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Harnessing and by
He was Chairman and principal author of the “ Memo to the President-Elect: Harnessing Process to Purpose ,” a blue-ribbon Commission report sponsored by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and the Institute for International Economics.
* The Harnessing of the Black Warrior River by Kenneth Willis
Their next three albums, Unholy Cult, Harnessing Ruin, and Shadows in the Light were released by French label Listenable Records, the same label which released an album by Hernandez's previous band Fallen Christ years before.
Harnessing the work of the earlier New Historicism, this emergent field of historiography began to challenge the hegemony of Medieval historians over the history which they narrate, and opens the door for new modes of thinking by the proposition that " we cannot interpret medieval culture, or any historical culture, except through the prism of the dominat concepts of our own thought worlds.
Harnessing Brownian motion and making molecular level machines is regulated by the second law of thermodynamics, with its often counter-intuitive consequences, and as such, we need another inspiration.
* Harnessing the intellectuals: censoring writers and artists in today's Cuba by Carlos Ripoll Washington, DC: Cuban American National Foundation 1985 ( CANF pamphlet # 15 )
Harnessing the flexibility and relatively inexpensive resources of electronic publishing, largely developed at the University library by its Digital Library Production Service, the University Library has focused on providing cost-effective, sustainable, permanent, user-friendly, locally operated, and author-friendly intellectual property agreements to counter the opposite effects that the publishing industry has fostered and to offer new models for other, similar publishing ventures.

Harnessing and computers
In the article Harnessing Green IT: Principles and Practices, San Murugesan defines the field of green computing as " the study and practice of designing, manufacturing, using, and disposing of computers, servers, and associated subsystems — such as monitors, printers, storage devices, and networking and communications systems — efficiently and effectively with minimal or no impact on the environment.
In the article Harnessing Green IT: Principles and Practices, San Murugesan defines the field of green computing as " the study and practice of designing, manufacturing, using, and disposing of computers, servers, and associated subsystems — such as monitors, printers, storage devices, and networking and communications systems — efficiently and effectively with minimal or no impact on the environment.

Harnessing and at
* Video of " Harnessing Quantum Physics ", Peter Shor's panel discussion with Ignacio Cirac, Michele Mosca, Avi Wigderson, Daniel Gottesman and Dorit Aharonov, at the Quantum to Cosmos festival
Harnessing the power of an artificial black hole, the drive was designed to project a focused beam of gravitons, folding space and allowing the ship to pass through and arrive immediately at the new location.

Harnessing and .
Harnessing a team to a buckboard, they drove out to a willow-lined creek about a half-mile off, then climbed down and began chopping.
Harnessing the richness of the Internet is another goal.
Wesley identified the appalling grandparents in Harnessing Peacocks, who bully the pregnant Hebe, as the nearest she came to a portrait of her own parents in old age.
He continued to appear occasionally on television, including playing the leads in Fiddlers Three ( 1991 ) and Harnessing Peacocks ( 1992 ) and an appearance on the American show Magnum, P. I.
Harnessing the explosive energy of the spring, the gymnast directs his or her body hands-first towards the vault.
Harnessing the wheelwork of nature: Tesla's science of energy.
According to Story About Li Bing and His Son in Harnessing the Rivers, in Records of Guansian, Li Erlang assisted his father in the construction of the complex irrigation system that prevented the Min River from flooding and irrigated the Chengdu Plain.
Harnessing a Godmaster's natural ability to manipulate Chokon Power-the energy of the heavens ( Tenchokon ), the Earth ( Chichokon ) and man ( Jinchokon )-Ginrai saw off the Decepticons, and, after a period of deliberation, after which he decided that becoming a Godmaster was the will of God himself, he joined the Autobots.
Harnessing the power of the Golden Fruit just as Sir Pac-alot did, Pac-Man re-imprisons Spooky and returns the Golden Fruit to where they belong.
Steve Shalaty replaced Hernandez on Harnessing Ruin.
On the band's 2005 album, Harnessing Ruin, there are more lyrics touching on other subjects such as politics.
The Becta Harnessing Technology Schools Survey 2007 indicated that 98 % of secondary and 100 % of primary schools had IWBs.
Elearning Credits have been rolled into the Harnessing Technology Grant which is being distributed to schools via Local Authorities.
* Harnessing the creative energy of physical scientists to fuel technology innovations and paradigm shifts in brain studies.
: User-Centric Innovations in New Product Development ; Systematic Identification of Lead User Harnessing Interactive and Collaborative Online-Tools, in: International Journal of Innovation Management, Vol.
Items covered in the contest may cover any equine subject, i. e., Reproduction, Training, Parasites, Dressage, Draft Horses, History and Origins, Anatomy and Physiology, Driving and Harnessing, Horse Industry, Horse Management, Breeds, Genetics, Mustangs, Western Games, Colors, Famous Horses in History, Parts of the Saddle, Types of Bits, Feedstuffs and Nutrition.

collective and intellect
# harnessing the collective human intellect of all the people contributing to effective solutions was the key ;
A common principle for most liberal conservatives of Burkean extraction is a theory of collective human intellect.
Institutions reflect the wisdom of the collective human intellect, whereas changes reflect reasoning or deduction by individuals or groups who are only exposed to contemporary problems.
When individuals reason out new institutions from a set of first principles, a process conservatives called ' social engineering ', they will rarely best an institution that has grown from the collective intellect.
Conservatives believe that institutions based on the collective human intellect, experience and wisdom of many generations are more reliable.
These works have close connections to Abakanowicz's life living in a Communist regime which repressed individually creativity and intellect in favor of the collective interest.
Mind can be interpreted as the collective aspects of intellect and consciousness.

collective and facilitated
This resulted in laws abolishing collective responsibility, and facilitated the resettlement of farmers onto lands on the outskirts of the Empire.

collective and by
The collective by which I address you in the title above is neither patronizing nor jocose but an exact industrial term in use among professional thieves.
( 2 ) displacement of state law by federal law in state courts in all actions regarding collective bargaining agreements ; ;
As the first collective confrontation of the Nazi outrage, the Trial of Eichmann represents a recovery of the Jews from the shock of the death camps, a recovery that took fifteen years and which is still by no means complete ( though let no one believe that it could be hastened by silence ).
If a union cannot perform this function, then collective bargaining is being palmed off by organizers as a gigantic fraud.
Had it done so, the blot on its escutcheon would have remained indelible, nor could the Harvard Divinity School assemble today to honor Parker's insurgence other than by getting down on its collective knees and crying `` peccavi ''.
* Mohism, which advocated the idea of universal love: Mozi believed that " everyone is equal before heaven ", and that people should seek to imitate heaven by engaging in the practice of collective love.
The main scholarly outlet has been the journal Annales d ' Histoire Economique et Sociale (" Annals of economic and social history "), founded in 1929 by Lucien Febvre and Marc Bloch, which broke radically with traditional historiography by insisting on the importance of taking all levels of society into consideration and emphasized the collective nature of mentalities.
* BBS, collective term for the former South African High Commission Territories of Basutoland, Bechuanaland Protectorate and Swaziland, administered by the British High Commissioner for Southern Africa
The four-man junta headed by General Augusto Pinochet abolished civil liberties, dissolved the national congress, banned union activities, prohibited strikes and collective bargaining, and erased the Allende administration's agrarian and economic reforms.
A collective body, the National Council of Public Safety ( CNSP ), presided over by Brigadier General Robert Guéi, took control.
Social capital is defined by Robert D. Putnam as " the collective value of all social networks and species ( who people know ) and the inclinations that arise from these works to do things for each other ( norms of reciprocity ).
Throughout the 1920s and most of the 1930s, the Labour Party's official policy, supported by Attlee, was to oppose rearmament and support internationalism and collective security under the League of Nations.
A collective trauma is a traumatic psychological effect shared by a group of people of any size, up to and including an entire society.
Traumatic events witnessed by an entire society can stir up collective sentiment, often resulting in a shift in that society's culture and mass actions.
The term was used by author John Perkins in his 2004 book Confessions of an Economic Hit Man, where he described corporatocracy as a collective composed of corporations, banks, and governments.
The term computer system security means the collective processes and mechanisms by which sensitive and valuable information and services are protected from publication, tampering or collapse by unauthorized activities or untrustworthy individuals and unplanned events respectively.
The U. S. argument was affirmed, however, by the dissenting opinion of ICJ member U. S. Judge Schwebel, who concluded that in supporting the contras, the U. S. acted lawfully in collective self-defence in El Salvador's support.
Moreover, during the mid-1970s the magazine was run by a Maoist editorial collective.
Social determinants of health have been recognized by several health organizations such as the Public Health Agency of Canada and the World Health Organization to greatly influence collective and personal well-being.
The mistake was picked up and repeated by numerous other media sources, and the moniker " D. B. Cooper " became lodged in the public's collective memory.
Sociologist Helmut Schoeck similarly considered envy the motive of collective efforts by society to reduce the disproportionate gains of successful individuals through moral or legal constraints, with altruism being primary among these.

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