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calls and for
Wisman, who has had the chief controller's job for four years, calls the signals for a team operating three rows of dull-gray consoles studded with lights, switches and buttons.
Comprehensive examination of any policy question calls for the performance of the intellectual tasks inseparable from any problem-solving method.
self-discovery calls for an open, permissive, inquiring posture of self-observation.
This lofty disregard for others was not shared by such men as Pierre Flotte and his associates, that `` brilliant group of mediocre men '', as Powicke calls them, who provided the brains for the French embassy that came to Rome under the nominal leadership of the archbishop of Narbonne, the duke of Burgundy, and the count of St.-Pol.
His new book, entitled `` Slums And Suburbs '', calls for fast and drastic action to avert disaster.
On the other hand, it is no interference with sovereignty to point out defects where they exist, such as that a plan calls for factories without power to run them, or for institutions without trained personnel to staff them.
Meeting these levels of protection from fire calls for: 1.
Since it requires only five players, it would seem to fall into the category of chamber music -- yet it calls for a double bass, an instrument generally regarded as symphonic.
Most recreation work calls for a good deal of pre-planning.
Fishing interest calls for a check of the species found, quantity and size, the season they are available, and the stocking program of the fish commission.
-- The existing plant growth calls for thorough checking.
Max, in a fit of despair, takes Alicia and runs off for two marvelous weeks in Burbank ( Fink calls it `` the most wonderful and lovely fourteen days in my whole life '' ), at the end of which Alicia tragically contracts Parkinson's disease and dies.
These must have been for local calls strictly, as in May 1900 the `` only long distance telephone '' in town was transferred from C. B. Carleton's to Young's shoe store.
Pip's great expectations, his progress through illusion and disillusionment, turn, somewhat as they do for the naive hero of Dreiser's American Tragedy, upon the lure of genteel prosperity through unearned income -- what Wemmick calls `` portable property '' and what Jaggers reproaches Pip for letting `` slip through ( his ) fingers ''.
`` He calls for help while saying he is against centralization, but you can't have it both ways '', Jones said.
One of the agreements calls for the New Eastwick Corp. to purchase a 1311 acre tract for $12,192,865.
The plan calls for dividing the project into 16 sectors which would be barred to vehicular traffic.
His schedule calls for a noon speech Monday in Eugene at the Emerald Empire Kiwanis Club.
Merritt D. Hill, Ford Motor Co. vice president, says his company is starting to get calls daily from dealers demanding immediate delivery or wanting earlier shipping dates on orders for corn pickers.
The pastor calls in the home of each individual or family for a spiritual guidance conference.

calls and republic
There were calls for socialist revolution from the International Workingmen's Association, revolts and unrest in the autonomous regions of Navarre and Catalonia, and pressure from the Catholic Church against the fledgling republic.
As the Mexican republic matured, calls for the secularization (" disestablishment ") of the missions increased.
* Calls for a parliamentary republic not to be established and calls this a " retrograde step.
It has remained unchanged since Fiji was declared a republic in 1987, despite calls from some politicians ( such as Opposition Senator Atu Emberson-Bain ) for changes.
Subversion in the army, a series of local cantonalist risings, instability in Barcelona, failed anti-federalist coups, calls for revolution by the International Workingmen's Association, the lack of any broad political legitimacy, and personal in-fighting among the republican leadership all further weakened the republic.
In addition, calls for a separate Albanian republic within Yugoslavia were voiced.
With The Darkness, Jackie is able to take control of the small tropical republic, build himself an impenetrable fortress, an army and, eventually, even a lover he calls ' Elle '.
The republic ’ s telephone company, ChuvashSvazinform ( JSC ), provides all major telecom services to its customers, and it is a simple matter to make direct calls to most places in and outside of Russia.

calls and Workers
The National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers ( RMT union ) held a conference in January 2006 to address what it calls ' the crisis in working class representation ', in which Socialist Party councillor and Campaign for a New Workers ' Party chair Dave Nellist was invited to speak.
Unlike IMT supporters in most countries, the Workers ' International League does not support any existing political party, but rather calls on the trade unions to break with the Democratic Party and has organizing strategies under the name of the Campaign for a Mass Party of Labor ( CPML ).
The workers ' and peasants ' government, created by the Revolution of October 24-25 and basing itself on the Soviet of Workers ', Soldiers ' and Peasants ' Deputies, calls upon all the belligerent peoples and their government to start immediate negotiations for a just, democratic peace.
* May 14-Northern Ireland grinds to a halt as the Ulster Workers ' Council calls a strike following the defeat of an anti-Sunningdale Agreement motion.
Workers from throughout the country, including 3, 000 Verizon employees plus non-Verizon employees, helped restore service, allowing the network to carry 230, 000, 000 calls during the first week following the attacks.
The United Mine Workers of America calls his formation of a new coal company " a travesty ," saying Blankenship belonged in jail.
Also he recently served as the New York chairman of the Immigrant Workers Freedom Ride, a campaign which calls for " a road to citizenship, the reunification of families, a voice and dignity in the workplace, and the civil rights of all people.
Workers are also allowed free international phone calls during work hours.

calls and ',
His Hellenic Jewish parents called him Joseph ( although the Byzantine text-type calls him, Iōsēs, ' Joses ', a Greek variant of ' Joseph '), but when he sold all his goods and gave the money to the apostles in Jerusalem, they gave him a new name: Barnabas.
In the nineteenth century, Thomas Bulfinch combined these into a single synoptic view of material which Andrew Stewart calls a " historically-intractable farrago of ' evidence ', heavily tinged with Athenian cultural chauvinism ".
One such reaction to the loss of meaning is what Nietzsche calls ' passive nihilism ', which he recognises in the pessimistic philosophy of Schopenhauer.
Roderigo calls Othello ' the thicklips ', which seems to refer to European conceptions of Sub-Saharan African physiognomy, but Honigmann counters that, as these comments are all intended as insults by the characters, they need not be taken literally.
Alvin successfully negotiates the price down, and explains his mission, which he calls ' a hard swallow to pride ', but ' A brother is a brother.
However a resolution of the Bar Council of India calls upon lawyers not to address the judges as ' lord ' or ' lady ', questioning the association with nobility within a constitutional democracy.
For example, when Teacher calls the register and he is supposed to say ' Present, sir ', he says ' Gift, miss ' instead.
The visual imagery of Laibach's art ( or ' Laibach Kunst ', as it calls itself ) has been described as ' radically ambiguous ', An early example of this ambiguity would be the woodcut entitled The Thrower, also known as Metalec ( The Metal Worker ).
He has long been infatuated with Marge Simpson, whom he calls ' Midge ', and has on occasion tried to win her away from Homer.
This concept however is contradicted in a number of episodes, where Backstep personnel appear to become aware of the Backstep only when Frank calls in as ' Conundrum ', his backstepping call sign.
In the 2008 United States presidential election, the Financial Times endorsed Barack Obama, although raising concerns over tones of protectionism, the FT praised his ability to ' engage the country ’ s attention ', his calls for a bipartisan politics, as well as his plans for ' comprehensive health-care reform '.
When he got there, he was informed that a series of telephone calls had been made by senior opposition figures ( and some independent TDs ), including Fianna Fáil leader ( and ex-Taoiseach ) Charles Haughey, Brian Lenihan and Sylvester Barrett demanding that the President, as he could constitutionally do where a Taoiseach had ' ceased to retain the support of a majority in Dáil Éireann ', refuse FitzGerald a parliamentary dissolution, forcing his resignation as Taoiseach and enabling the Dáil to nominate someone else for the post.
He concludes, " This ' degenerate and unlovely age ', as one historian calls it, exists in the mind of Karl Rove, the reputed brain of George W. Bush, as the seminal age of inspiration for the politics and governance of America today.
' Silappadikaram ', the great Tamil classic, calls the Holy Hills, ' Nediyon Kunrams '.
Grafio is probably from the Greek grafein ' to write ', hence ' scribe '; it plausibly comes via the Byzantine Greek grapheus or suggrapheus " he who calls a meeting, i. e. the court, together ", which denoted a civil servant, rather than a feudal count.
On this view, anyone who asserted or believed one of Moore's sentences would be subject to a loss of self-knowledge — in particular, would be one who, with respect to a particular ' object ', broadly construed, e. g. person, apple, the way of the world, would be in a situation which violates, what Moran calls, the Transparency Condition: if I want to know what I think about X, then I consider / think about nothing but X itself.
Waugh wrote that the novel " deals with what is theologically termed ' the operation of Grace ', that is to say, the unmerited and unilateral act of love by which God continually calls souls to Himself ".
In the 1850 novel David Copperfield by Charles Dickens, the character Mr. Barkis calls the title character ' a young Roeshus ', the misspelling apparently meant to reflect Barkis ' rustic background.
Goldziher's work was an exception in that he appreciated ' Islam's tolerance towards other religions ', though this was undermined by his dislike of anthropomorphism in Mohammad's thought, and what Said calls ' Islam's too exterior theology and jurisprudence.
She is constantly stifled in this venture by the man she calls ' Grandad ', Craigan, who is her father's best friend and with whom she lives.
To show this blend, he calls such actions ' benselfish ', and finds the roots of our capacity for this in the evolutionary pressures that produced kin selection.
Ramachandran calls this the ' Bouba / kiki effect ', based on the results of an experiment with two abstract shapes, one blob-like and the other spiky, that asked people to relate the nonsense words bouba and kiki to them.

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