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was and institutional
Regarding institutional reforms, the party was a long-time supporter of presidentialism and a plurality voting system, and came to support also federalism and to fully accept the alliance with Lega Nord, although the relations with that party were tense at times, especially about issues regarding national unity.
However, this intention was thwarted by a combination of ethnic antagonism, aesthetic controversy and political struggles over the institutional control of public art.
After the charge of monetary and exchange rate policies was shifted in 1998 to the European Central Bank, within the European institutional framework, the bank implements the decisions, issues euro banknotes and withdraws and destroys worn pieces.
The other way was institutional union with new United and uniting churches.
In response to calamities within the empire and threats from imperialism, the Self-Strengthening Movement was an institutional reform in the second half of the 1800s.
A second issue was the Columbia administration's failure to resign its institutional membership in the Pentagon's weapons research think-tank, the Institute for Defense Analyses ( IDA ).
The Communist Party was his institutional base ; he was the General Secretary – another advantage.
A landmark in the " institutional history " of the Cathars was the Council, held in 1167 at Saint-Félix-Lauragais, attended by many local figures and also by the Bogomil papa Nicetas, the Cathar bishop of ( northern ) France and a leader of the Cathars of Lombardy.
At the institutional level, many of the institutions also changed denominations, but the end result was a system that borrowed from both systems:
Pierre-Félix Guattari ( ) ( April 30, 1930 – August 29, 1992 ) was a French militant, an institutional psychotherapist, philosopher, and semiotician ; he founded both schizoanalysis and ecosophy.
Whilst GATT was a set of rules agreed upon by nations, the WTO is an institutional body.
20 %- 20 % of the shares were sold to foreign institutional investors and given to the Social Security organizations, 5 % were bought by employees, and 8 % was offered at the Budapest Stock Exchange.
This may even lead to an institutional variability, as in North Korea, where, after the presidency of party leader Kim Il-Sung, the office was vacant for years, the late president being granted the posthumous title ( akin to some ancient Far Eastern traditions to give posthumous names and titles to royalty ) of " Eternal President " ( while all substantive power, as party leader, itself not formally created for four years, was inherited by his son Kim Jong Il, initially without any formal office ) until it was formally replaced on 5 September 1998, for ceremonial purposes, by the office of Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme People's Assembly, while the party leader's post as Chairman of the National Defense Commission was simultaneously declared " the highest post of the state ", not unlike Deng Xiaoping earlier in the People's Republic of China.
A key factor of their growth over this and the next decade was increased allocations by US institutional investors, notably pension and endowment funds, following the success of David Swensen's investments in alternative investments and other non-marketable assets, such as hedge funds, timber, real estate and private equity, at Yale University's endowment fund.
" Later when Nehru had began his institutional schooling in 1905 at Harrow, a leading school in England, he was greatly influenced by G. M.
Therefore, he was able to hold knowledge across a vast array of subjects: " the international world order, the political and economic organisation of contemporary society, especially France, the institutional and legal frameworks that regulate the lives of ordinary citizens, the educational system, the media networks that control and disseminate information.
* Though Ashcroft initially opposed the legislation, while he was governor, Missouri enacted its first hate crimes legislation, creating penalties for ethnic intimidation and crimes committed for motives based on race, color, religion, or national origin, and penalties for institutional vandalism for damages to ethnically-related buildings and property.
This " stall system " ( fixed bookcases perpendicular to exterior walls pierced by closely spaced windows ) was characteristic of English institutional libraries.
" In 2009 Burger was able to receive approval from the institutional review board by modifying several of the experimental protocols.
Central to this synthesis were common assumptions and institutional frames of reference, including the religious norms found in Christianity, scientific norms found in classical physics, as well as the idea that the depiction of external reality from an objective standpoint was not only possible but desirable.
The reign of Murad III was marked by wars with Safavids and Habsburgs and Ottoman economic decline and institutional decay.

was and blunder
This diagram shows why white 20 was a blunder ; if it had been next to black 19 ( at the position of move 32 in this diagram ) then black 31 would not be a threat and so the forcing sequence would fail.
It was thought that the surface at The Oval would favour pacemen, but Australia's selection proved to be a blunder as England's spinners took them to the only win of the series, allowing them to regain the Ashes.
It is true that Yamamoto believed that Japan could not win a protracted war with the United States, and moreover seems to have believed that the Pearl Harbor attack had become a blunder — even though he was the person who came up with the idea of a surprise attack on Pearl Harbor.
Einstein later referred to his failure to predict the expansion of the universe from theory, before it was proven by observation of the cosmological red shift, as the " biggest blunder " of his life.
Several members of the SED Politbüro realized this was a serious blunder and made plans to get rid of him.
Ian Howard argued that Emma not being involved in a major political manoeuvre would be " out of character for her " and the Encomium was probably trying to mask her responsibility for a blunder.
The move, however, was a strategic blunder, as it drew the ire of many warlords across the land, including Yuan Shu's own subordinate Sun Ce, who had advised Yuan Shu not to make such a move.
With manipulative coaching, the aunts encouraged the Dauphine to refuse to acknowledge the favourite, which was considered by some to be a political blunder.
The previous biggest blunder was the airing of A Charlie Brown Christmas in December 2006 with several acts in the wrong order.
A major theme of Irving's writings since the 1980s was his belief that it had been a great blunder on the part of Britain to declare war on Germany in 1939, and that ever since then and as a result of that decision, Britain had slipped into an unstoppable decline.
" Though the Kaiser was complimentary, Friedrich von Holstein described Chamberlain's speech as a " blunder " and the Times attacked Chamberlain for using the term " alliance " without inhibition.
However, in game five, Kramnik made what has been described as the worst blunder of his career ( a blunder that pales in comparison to his loss against Deep Fritz 10 in 2006 ), losing a knight in a position which was probably drawn.
After the campaign, just before General Sherman began his operations against Atlanta, Sherman said of the Red River campaign that it was " One damn blunder from beginning to end.
Wellington had planned to retreat if outflanked, but he was watching warily to see if Marmont would make a blunder.
Melas also committed a serious tactical blunder, detaching Generalmajor ( GM ) Nimptsch's brigade of 2, 300 hussars and two artillery batteries back over the Bormida bridge to block the corps of General Louis Gabriel Suchet, which was mistakenly reported around 9 am from Acqui Terme to be approaching Alessandria from the south.
Another blunder was the botched construction of the PacifiCat BC Ferries, which would later become part of the FastCat Fiasco ; the project, designed to speed transportation between Vancouver and Nanaimo, was plagued by cost over-runs and poor technical decisions.
In the 1912 World Series, Speaker led the Red Sox to their second World Series title over John McGraw's New York Giants, with the Red Sox winning the eighth and final game ( game two was called on account of darkness and ended in a tie ) after Fred Snodgrass's error — dropping an easy fly ball that would have been the first out — and Fred Merkle's blunder — failing to go after a Speaker pop foul that would have been the second out, after which Speaker promptly singled home the tying run — allowed the Red Sox to tie and win the game in the bottom of the tenth inning.
In an even greater blunder he joined the Pretender, was made an earl, and took charge of foreign affairs in the Stuart court.
The first blunder of the Hats was the hasty and ill-advised war with Russia.
However, in the second debate on foreign policy, Ford made what was widely viewed as a major blunder when he said " There is no Soviet domination of Eastern Europe and there never will be under a Ford administration.
Historian James Cowan described the Moturoa expedition as " Whitmore's one great blunder ", but strong criticisms of Whitmore's strategy were rejected by Belich, who said the commander's one mistake was to underestimate the Moturoa deceptively strong defences.
The transition from donder to blunder is thought by some to be deliberate ; the term blunder was originally used in a transitive sense, synonymous with to confuse, and this is thought to describe the stunningly loud report of the large bore, short barreled blunderbuss.

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