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Exhaustion and was
Exhaustion with the war was building as casualties mounted and there appeared to be no end in sight.
In 1960, Columbia awarded him a Ph. D .; his dissertation was entitled " The End of Ideology: On the Exhaustion of Political Ideas in the Fifties ," the title of his first book.
" Literature of Exhaustion " was about the need for a new era in literature after modernism had exhausted itself.
" A breaking point had been reached: " Exhaustion from three years on the road, fighting and creative differences was a salient signpost to premature oblivion.
Whilst at Barnwood Needham took part in the regular entertainments and concerts, once playing the part of King Giltgingerbread in The Enchanted Princess ; wrote a number of papers, including Brain Exhaustion and Insanity in relation to Society ; and was president of the Psychological Association of Great Britain and Ireland in 1887.

Exhaustion and from
Exhaustion, from releasing three records in two years and constant touring, contributed to the friction, particularly between Francis and Deal.
The End of Ideology: On the Exhaustion of Political Ideas in the Fifties ( ISBN 0-674-00426-4 ) is a book by Daniel Bell, first published in 1960, in which he suggests that the older grand humanistic ideologies derived from the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries are exhausted, and that new more parochial ideologies will soon arise.

Exhaustion and .
Exhaustion can also constitute a form of impairment, as reaction time, cognitive processing and sensory perception are all impaired by sleep deprivation and / or physical exhaustion.
* Law, Richard G. " Joanna Russ and The " Literature of Exhaustion ".
* Exhaustion where the person is unable to sustain effort to swim or tread water, often leading to death through drowning.
Exhaustion and war weariness were growing worse in 1917, as the fighting in France continued with no end in sight.
In his formal published treatises, Archimedes solved the same problem using the Method of Exhaustion.
* " Climatic Change and Agricultural Exhaustion as Elements in the Fall of Rome ," Quarterly Journal of Economics Vol.
The first of the restored apartments, Qianlong's Juanqinzhai, or " Studio of Exhaustion From Diligent Service ," began an exhibition tour of the United States in 2010.
Exhaustion of mental organization strength.
John Barth, the postmodernist novelist who talks often about the label " postmodern ", wrote an influential essay in 1967 called " The Literature of Exhaustion " and in 1979 wrote " Literature of Replenishment " in order to clarify the earlier essay.
* Exhaustion and disease led to the early evacuation of many Chinese and American troops before the coming assault on Myitkyina.
* Alberto Moreiras, The Exhaustion of Difference: the politics of Latin American cultural studies.
The Canadian Army recognized combat stress reaction as " Battle Exhaustion " during the Second World War and classified it as a separate type of combat wound.
" Exhaustion of administrative remedies " requires a person to first go to the agency which administers the statute ; this process usually involves filing a petition, then going to a hearing, and finally using the agency's internal appeal process.
Exhaustion of remedies frequently affects cases of habeas corpus.
Exhaustion of IAA makes the abscission zone sensitive to ethylene.

was and partly
Hague, like all who worked near the pits, was partly deafened from the constant assault against his eardrums.
I had come to New Orleans two years earlier after graduating college, partly because I loved the city and partly because there was quite a noted art colony there.
I had had my name taken out of the telephone book, and this was partly because of a convict who had been discharged from Sing Sing and who called me night after night.
The weekly loss is partly counterbalanced by 500 arrivals each week from West Germany, but the hard truth, says Crossman, is that `` The closing off of East Berlin without interference from the West and with the use only of East German, as distinct from Russian, troops was a major Communist victory, which dealt West Berlin a deadly, possibly a fatal, blow.
He was stern and overbearing with his flock, but obsequious and conciliatory with the whites, especially the rich who partly supported the church.
One of the drawing-room shutters was partly open and he made out the shapes of chairs and sofas, which seemed to be upholstered in brown or russet velvet.
It was just me and Eileen getting drunk together like we used to in the old days, and me staring at her across the table crazy to get my hands on her partly because I wanted to wring her neck because she was so ornery but mostly because she was so wonderful to touch.
Thus, the energy transferred from the arc to the anode was partly fed back into the arc.
Eventually it became clear to me, partly with the aid of another schizophrenic patient who could point out my condescension to me somewhat more directly, that this man, with his condescending, `` You're welcome '', was very accurately personifying an element of obnoxious condescension which had been present in my own demeanor, over these months, on each of these occasions when I had bid him good-bye with the consoling note, each time, that the healing Christ would be stooping to dispense this succor to the poor sufferer again on the morrow.
If the master of scops who was most responsible for the poem ever used kennings that were traditional, he was at least partly deprived of free will and not inclined towards shrewd and sophisticated misuse of speech elements.
it was partly his master.
The trouble was at least partly Juet's doing.
Lincoln later noted that this move was " partly on account of slavery " but mainly due to land title difficulties.
For English, this is partly because the Great Vowel Shift occurred after the orthography was established, and because English has acquired a large number of loanwords at different times, retaining their original spelling at varying levels.
' His Nemesis, a prose tragedy in four acts about Beatrice Cenci, partly inspired by Percy Bysshe Shelley's The Cenci, was printed while he was dying.
This score was partly in the Project style, recorded by most of the Project regulars, and produced and engineered by Parsons.
The experimental community was never successful, partly because most of the land was not arable.
The island of Hokkaido was known to the Ainu as Ainu Moshir, and was formally annexed by the Japanese at the late date of 1868, partly as a means of preventing the intrusion of the Russians, and partly for imperialist reasons.

was and blame
Her face was pale but set and her dark eyes smoldered with blame for Ben.
While the Cold War raged it was easy to blame it all on Yalta.
Everybody fell in love with Amy again last night at the Warwick Musical Theater, and Shelley Berman was to blame.
There was no one who would blame her or John ; ;
Some were the equivalent of Paneloux and thought that France was to blame for the calamity that had befallen it.
Diogenes Laertius reports the story that he was prosecuted by Cleon for impiety, but Plutarch says that Pericles sent his former tutor, Anaxagoras, to Lampsacus for his own safety after the Athenians began to blame him for the Peloponnesian war.
This strategy was a success, and Knox and Reed were able to fend off all lawsuits that would have placed blame upon the club's members.
In any case, Beethoven was not to blame, as violinist Josef Böhm recalled: " Beethoven directed the piece himself ; that is, he stood before the lectern and gesticulated furiously.
" Bonaparte later placed much the blame for the defeat on the wounded Admiral Blanquet, falsely accusing him of surrendering Franklin while his ship was undamaged.
Ivinskaya writes that Pasternak " raced frantically all over town, telling everybody that he was not to blame and denying responsibility for Mandelstam's disappearance, which for some reason he thought might be laid at his door.
According to Ivinskaya, " If ever the conversation turned to Mandelstam, Leonidovich would always hark back to the same thing: that he was not to blame for his misfortunes, and that if he had not written to Bukharin and in general made a great fuss about his arrest, then perhaps Mandelstam would not even have had the respite, brief as it was, which was granted to him -- with the result that the Voronezh Notebooks might never have been written.
Although there is no strong evidence for any single theory, many independent theories exist, some blaming storms, some capsizing, and some suggesting that wartime enemy activity was to blame for the loss.
The Widgery Tribunal, held in the immediate aftermath of the event, largely cleared the soldiers and British authorities of blame — Widgery described the soldiers ' shooting as " bordering on the reckless "— but was criticised as a " whitewash ", including by Jonathan Powell.
Once there, Gallus claimed that it was Constantina who was to blame for all the trouble that had been caused while he was in charge of the eastern provinces.
Trumbo said in a speech given in 1970 that there was blame on all sides:
Pedro was introduced as a villain in the first show and was teamed up with Fernando by the second show, so someone to talk to, to plan with, to blame when things went wrong as they always did.
Rommel was later to blame the failure to break through to the Nile on how the sources of supply to his army had dried up and how:
He wrote that " all of the democratic circles of America and of Europe, especially those of the Italian centre-left, now know well that the disastrous attack was planned and realized by the American CIA and Mossad with the help of the Zionist world to place the blame on Arabic countries and to persuade the Western powers to intervene in Iraq and Afghanistan ".
As well as visiting mines, including Grimethorpe, and observing social conditions, he attended meetings of the Communist Party and of Oswald Mosley – " his speech the usual claptrap — The blame for everything was put upon mysterious international gangs of Jews " – where he saw the tactics of the Blackshirts – " one is liable to get both a hammering and a fine for asking a question which Mosley finds it difficult to answer.
Garnet's meeting with Catesby, at which the former was said to have absolved the latter of any blame in the plot, was proof enough that the Jesuits were central to the conspiracy ; according to Coke the Gunpowder Plot would always be known as the Jesuit Treason.

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