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then and resolved
Andronikos seems then to have resolved to exterminate the aristocracy, and his plans were nearly successful.
The terms of the work-to-rule were that staff refused to work with the new equipment ( though the old black and white equipment had been disposed of by then ) and therefore programmes were recorded and transmitted in black and white, including Coronation Street The dispute was resolved in early 1971 and the last black and white episode was broadcast on 8 February 1971.
He personally favored Robert Anderson, a Democrat, who rejected his offer ; Eisenhower then resolved to leave the matter in the hands of the party.
In 1979, Massimo Pallottino, then president of the Istituto di Studi Etruschi ed Italici initiated the Committee of the Corpus Speculorum Etruscanorum ( CSE ), which resolved to publish all the specula and set editorial standards for doing so.
The crisis was resolved when Neurath pointed out to Hitler that under Ribbentrop's rules, if the Soviet Ambassador were to give the communist clenched-fist salute, then Hitler would be obliged to return it.
Bayesians would argue that this is right and proper — if the issue is such that reasonable people can put forward different, but plausible, priors and the data are such that the likelihood does not swamp the prior, then the issue is not resolved unambiguously at the present stage of knowledge and Bayesian statistics highlights this fact.
If another operator is found before two operands are found, then the old operator is placed aside until this new operator is resolved.
He then resolved to destroy the fortress, called Chastellet and manned by the Templars, moving his headquarters to Banias.
Should a complaint not be resolved to the person complaining's satisfaction then an appeal may be made to London TravelWatch, an independent body.
The Altaic language family was generally accepted by linguists from the late 19th century up to the 1960s, but since then has been in dispute, and the dispute is not yet resolved.
This dispersion problem could potentially be resolved by accelerating a stream of sails which then in turn transfer their momentum to a magsail vehicle, as proposed by Jordin Kare.
The Mongols then resolved to " reach the ultimate sea ", where they could proceed no further, and invaded Hungary and Poland.
The bankruptcy court then determines if the interrupted state court proceeding should be returned to state court for resolution, or should be resolved in a federal bankruptcy court adversarial proceeding, based upon the applicable bankruptcy law.
The differences were then resolved by majority decision among the three.
The conflict was resolved after the Argentine defeat in the Falkland's by Papal mediation in the Beagle conflict of Pope John Paul II and in the form of a Treaty of Peace and Friendship of 1984 between Chile and Argentina ( Tratado de Paz y Amistad ), granting the islands to Chile and most of the Exclusive economic zone to Argentina ; since then, other border disputes with Chile have been resolved via diplomatic negotiations.
The Declaration was then unanimously agreed upon and Congress resolved to have the Declaration engrossed and signed by those present, which signing took place on August 2, 1776.
The mutiny was successfully resolved by dismissing about one half of the line, which Wayne then had to rebuild.
This problem may be resolved by using an integrated packet-level and application level appliance or software which is then able to communicate this information between the packet handler and the proxy.
represented the Penn family for the following seventeen years in their boundary dispute with first Charles Calvert, 5th Baron Baltimore and then his son Frederick Calvert, 6th Baron Baltimore of Maryland until it was peacefully resolved in 1767.
Lengthy rights negotiations with Warners then delayed further screenings until May 2012, although the situation now appears to have been resolved and Repo Films now intends to enter the film into various International Film Festivals.
The standard definition focuses on the thematic and harmonic organization of tonal materials that are presented in an exposition, elaborated and contrasted in a development and then resolved harmonically and thematically in a recapitulation.
By then, Raitt was clean and sober, having resolved her substance abuse problem.
He then resolved to become a buddha and so to come into possession of a (" buddha-field ", a realm existing in the primordial universe outside of ordinary space time, produced by a buddha's merit ) possessed of many perfections.

then and sever
Fulk then married his younger daughter Sibyl to William Clito, though Henry managed to sever the union by having Pope Calixtus II annul the marriage on the grounds of consanguinity.
The blade is then released, to fall swiftly and sever the head from the body.
This is followed by a similar utterly slight downward touch, and then I sever contact so gently that the subject does not know exactly when-and the subject's hand is left going neither up nor down, but cataleptic.
Ltd. was formed and then merged into a Crown corporation, in part to sever the influence of the General Electric Company in the USA.
Snapback is analogous to stretching a rubber band to its breaking point between the hands, and then suffering a stinging blow from the retracting loose ends of the band-in the case of a heavy mooring line this blow carries much more force and can inflict severe injuries or sever limbs.
Cypher is then kidnapped by the Hellions, who wish to reprogram him, but is rescued by his teammates, who sever his connection to Selene.
Caragiale rejected the offer: by then, he had grown disillusioned with the traditional political groupings, and had decided to sever all his links with them.
The cavalry would then attempt to run into the enemy and sever communications between generals and soldiers.
Foucault then further shows that raison d ' état wasn't much concerned with legality ( as we know the term ) but with political necessity ; politics is concerned with necessity and if necessary politics must become violent lending to coup d ' état ; this means that it is obliged to sacrifice, to sever, cause harm, and it is led to be unjust and murderous.
:" Monks, even if bandits were to savagely sever you, limb by limb, with a double-handled saw, even then, whoever of you harbors ill will at heart would not be upholding my Teaching.

then and connections
For the occasion on which everyone already knows everyone else and the host wishes them to meet one or a few honored newcomers, then the `` open house '' system is advantageous because the honored guests are fixed connective points and the drifting guests make and break connections at the door.
The packet filter then redirects the connection to the web-proxy which can perform detailed filtering on the website without having to pass through all unfiltered connections.
Children would join the Young Pioneers and then, at the age of 14, might graduate to the Komsomol ( Young Communist League ) and ultimately, as an adult, if one had shown the proper adherence to party discipline or had the right connections one would become a member of the Communist Party itself.
Economic growth and the intellectual benefits of a highly developed university system, together with Scotland's traditional connections to France, then in the throes of the Enlightenment, led Scots intellectuals to develop a uniquely practical branch of humanism to the extent that Voltaire said " we look to Scotland for all our ideas of civilization ".
This began with point-to-point communication between mainframe computers and terminals, expanded to point-to-point connections between computers and then early research into packet switching.
The Polks had connections with the university, then a small school of about 80 students: Sam Polk was their land agent for Tennessee, and his cousin, William Polk, was a trustee.
In 1933, after a violent encounter with the recently installed Nazis, he left for France and was then able to use family connections to flee to Bristol, England, arriving September 24, 1933.
He carefully considers language, then, as the core of culture, by examining in particular the connections between the unfolding of thought and sense-enriching his perspective not only by an analysis of the acquisition of language and the expressivity of the body, but also by taking into account pathologies of language, painting, cinema, literature, poetry and song.
Italy, suspecting that San Marino could harbour Austrian spies who could be given access to its new radiotelegraph station, tried to forcefully establish a detachment of Carabinieri on its territory and then suspended any telephone connections with the Republic when it did not comply.
For example, if 50 % of a system's user base will be accessing the system via a 56K modem connection and the other half over a T1, then the load injectors ( computers that simulate real users ) should either inject load over the same mix of connections ( ideal ) or simulate the network latency of such connections, following the same user profile.
He then volunteered to fight in the Algerian War, using personal connections to be sent despite the reservations of his superiors.
They started a psychosurgery program at George Washington University in 1936, first using Moniz's method but then devised a method of their own in which the connections between the prefrontal lobes and deeper structures in the brain were severed by making a sweeping cut through a burr hole on either side of the skull.
In the UK the Plessey Company produced a range of TXK crossbar exchanges, but their widespread rollout by the British Post Office began later than in other countries, and then was inhibited by the parallel development of TXE reed relay and electronic exchange systems, so they never achieved a large number of customer connections although they did find some success as tandem switch exchanges.
The information measured by these field instruments is then gathered in local Remote Terminal Units ( RTU ) that transfer the field data to a central location in real time using communication systems, such as satellite channels, microwave links, or cellular phone connections.
Network connections might fail, or one node might successfully complete its part of the transaction and then be required to roll back its changes, because of a failure on another node.
To avoid connections to South African issues that were then a cause of worldwide attention and concern ( see apartheid ) his origin was changed from South African to Scottish to match that of Scrooge, which led Glomgold to have Scotland-style names in other countries ( see below ).
Bremen's prince-archbishop Johann Rode then tried to form a war alliance to repel these and prevent further invasions, first gaining the cities of Bremen, Hamburg and Stade, which considered the areas downstream the rivers Elbe and Weser their own front yard existential for their free maritime trade connections.
His long popularity and connections in Kansas and national politics helped make Curtis a strong leader in the Senate ; he marshaled support to be elected as Senate Minority Whip from 1915 – 1925 and then as Senate Majority Leader from 1925 – 1929.
With the intellectual benefits of having established Europe's first public education system since classical antiquity Scottish thinkers began questioning assumptions previously taken for granted ; and with Scotland's traditional connections to France, then in the throes of the Enlightenment, the Scots began developing a uniquely practical branch of humanism to the extent that Voltaire said, " We look to Scotland for all our ideas of civilization.
The first gossip columnist, dominating the 1930s and 40s, was Walter Winchell, who used political, entertainment, and social connections to mine information and rumors, which he then either published in his column On Broadway, or used for trade or blackmail, to accumulate more power.
Part of the attraction for Harken's management to buy Spectrum 7 was having Mr. Bush on its team — his father was then Vice-President, he had extensive " connections ," and knowledge of the oil and gas business.
That is, the person takes irrelevant information and puts it in the form of disconnected experiences, then it is taken to be relevant in a manner that suggests false causal connections.
The next years he spent in exile, at first in London, then in the Netherlands ; in 1852 he went to Paris, where, by means of private connections, he received an appointment in the bank of Bischoffheim & Goldschmidt, of which he became managing director, a post which he held till 1866.

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