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central and issue
Any attempt to reconcile this statement of the central issue in the campaign of 1956 with the nature of the man who could not conceive it as the central issue will at least resolve our confusions about the chaotic and misleading results of the earnestness of both doctors and President in a situation which should never have arisen.
Despite the internal and international crises that harassed Morocco the elections remained a central issue.
Our endeavor to capture even a faint sense of how strenuous was the fight is muffled by our indifference to the very issue which in the Boston of 1848 seemed to be the central hope of its Christian survival, that of the literal, factual historicity of the miracles as reported in the Four Gospels.
By contrast, the National Union Party was united and energized as Lincoln made emancipation the central issue, and state Republican parties stressed the perfidy of the Copperheads.
Abraham Lincoln consistently made preserving the Union the central goal of the war, though he increasingly saw slavery as a crucial issue and made ending it an additional goal.
The history of the universe is a central issue in cosmology.
The question of who may vote is a central issue in elections.
The term " fantasy " became a central issue with the development of the Kleinian group as a distinctive strand within the British Psycho-Analytical Society, and was at the heart of the so-called Controversial discussions of the wartime years.
It had been a central issue in the reign of Pope Gregory VII and his battles with Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor.
The treaty angered the French and became a central issue in many political debates.
The issue of women's right to academic education is central to the book's plot.
Corruption in politics was the central issue in 1884, and Cleveland's reputation as an opponent of corruption proved the Democrats ' strongest asset.
The Second World War left the surviving remnant of Jews in central Europe as displaced persons ( refugees ); an Anglo-American Committee of Inquiry, established to examine the Palestine issue, surveyed their ambitions and found that 97 % wanted to migrate to Palestine.
In the 19th century, human rights became a central concern over the issue of slavery.
A central issue addressed by the Law of Return is the inheritability of refugee status.
Schwitters published a periodical, also called Merz, between 1923 – 32, in which each issue was devoted to a central theme.
The central issue of this definition may be stated as " did the defendant know what he was doing, or, if so, that it was wrong?
The issue central to the case was whether Microsoft was allowed to bundle its flagship Internet Explorer ( IE ) web browser software with its Microsoft Windows operating system.
On June 3, 2008, US-Sudan normalization talks broke down over the issue of conflicts in the oil-producing central region of Abyei.
In the seventeenth century, the philosophy of space and time emerged as a central issue in epistemology and metaphysics.
As warfare in Europe increased, the two factions increasingly made foreign policy the central political issue of the day.
Perhaps the final political impetus towards independence was the central issue of land ownership which arose during the 1960s.

central and was
It was over an hour before their escape was discovered, but still the news that Barton was free flashed across the central portion of the state.
The family estate was situated near Vadstena on Lake Vattern in south central Sweden.
It was hit by a shell fired by the bombarding Venetian army and the great central portion of the temple was blown to smithereens.
In 1951 the pool's operation was transferred to the newly-created Department of Administration, an agency established as the central staff and auxiliary department of the state government.
One of the most beautiful buildings in Istanbul, it was constructed in the early years of the Seventeenth Century, with a huge central dome, two half domes that seem to cascade down from it, and smaller full domes around the gallery.
Microscopically, there was hyperemia of the central veins, and there was some atrophy of adjacent parenchyma.
At the central level the scrutin uninominal voting system was selected over some form of the scrutin de liste system, even though the latter had been recommended by Duverger and favored by all political parties.
Thus the Congress marks a formal recognition of the political system that was central to world politics for a century.
At the very first, then, Brumidi was required, by the classically pyramidal shape of his central group, to fill in the triangular space above the seated girl on Liberty's right, before starting on the allegorical figures themselves.
The trial will be held, probably the first week of March, in the famous Old Bailey central criminal court where Klaus Fuchs, the naturalized British German born scientist who succeeded in giving American and British atomic bomb secrets to Russia and thereby changed world history during the 1950s, was sentenced to 14 years in prison.
Her permanent titanium shell was recessed behind an even more indestructible barrier in the central shaft of the scout ship.
In Greek mythology, Achilles (, Akhilleus, ) was a Greek hero of the Trojan War, the central character and the greatest warrior of Homer's Iliad.
Altruism was central to the teachings of Jesus found in the Gospel, especially in the Sermon on the Mount and the Sermon on the Plain.
Others suggest the alphabet was developed in central Egypt during the 15th century BC for or by Semitic workers, but only one of these early writings has been deciphered and their exact nature remains open to interpretation.
In 1911, Ernest Rutherford gave a model of the atom in which a central core held most of the atom's mass and a positive charge which, in units of the electron's charge, was to be approximately equal to half of the atom's atomic weight, expressed in numbers of hydrogen atoms.
This central charge would thus be approximately half the atomic weight ( though it was almost 25 % off the figure for the atomic number in gold ( Z = 79, A = 197 ), the single element from which Rutherford made his guess ).
Nevertheless, in spite of Rutherford's estimation that gold had a central charge of about 100 ( but was element Z = 79 on the periodic table ), a month after Rutherford's paper appeared, Antonius van den Broek first formally suggested that the central charge and number of electrons in an atom was exactly equal to its place in the periodic table ( also known as element number, atomic number, and symbolized Z ).

central and balance
The Mecholyl and noradrenalin tests applied with certain precautions are reliable indicators of this central autonomic balance, but for the sake of correlating autonomic and clinical states, and of studying the effect of certain therapeutic procedures on central autonomic reactions, additional tests seem to be desirable.
It has further been shown that: ( 1 ) an experimental neurosis in its initial stages is associated with a reversible shift in the central autonomic balance ; ;
Thus all differences were leveled, and all contrasts erased, in a realm of no distinction, and the harmonious balance of the Lo Shu square could effectively symbolize the world in balanced harmony around a powerful central axis.
Sub-acute combined degeneration of the spinal cord secondary to pernicious anaemia can lead to anything from slight peripheral nerve damage to severe damage to the central nervous system, affecting speech, balance and cognitive awareness.
2-Oxoglutarate has turned out to be the central signalling molecule reflecting the carbon / nitrogen balance of cyanobacteria.
While ATMs ( as well as the remote memory systems discussed below ) use the card merely to identify the associated account and record changes in a central database, stored value systems make a physical alteration to the card to reflect the new balance after a call.
However, the central power needs also to balance between the different clans and people from the two other ones, mainly the Tashkent clan, are often found at high positions in the state.
But when comparing Sherman's scorched-earth campaigns to the actions of the British Army during the Second Boer War ( 1899 – 1902 )— another war in which civilians were targeted because of their central role in sustaining an armed resistance — South African historian Hermann Giliomee declares that it " looks as if Sherman struck a better balance than the British commanders between severity and restraint in taking actions proportional to legitimate needs ".
This centralization continued through the Renaissance and has been changed and reformed until the present centralized system which is thought to have a balance between central government and decentralized power.
For example, suppose a bank's branch office sends instructions to the central office requesting a change in the balance of an account.
Airsickness occurs when the central nervous system receives conflicting messages from the body ( including the inner ear, eyes and muscles ) affecting balance and equilibrium.
A three-cylinder system often has two outer cylinders of flammable liquid and a central cylinder of propellant gas to maintain the balance of the soldier carrying it.
* Monitoring of the central venous pressure ( CVP ) in acutely ill patients to quantify fluid balance
Theories of the balance of power gained prominence again during the Cold War, being a central mechanism of Kenneth Waltz's Neorealism.
" The lateral pavilions of the garden facade project only slightly, but are three bays wide with traditional tall slate roofs like those on the entrance front, and effectively balance the central domed salon.
There is also a component of Christian iconography in this mural, as the central man leans spread eagle against a barricade of rocks and beams that resemble a cross, which contributes to the mural's balance but not in a symmetrical way.
Hinduism and Buddhism have been an influence on the development of many of ayurveda's central ideas – particularly its fascination with balance, known in Buddhism as Madhyathmaka ( Devanāgarī: म ा ध ् य ा त ् म ि क ).
This allows the central server to, for instance, dynamically balance the load of each crawler.
Chen proposed that a balance should be found between " setting the bird free " and choking the bird with a central plan that was too restrictive ; this theory would later become a focal point of criticism against Chen during the Cultural Revolution.
The surplus on the balance of payments of that country is reflected by higher deposits local banks hold at the central bank as well as ( initially ) higher deposits of the ( net ) exporting firms at their local banks.
The value is not physically stored on the card instead, the card number uniquely identifies a record in a central database, where the balance is recorded.
Together the two doctrines helped smooth the transition to a federal system of government, and " by preserving a balance between the constituent elements of the Australian federation, probably conformed to community sentiment, which at that stage was by no means adjusted to the exercise of central power.
For example, if a country is importing more than it exports, its trade balance will be in deficit, but the shortfall will have to be counterbalanced in other ways – such as by funds earned from its foreign investments, by running down central bank reserves or by receiving loans from other countries.
While the overall BOP accounts will always balance when all types of payments are included, imbalances are possible on individual elements of the BOP, such as the current account, the capital account excluding the central bank's reserve account, or the sum of the two.

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