( 9 ' tall ), ramparts ( 10-11 ' wide ), with a 6 ' deep ditch in front ; and 20-30 ' from the ditch a row of abatis.
By 1977, the United Nations was imposing arms sanctions on the republic due to its controversial policy of racial apartheid.
By contrast, imposing the jury factfinding requirement onto the Guidelines would " destroy the system " by " prevent a judge from relying on a presentence report for factual information, relevant to sentencing, uncovered after the trial ," because such facts would necessarily not have been submitted to the jury during the course of the trial.
By mid-18th century it had been developed into the robe à la française, which ensured that a woman took up three times as much space as a man and always presented an imposing spectacle.

By and retrospectively
By 1954 this had grown to 2, 483 cc and it was this short-block version of the XK 6-cylinder that was fitted to the new compact Jaguar 2. 4-litre ( retrospectively known as the Mark 1 ) released in that year.

By and own
By upholding his own personal code of behavior, the private detective has placed himself in opposition to a society whose fabric is permeated with crime and corruption.
By his own confession, Maris is an angry young man.
By 335 BC he had returned to Athens, establishing his own school there known as the Lyceum.
By age three, however, her mother changed her name to Elizabeth Sewall Alcott, after her own mother.
By their assistance and that of his own subjects, who entertained a great attachment for him, he recovered Epirus.
By the standards of 19th century tycoons, Carnegie was not a particularly ruthless man but a humanitarian with enough acquisitiveness to go in the ruthless pursuit of money ; on the other hand, the contrast between his life and the lives of many of his own workers and of the poor, in general, was stark.
" By his own appraisal, he was a non-conforming misfit in the fraternity environment.
By the end of Judges the Israelites are in a worse condition than they were at the beginning, with Yahweh's treasures used to make idolatrous images, the Levites ( priests ) corrupted, the tribe of Dan conquering a remote village instead of the Canaanite cities, and the tribes of Israel making war on the Benjamites, their own brothers.
By 1743, he had perfected his hybrid style of playwriting ( combining the model of Molière with the strengths of Commedia dell ' arte and his own wit and sincerity ).
By his own account, he spent a great deal of time in the Oak Knoll Naval Hospital's library, where he would have encountered the work of Freud and other psychoanalysts.
By his own admission, Hubbard made what he considered was one of the greatest mistakes of his life when he used the biological definition of engram as a " trace on a cell ", which was not in line with the proper biological definition.
By the end of the year Mobutu had created a rival government with its own prime minister.
By this time the destroyers had become large, multi-purpose vessels, expensive targets in their own right.
By the next Broadway season, he was the star of his own show about a young man who is drafted called Let's Face It !.
By mid-1892 Satie had composed the first pieces in a compositional system of his own making (), had provided incidental music to a chivalric esoteric play ( two ), had had his first hoax published ( announcing the premiere of, an anti-Wagnerian opera he probably never composed ), and had broken with Péladan, starting that autumn with the Uspud project, a " Christian Ballet ", in collaboration with.
By the time the siege ended in May 1094, El Cid had carved out his own principality on the coast of the Mediterranean.
By chance he encountered a copy of " Captain Claridge's work on the ' Water Cure ,' as practised by Priessnitz, at Graefenberg ", and " making allowances for certain exaggerations therein ", pondered the option of travelling to Graefenberg, but preferred to find something closer to home, with access to his own doctors in case of failure: " I who scarcely lived through a day without leech or potion!
By 2000, almost no major vendor produced its own EDIF tools, choosing instead to OEM third-party tools.
By the early 1970s, the picture changed: software costs were dramatically increasing, a growing software industry was competing with the hardware manufacturer's bundled software products ( free in that the cost was included in the hardware cost ), leased machines required software support while providing no revenue for software, and some customers able to better meet their own needs did not want the costs of " free " software bundled with hardware product costs.
By 410, Britain was effectively told to look after its own affairs and expect no aid from Rome.
By October 1935 his flat-mates had moved out and he was struggling to pay the rent on his own.
By the time he opened his own furniture workshop in 1917, Rietveld had taught himself drawing, painting and model-making.
By 1902, the factory alone became " A great city with its own streets, its own police force, fire department and traffic laws.

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