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Page "Politics of Mexico" ¶ 35
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thrust and new
One of the inescapable realities of the Cold War is that it has thrust upon the West a wholly new and historically unique set of moral dilemmas.
It is vitally important that the new U.S. aid program should encourage all of them, since the main thrust for development must come from the less developed countries themselves.
It is difficult to see any powerful sources of strength on the horizon at this time which would give the economy a new upward thrust.
Baltimore's post NFL-AFL merger passage to the AFC saw them thrust into a new environment with little in common with its fellow divisional teams, the Jets, Miami Dolphins, Buffalo Bills, and Boston Patriots.
Once the spacecraft arrives, a second application of thrust will re-circularize the orbit at the new location.
Within the next century, however, European and Asian economies were slowly becoming integrated through the rise of new global trade routes ; and the early thrust of European political power, commerce, and culture in Asia gave rise to a growing trade in lucrative commodities — a key development in the rise of today's modern world free market economy
Another hallmark of the company's culture was that there was little formal training of reporters ; new hires were often thrust into a " sink-or-swim " situation of reporting on an unfamiliar subject.
With his mother and two elder sisters as advisers, the new Druk Gyalpo was thrust into the affairs of state.
According to Hocken ( 2009 ) " the new thrust that turned Hebrew Christians into Messianic Jews was distinctly charismatic.
Design reports from early 1952 outlined key features of a new gas turbine propelled engine and disc-shaped vehicle: an inner disc with central eye intake with an outer, counter-rotating disc, with rear-directed thrust nozzles, later refined to include controlling the aeroplane by thrust vectoring and stabilizing the vehicle by having the large engine rotor act as a gyroscope.
He represents the potential of a new adventure, chosen or thrust upon one.
With the influence of the first director, Jules Cohen ( who was instrumental in bringing Adelina Patti ) and the fortunate combination of Raoul Gunsbourg, the new director from 1883, and Princess Alice, the opera-loving American wife of Charles III's successor, Albert I, the company was thrust onto the world's opera community stage.
The main thrust of critics ' argument is that the appropriate response to overpopulation is not to recruit hundreds of thousands of additional settlers, and the answer to overdevelopment in the north is not to build up the last open spaces in the second most-densely crowded country in the developed world ; rather, what is required is an inclusive plan for the green vitalization of existing population centers in the Negev, investment in long-awaited service-provision in Bedouin villages, clean-up of its many toxic industries ( such as Ramat Hovav ), and the development of a viable economic plan focusing on creating job options for the unemployed rather than promoting an influx of new immigrants and creating jobs for them.
It provided a full-scale working prototype for the new RST's auditorium, seating 1, 045 people around a thrust stage.
What had formerly been a spoiling attack was developed into the new major thrust.
But this revival of ceremonial became the characteristic of the new movement, and " Ritualist " thrust " Puseyite " aside.
Over the course of the 1990s, with the end of the Cold War, the return to democracy in Latin America, and the thrust toward globalization, the OAS made major efforts to reinvent itself to fit the new context.
Zeus, with a new 400, 000 lbf ( 1. 78 MN ) thrust solid-fuel booster, was first test launched during August 1959 and demonstrated a top speed of 8, 000 mph ( 12, 875 km / h ).
This certainly is not the best time to make any hasty judgment on this contention, but considering the very nature of ' knowledge ' itself, added to the fact that it is the thrust of this new form of economy, there certainly is a clear way forward for this notion, though the particulars ( i. e. the quantum of the revolutionary approach and its applicability and commercial value ), remain in the speculative realm, as of now.
The player is thrust into a new environment ( the city of Xebec's Demise ) and must learn to survive.
This was similar to how the player was captured from Earth in the first place, causing the player to once again be thrust into a new environment.
Although this thrust would be tiny, it may be enough to move small debris into new orbits that do not intersect those of working satellites.
The new ASRAAM did not use the thrust vectoring system of SRAAM but body lift technology and small fins at the extreme rear of the missile to give directional control and reducing aerodynamic drag.

thrust and laws
The main thrust of The Revolution was to promote women ’ s and African-Americans ’ right to suffrage, but it also discussed issues of equal pay for equal work, more liberal divorce laws and the church ’ s position on women ’ s issues.
When an engine thrust or propulsive force is present, Newton's laws still apply, but Kepler's laws are invalidated.
When the thrust stops, the resulting orbit will be different but will once again be described by Kepler's laws.
A jet engine is a reaction engine that discharges a fast moving jet of fluid to generate thrust by jet propulsion and in accordance with Newton's laws of motion.
Since then, the overall thrust of liberalisation has remained the same, although no government has tried to take on powerful lobbies such as trade unions and farmers, on contentious issues such as reforming labour laws and reducing agricultural subsidies.

thrust and has
He has gained only one thing -- he has exploded a 50-megaton bomb and he probably has rockets with sufficient thrust to lob it over the shorter intercontinental ranges.
The book of Jeremiah depicts a remarkably introspective prophet, a prophet who was impetuous and often angered by the role into which he has been thrust.
The thrust is not merely that God has experiences that Job does not, but that God is king over the world and is not necessarily subject to questions from his creatures, including men.
Hydrogen has also been proposed for use in these engines and would provide much greater specific impulse ( thrust per kilogram of reaction mass ), but it has been claimed that water will beat hydrogen in cost / performance terms despite its much lower specific impulse by orders of magnitude.
The more narrow and steeply sloping southern flank ( left ) has low, rounded terraces, features interpreted as thrust fault s. The volcano's basal escarpment is prominent.
For extra speed a swimmer wears a body suit, which has rubber or plastic bumps that break up the water close to the body and provides a small amount of thrust — just barely enough to help a swimmer swim faster.
* C-Slot: propellant with large wedge cut out of side ( along axial direction ), producing fairly long regressive thrust, though has thermal difficulties and asymmetric CG characteristics.
The 117, 000 pound Castor 120 first stage has a propellant mass fraction of 92. 23 % while the 31, 000 pound Castor 30 upper stage recently developed for Orbital Science's Taurus II COTS ( International Space Station resupply ) launch vehicle has a 91. 3 % propellant fraction with 2. 9 % graphite epoxy motor casing, 2. 4 % nozzle, igniter and thrust vector actuator, and 3. 4 % non-motor hardware including such things as payload mount, interstage adapter, cable raceway, instrumentation, etc.
MPD technology also has the potential for thrust levels of up to 200 newtons ( N ) ( 45 lbf ), by far the highest for any form of electric propulsion, and nearly as high as many interplanetary chemical rockets.
Even with the lower thrust, the stage also has a thrust-to-weight ratio similar to the original S-IVB, 34, 900 kg being pushed by 350 kN ( 10. 0 N / kg or 1. 02 lbf / lb ), as opposed to 114, 759 kg pushed by 1, 112 kN ( 9. 7 N / kg or 0. 99 lbf / lb ).
Higher exhaust velocity has both benefit and tradeoff, increasing propellant usage efficiency ( more momentum per unit mass of propellant expelled ) but decreasing thrust and the current rate of spacecraft acceleration if available input power is constant ( less momentum per unit of energy given to propellant ).
The M2P2 system therefore has an effective specific impulse which is the amount of gas consumed per newton of thrust.
The expansion of the magnetic field using plasma injected has been successfully tested in a large vacuum chamber on Earth, but the development of thrust was not part of the experiment.
The GE90-115B engine fitted on the Boeing 777-300ER, recognized by the Guinness Book of World Records as the " World's Most Powerful Commercial Jet Engine ," has a thrust of 569 kN ( 127, 900 lbf ).
Note that the gain of momentum of a rocket ( including fuel ) per unit time is not equal to the thrust, because the momentum that the fuel has while in the rocket has to be subtracted to the extent that it is used, i. e., the gain of momentum of a rocket per unit time is equal to the thrust, minus the velocity of the rocket multiplied by the amount of fuel used per unit time.
Its basic thrust is that the state has no right to interfere with the religion of its citizens, Jews included.

1.190 seconds.