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Page "The Decline of the West" ¶ 29
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Crucially and with
Crucially, the Birlings must descend from the safety and opulence of their brightly lit Edwardian drawing room and into the dimly lit cobblestoned area to engage with Goole and confess their actions.
Crucially, Braille's smaller cells were capable of being recognized as letters with a single touch of a finger.
Crucially, the category of primitives is restricted to pure hunter-gatherer societies with no domesticated plants or animals.
Crucially, they retreated not to the east, along their own lines of communication and away from Wellington, but northwards, parallel to Wellington's line of march and still within supporting distance, and remained throughout in communication with Wellington.
Crucially, he had no battle reserves with which to either support his battered line or to launch a counterattack of his own.
Crucially, martial law as then understood was not a form of substantive law, but instead a suspension of the rule of law ; it was the replacement of normal statutes with a law based on the whims of the local military commander.
Crucially ( and this can be seen as the purpose of the statute ), any subsequent employer of such an indentured servant or slave, who was in fact bound to service of labor to a pre-existing master, would be chargeable with misprision-of-a-felony ( if it was proved in they knew that the employee was still indentured to a master, or owned as a slave ); and chargeable as an accessory-after-the-fact, in the felony, with the servant or slave ; in helping them, by employing them, in the unlawfully taking that which was lawfully bound ( through the master servant relationship ) in exclusive right, to the master of the indentured servant or slave.
Crucially, Lindsay wanted to “ get rid of the London external degree ”, instead forming a college with the authority from the start to set its own syllabus, perhaps acting under the sponsorship of an established university.
Crucially, the probability with which a particular species of moth was detected was higher after repeated trials with that species ( e. g. A, A, A ,…) than it was after a mixture of trials ( e. g. A, B, B, A, B, A, A …).
Crucially, however, Parliament had conceded in the Insolvency Act that administrative receivership should have priority-that is, a secured creditor with a floating charge could defeat any attempt to commence an administration by appointing an administrative receiver.
Crucially, people with simultanagnosia are unable to enumerate objects outside the subitizing range, either failing to count certain objects, or alternatively counting the same object several times.
Crucially, New Mysterians would argue that they did not start with any supposition as to the solvability of these questions.
Crucially Suresh had control of most of the EPRLF's assets as well as its name ( as registered with the Sri Lankan Department of Elections ).
Crucially, the first performance with him as music director, on January 18, 1958 at Carnegie Hall, New York, was the first of these concerts to be televised.

Crucially and also
Crucially, Psalmanazar's appeal derived not only from his exotic ways, which tapped into a growing domestic interest in travel narratives describing faraway locales, but also played upon the prevailing anti-Catholic and anti-Jesuit religious sentiment of early 18th century Britain.
Crucially, she also experienced that all five of her phantom fingers were now normal length.
Crucially, CPFC 2010 also secured the freehold of the ground, the consortium paying tribute to a fans ' campaign which helped pressure Lloyds bank into selling the ground back to the club.
Crucially, he also pursued the then-new jukebox market.
Crucially, they were also able to radio for supporting artillery fire from outside the pocket.
Crucially, Mark also managed to recruit Harold Brittan from Bethlehem Steel.
Crucially, these cities were also semi-autonomous, especially the Italian city-states.

Crucially and being
Crucially Kelderek is too afraid of being called a coward to object to this ill treatment.
Crucially he saw the appointment of a farm superintendent as being the key to success.

Crucially and battle
Crucially, the I Corps did not fight in either battle that day.

Crucially and between
Crucially, Comrie ( and others to be discussed here ) distinguish between the linguistic encoding of causal relations and other, extra-linguistic concerns, such as the nature of causation itself, and questions of how humans perceive of causal relations.

Crucially and again
Crucially, Vargas was knocked down in the 1st round and again in the 11th round.
Crucially, negation of an expression does not change its presuppositions: I want to do it again and I don't want to do it again both presuppose that the subject has done it already one or more times ; My wife is pregnant and My wife is not pregnant both presuppose that the subject has a wife.

Crucially and will
Crucially, this is an inherited, degenerative condition and so will change during the life of an animal, so any treatment is subject to regular review or re-assessment if the symptoms appear to get worse or anything significantly changes.
Crucially, an all-African alliance will empower African peoples globally.
Crucially for poverty reduction, the latter two at least are labor-intensive, helping to ensure that growth in these sectors will be poverty-reducing.

Crucially and into
Crucially, Cannon exercised these powers to maintain discipline within the ranks of his own party: the Republicans were divided into the conservative " Old Guard ," led by Cannon, and the progressives, led by President Theodore Roosevelt.
Crucially perhaps, William and Mary definitively accepted the Church of Scotland as a Presbyterian institution after decades of intermittent efforts by various monarchs, including James VI, Charles I, Charles II and James VII to mould the Church of Scotland into an Episcopalian institution more pliable to Royal control and possibly more acceptable to those monarchs who happened to be Catholic.
Crucially, the airship was allowed to continue rising to 3000 feet ( 900 metres ) and above the cloud layer into bright sunlight for 30 minutes.

Crucially and life
Crucially, the experience of almost total state control during the Second World War had inured the population to the idea that the state might be able to solve problems in wide areas of national life.
( Crucially, the larynx or voicebox, originally high in the throat to let the baby breathe while swallowing, descends during the first year of life, allowing a pharynx to develop and all the sounds of human speech to be formed.

Crucially and order
Crucially, in most settings, there must only be a finite number of subdomains, each of which must be an interval, in order for the overall function to be called " piecewise ".
Crucially, Sugden had intended to recover the incriminating “ Dying Pig ” toy before it was noticed, but once Poirot had learned of it, he had to provide a faked clue, physically similar, in order to protect the means by which the murder was committed.

Crucially and all
Section 1 said that: Crucially, this rendered all past, present and future patents and monopolies null and void.
Crucially, none of the versions available before 2006 contained all the footage found in the others ; each had some elements missing from other versions, and each has substantial editing differences from the others.

Crucially and system
Crucially, it is designed to run underneath Windows such that the operating system is unaware of its presence.
Crucially, however, the paper demonstrated that the complexity observed emerged in a robust manner that did not depend on finely tuned details of the system: variable parameters in the model could be changed widely without affecting the emergence of critical behaviour ( hence, self-organized criticality ).
Crucially, no one way of dividing a heterarchical system can ever be a totalizing or all-encompassing view of the system, each division is clearly partial, and in many cases, a partial division leads us, as perceivers, to a feeling of contradiction that invites a new way of dividing things.

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