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other and issue
Among Bourbons the racial issue may have less to do with their remaining unreconstructed than other factors.
Two special issues were published, one for November 1959 on Space Medicine, the other the Tenth Anniversary issue for January 1960.
To continue their important conversations about the Tunisian issue and the whole range of other problems, Mr. Kennedy invited Stevenson to Cape Cod for the weekend.
Our faculty and students pressed this issue more than any other.
Lincoln s assessment of the political issue for the 1860 elections was that, " This question of Slavery was more important than any other ; indeed, so much more important has it become that no other national question can even get a hearing just at present.
They typically review contractor shop drawings and other submittals, prepare and issue site instructions, and provide construction contract administration and Certificates for Payment to the contractor ( see also Design-bid-build ).
But Johnson, with the support of other officials including Seward, insisted that the states, not the federal government, had the right to address the issue of suffrage.
The ULA had an issue similar to those experienced by other socketed CPU's ; Over time, the thermal heating and cooling could cause the ULA to rise slightly out of it's socket just enough to cause the machine to start exhibiting ' hanging ' or other startup-failure issues, such as a continuous ' startup beep '.
This is done by adding eight extra 8-bit buses which allow the graphics controller to issue new AGP requests and commands at the same time with other AGP data flowing via the main 32 address / data ( AD ) lines.
Accordingly, Ben Adret addressed to the congregation of Montpellier a letter, signed by fifteen other rabbis, proposing to issue a decree pronouncing the anathema against all those who should pursue the study of philosophy and science before due maturity in age and in rabbinical knowledge.
The next morning, Boaz discusses the issue with the other male relative, Ploni Almoni (" so-and-so ") before the town elders.
During Selig's term of service, the use of steroids and other performance enhancing drugs became a public issue.
Although prior to the catastrophic collapse of the towers, the phrase " a good day to bury bad news " ( not actually used by Moore ) has since been used to refer to other instances of attempting to hide one item of news behind a more publicised issue.
In the February 1964 issue of Argosy, Vincent Gaddis's article " The Deadly Bermuda Triangle " argued that Flight 19 and other disappearances were part of a pattern of strange events in the region.
Before 1938, the federal courts, like almost all other common law courts, decided the law on any issue where the relevant legislature ( either the U. S. Congress or state legislature, depending on the issue ), had not acted, by looking to courts in the same system, that is, other federal courts, even on issues of state law, and even where there was no express grant of authority from Congress or the Constitution.
Another widely debated issue is the relationship between copyrights and other forms of " intellectual property ", and material property.
Another issue with verbal report as a criterion is that it restricts the field of study to humans who have language: this approach cannot be used to study consciousness in other species, pre-linguistic children, or people with types of brain damage that impair language.
This means that if the CPU requests data from a disk, for example, it does not need to busy-wait until the read is over ; it can issue the request and continue with some other execution.
In May 1955 McCarthy threatened to issue subpoenas to White House personnel ; Eisenhower was furious, and issued an order as follows: " It is essential to efficient and effective administration that employees of the Executive Branch be in a position to be completely candid in advising with each other on official matters ... it is not in the public interest that any of their conversations or communications, or any documents or reproductions, concerning such advice be disclosed.
Because reported AIDS cases in Africa and other parts of the developing world include a larger proportion of people who do not belong to Duesberg's preferred risk groups of drug addicts and male homosexuals, Duesberg writes on his website that " There are no risk groups in Africa, like drug addicts and homosexuals ," However, many studies have addressed the issue of risk groups in Africa and concluded that the risk of AIDS is not equally distributed.

other and undermined
However, this theory is undermined by the disproportional fear of spiders in comparison to other, potentially dangerous creatures that were present during Homo sapiens environment of evolutionary adaptiveness.
Among other objections, the Military claims that its integrity and discipline would be undermined if soldiers who mutinied in the 2000 upheaval were to be pardoned.
In this period he undermined his previous liberal credentials to some extent by pushing through the controversial Prevention of Terrorism Act, which, among other things, extended the length of time suspects could be held in custody and instituted exclusion orders.
Half the subjects were told that one kind of study supported the deterrent effect and the other undermined it, while for other subjects the conclusions were swapped.
A siege was required at Naples, however, where the report of Totila's courteous treatment of Romans at Cumae and other surrounding towns undermined morale.
This scheme was undermined when molecular studies indicated that Soricomorpha is paraphyletic, because Soricidae shared a more recent common ancestor with Erinaceidae than with other soricomorphs.
It was this recognition that undermined all other interpretations, except perhaps that of Norman Cohn ( 1971 ) who saw it as a chiliastic movement in which the poor tried to escape the misery of their everyday lives.
Systems similar to GM's were implemented by other major companies, especially in the United States, and they eventually undermined the ability to compete with companies that used different accounting, according to Waddell & Bodek's 2005 analysis.
Similarly, the failure of the Sears Financial Network and other nonbank “ financial supermarkets ” that had seemed to threaten commercial banks in the 1980s undermined the argument that financial conglomerates would be more efficient than “ specialized ” financial firms.
These and other behaviors taught led parents to complain that their authority was being undermined.
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.
Although President Jimmy Carter tried to place another limit on the arms race with a SALT II agreement in 1979, his efforts were undermined by the other events that year, including the Iranian Revolution and the KGB-backed Nicaraguan Revolution, which both ousted pro-US regimes, and his retaliation against Soviet intervention in Afghanistan in December.
The treaty was undermined by the deaths of both Charles VI and Henry V within two months of each other in 1422.
Despite their agreement at Campo Formio, two primary combatants, France and Austria, remained suspicious of each other and several diplomatic incidents undermined the agreement.
A new Estatuto, the Ley del Vino y de los Alcoholes ( 25 / 1970 ) came into place in December 1970 but was again undermined, this time by two important events: the new Spanish Constitution ( inaugurated in 1978 ) that restated geographical considerations with the Estado de las Autonomías, and Spain's pending membership of the European Community ( 1986 ) that brought about a rapid classification of all Spanish produce in line with other member states.
Most reports, it said, indicate that the main obstacle is the PRC Government's fear of being undermined by the Catholic Church, especially since Pope John Paul II was widely seen as having influenced the fall of Communist governments in Poland and other Eastern European countries.
The addition of Gary McAllister, following Euro 96, should have provided mid table stability but the teams defensive frailties often undermined Dublin's scoring at the other end.
Labour Peer Baron Alli, said the amendment was " ill-conceived and does nothing other than undermine the purpose of the bill ", while the gay rights group Stonewall said the amendment was " unworkable and undermined hundreds of years of family law ".
These institutions interfered with the army and the business of war, undermined the tentative central government taking shape in Madrid, and in some cases proved almost as dangerous to each other as to the French.
Additional epidemiologic and phylogenetic data was presented at the conference which undermined other aspects of the OPV AIDS hypothesis.
" It also holds that this conspiracy can be undermined through various legal pleadings from English common law and other sources, such as a motion protesting the way a defendant's name is typeset in a legal complaint.
However, in 2003, Germany's High Court ruled that Walmart's low cost pricing strategy " undermined competition " and ordered Walmart and two other supermarkets to raise their prices.
The anarchic nature of the international system together with the states primary goal of survival intrinsically causes a self-help approach from all states, whereby reliance and trust on other actors are significantly undermined.

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