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rise and top
Mr. Speaker, I rise today to pay tribute to a great newspaper, the New York Times, on the occasion of a major change in its top executive command.
Towards the end of an intermediate or major rise, while the top is forming on the price chart, it is frequently observed that the odd-lot buying increases sharply.
Through meditation, and various esoteric practices, such as Kundalini Yoga, Sahaja Yoga, and Kriya Yoga, the kundalini is awakened, and can rise up from the muladhara chakra through the central nadi, called sushumna, inside or alongside the spine and reaches the top of the head.
Most believe that Hideyoshi, envied and hated by fellow generals for his swift rise from a lowly footman to a top general under Oda Nobunaga, wanted to give the credit for taking Takamatsu to Nobunaga so as to humble himself in front of other Oda vassals.
In this phobia, the CS is heights such as the top floors of a high rise building or a roller coaster.
Sergius III owed his rise to the power of his new patron Theophylact, and quickly rewarded him with the position of sacri palatii vestararius, the principal official at the top of papal patronage in control of the disbursements, and thus of patronage.
< td valign =" top "> Use of guilt, " mental discipline ", humiliation, rise of compulsory schooling, delegation of parental unconscious wishes.
As " In Dreams " was released in April 1963, Orbison was asked to replace guitarist Duane Eddy on a tour of the UK in top billing, with The Beatles, whose popularity was on the rise.
* Saint Piran ' rediscovered ' tin-smelting ( tin had been smelted in Cornwall since before the Romans ' arrival, but the methods had since been lost ) when his black hearthstone, which was evidently a slab of tin-bearing ore, had the tin smelt out of it and rise to the top in the form of a white cross ( thus the image on the flag ).
During secondary fermentation, raisins are added to control the amount of sugars and to act as an indicator of readiness for consumption ; they will rise to the top of the bottle when the drink is ready.
This dramatically sped up the butter-making process by eliminating the slow step of letting cream naturally rise to the top of milk.
More than half a dozen creeks tumble from hanging valleys at the top of granite cliffs that can rise 3000 – 4000 feet ( 900 – 1200 m ) above the valley floor, which itself is 4000 ft ( 1200 m ) above sea level.
Spicules rise to the top of the chromosphere and then sink back down again over the course of about 10 minutes.
Starting as a publicity worker, he would rapidly rise to be the party's top and was its lijsttrekker ( top candidate ) for the 1982 elections.
It remained a top seller in the U. S., owing much of its success to high build-quality and innovative advertising, ultimately giving rise to variants, including the Volkswagen Karmann Ghia and the Volkswagen Type 2 bus.
At the end of the 1960s, Vee Beetle engine output on a single carburetor would reach up to 70 BHP ; top speeds would gradually rise to nearly.
His rise to the top of the rankings spot was controversial because he had not recently won any Grand Slam titles, but he justified his ranking three months later by claiming his first Wimbledon title, beating former world number 1 Jim Courier in the final.
The three would remain together for a decade, forming much of the core of a team that would rise to the top of the league.
Head coach Marc Crawford later recalled the campaign as a turning point for the team's offensive leadership as the Sedin twins began their rise to stardom, matching the top line's production.
Sturges repeatedly suggests that the " lowliest boob could rise to the top with the right degree of luck, bluff and fraud.
In May 2012, Caroline Lucas announced that she would not seek re-election, hoping that instead other talented individuals could rise to the top of the party.
The east-west layout of the platforms and the fact the station is at the top of a low rise from prevailing winds from the west, together with the original 2 platforms being shuttered in from the goods loops meant that passengers were left standing in a ' wind tunnel '.
In the book, the room is itself significant, and is strongly emphasised early in the story ; Mrs Thompson's room is noted as being at " the top " of Warley geographically, and higher up socially than he has previously experienced, and serves as a metaphor for Lampton's ambition to rise in the world.
Today they rarely top above sea level, yet due to the relative low terrain around them, they still rise 200-above their base.

rise and sports
The seminal moment for the growth of fantasy sports was the rise of the Internet in the mid-1990s.
After the game, many sports writers commented on Warner's rise from an unknown backup to a Super Bowl MVP, but Warner himself wasn't impressed by it.
In Britain 2-litre sports cars were initially popular ( the Bristol engine being readily available and cheap ), subsequently 1100 cc sports racers became a very popular category for young drivers ( effectively supplanting 500 cc F3 ), with Lola, Lotus, Cooper and others being very competitive, although at the other end of the scale in the early to mid 1960s the national sports racing scene also attracted sophisticated GTs and later a crop of large-engined " big bangers " the technology of which largely gave rise to Can-Am but soon died out.
The ACO, organisers of the Le Mans 24 Hours, attempted to come up with a formula that would encourage more prototypes back to the race but would also be relatively economical – their Grand Touring Prototype rules in the late 1970s, based on fuel consumption rules, gave rise to two different varieties of sports car racing that were widely held to be a high point in the history of the sport.
More recently, " green " and sports tourism is on the rise, with the gorges of the Tarn River, the Ardèche Gorges, as well as the vast preserved expanses of Cévennes, Ardèche, Lauragais, and other sites.
The Mustang created the " pony car " class of American automobiles — sports car-like coupes with long hoods and short rear decks — and gave rise to competitors such as GM's Chevrolet Camaro, AMC's Javelin, and Chrysler's revamped Plymouth Barracudas and Dodge Challengers.
The school also has competitive MIAA Division I athletics, having won several state titles in different sports and given rise to former major league pitcher Brian Rose and former North Carolina Tar Heel basketball player Jess Gaspar along with UCONN Football star Jordan Todman and Georgia's Arthur Lynch.
Roone Pickney Arledge, Jr. ( July 8, 1931 – December 5, 2002 ) was an American sports and news broadcasting pioneer who was president of ABC Sports from 1968 until 1986 and ABC News from 1977 until 1998, and a key part of the company's rise to competition with the two other main television networks, NBC and CBS, in the 1960s, ' 70s, ' 80s and ' 90s.
A parody of both sports commentators and chat show presenters, among others, the character has appeared in two radio series, three television series and numerous TV and radio specials, including appearances on BBC's Comic Relief, which have followed the rise and fall of his career.
A winter sports week with speed skating, figure skating, ice hockey and nordic skiing was planned ; the concept of this week eventually gave rise to the Winter Olympic Games.
The release of NBA Jam gave rise to a new genre of sports games which were based around fast, action-packed gameplay and exaggerated realism, a formula which Midway would also later apply to the sports of football ( NFL Blitz ), and hockey ( 2 on 2 Open Ice Challenge ).
Given his privileged economic status at the time of the rise in the popularity of football, Wreford-Brown was one of a select few who were able to play sports for no monetary gain whatsoever.
In the United States, café society came to the fore with the end of Prohibition in December 1933 and the rise of photo journalism, to describe the set of people who tended to do their entertaining semi-publicly, in restaurants and night clubs and who would include among them movie stars and sports celebrities.
The rise of women playing sports began during World War I and World War II.
The other class designations disappeared because leagues of that level could not sustain operation during a large downturn in the financial fortunes of minor league baseball in the 1950s and 1960s caused by the rise of television broadcasts of major league sports across broad regions of the country.
The 1930s saw the rise of the Third Reich which restructured sports and football organizations throughout the nation to suit the regime's goals.
The rise in popularity of lawn sports helped prompt the spread of the invention.
That the Manta was sold alongside the Mark 2 Cavalier in the 1980s gave rise to the curiosity that the previous generation Ascona / Cavalier was effectively being sold concurrently with its successor, since a coupe / sports hatch version of the Ascona C / Cavalier Mark 2 was never engineered.
The rise of baseball also helped squeeze out other sports such as cricket, which had been popular in Philadelphia prior to the rise of baseball.
The rise of the radio made sports journalism more focused on the live coverage of the sporting events.
Pivotal in the rise of snooker as one of Britain's most popular sports was the 1972 World Championship final.

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