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Page "Investment Advisers Act of 1940" ¶ 28
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thrust and study
Additionally, although pitting, holes, lesions, and other damage on Triceratops skulls ( and the skulls of other ceratopsids ) are often attributed to horn damage in combat, a recent study finds no evidence for horn thrust injuries causing these forms of damage ( for example, there is no evidence of infection or healing ).
The U. S. FAA has conducted a study about civilizing 3D military thrust vectoring to help jetliners avoid crashes.
According to this study, 65 % of all air crashes can be prevented by deploying thrust vectoring means.
In 1916, Lam moved to Havana to study law, a path that his family had thrust upon him.
For the most part, church-based dogmatic points of view were no longer thrust upon students in the examination of their subjects of study.
In the number theory of the twentieth century, the infinite descent method was taken up again, and pushed to a point where it connected with the main thrust of algebraic number theory and the study of L-functions.
The U. S. FAA has also conducted a study about civilizing 3D military thrust vectoring to recover jetliners from catastrophes.
Although pitting, holes, lesions, and other damage on ceratopsid skulls are often attributed to horn damage in combat, a 2006 study found no evidence for horn thrust injuries causing these forms of damage ( for example, there is no evidence of infection or healing ).
McDonald's acquaintance George Early, a prominent engineer with the United Aircraft Association and also a NICAP member, said, " I don't think Jim was 100 % sold on the UFOs being extraterrestrial spacecraft with beings in them ... His essential thrust was that here is a topic worthy of scientific study which has not been studied scientifically, and we should find out what the answer is.

thrust and which
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.
Under equilibrium conditions of cutting the chip exerts a thrust Af against the knife which tends to push it into the substrate or lift it away from the substrate depending on the vector direction of Af.
In these versions, when Ajax came to the Capharean Rocks on the coast of Euboea, his ship was wrecked in a fierce storm, he himself was lifted up in a whirlwind and impaled with a flash of rapid fire from Athena in his chest, and his body thrust upon sharp rocks, which afterwards were called the rocks of Ajax.
A rocket or rocket vehicle is a missile, spacecraft, aircraft or other vehicle which obtains thrust from a rocket engine.
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.
* maximum power: 2, 500 W ( of which 2, 100 W powers the ion thrust engine )
Bluebird K7 was fitted with a lighter and more powerful Bristol Orpheus engine, taken from a Folland Gnat jet aircraft, which developed of thrust.
There are three main types of fault, all of which may cause an earthquake: normal, reverse ( thrust ) and strike-slip.
Explanations: A-fold ( geology ) | folded rock strata cut by a thrust fault ; B-large intrusion ( cutting through A ); C-erosion al angular unconformity ( cutting off A & B ) on which rock strata were deposited ; D-dike ( geology ) | volcanic dyke ( cutting through A, B & C ); E-even younger rock strata ( overlying C & D ); F-normal fault ( cutting through A, B, C & E ).
In the shallow crust, where brittle deformation can occur, thrust faults form, which cause deeper rock to move on top of shallower rock.
For internal combustion engines in the form of jet engines, the power output varies drastically with airspeed and a less variable measure is used: thrust specific fuel consumption ( TSFC ), which is the number of pounds of propellant needed to generate impulses that measure a pound force-hour.
Upon seeing this, Phinehas, the grandson of Aaron, took a javelin in his hand and thrust through both the Israelite and the Midianitish woman, which turned away the wrath of God.
Goldberg says that, “ these changes fostered a different relationship between actors and the space in which they performed and also between them and their audiences .” Actors were thrust into much closer audience interaction.
Benedict IX, wishing to marry and vacate the position into which he had been thrust by his family, consulted his godfather as to whether he could resign the supreme pontificate.
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.
* Oxidiser tanks are very lightweight when empty, approximately 1 % of their contents, so the reduction in orbital weight by airbreathing is small, whereas air-breathing engines have a poor thrust / weight ratio which tends to increase the orbital mass.
On the other hand LACE-like precooled airbreathing designs such as the Skylon spaceplane ( and ATREX ) which transition to rocket thrust at rather lower speeds ( Mach 5. 5 ) do seem to give, on paper at least, an improved orbital mass fraction over pure rockets ( even multistage rockets ) sufficiently to hold out the possibility of full reusability with better payload fraction.
An ophiolite is a suite of geological formations which represent a slice through a section of ocean crust ( including the upper level of the mantle ) thrust onto the continental crust.
A different British VTOL project was the gyrodyne, where a rotor is powered during take-off and landing but which then freewheels during flight, with separate propulsion engines providing forward thrust.
This led to the first VTOL engines as used in the first British VTOL aircraft, the Short SC. 1 ( 1957 ) which used 4 vertical lift engines with a horizontal one for forward thrust.
The idea of using the same engine for vertical and horizontal flight by altering the path of the thrust led to the Bristol Siddeley Pegasus engine which used rotating ducts to direct thrust over a range of angles.
Therefore, a Soviet “ rush to the Channel ” ( from Western Poland / East German starting points ) would have been denied the follow-on forces ( having been destroyed by V-Force tactical air ) which would have made the success of such an armored thrust possible.
About 20 – 30 % of the discharge current is an electron current, which does not produce thrust, which limits the energetic efficiency of the thruster ; the other 70 – 80 % of the current is in the ions.

thrust and led
Usman dan Fodio led the Fulani thrust and proclaimed a jihad ( holy war ) on the irreligious Muslims of the area.
Henry led the main thrust through the county of Évreux, while the other wing, under the French king's brother Odo, invaded eastern Normandy.
In 1106, an Egyptian campaign thrust into southern Judea and almost succeeded the following year in wresting Hebron back from the crusaders under Baldwin I of Jerusalem, who personally led the counter-charge to beat the Muslim forces off.
The Canadians, with Indian 8th Infantry Division on their left, led the main thrust across the Moro on 8 December aiming for Ortona.
As commander-in-chief of the British Army in America, General Braddock led the main thrust against the Ohio Country with a column some 2, 100 strong.
Followers are instructed to thrust their hips forward, but pull their upper body away, and shyly look over their left shoulder when they are led into a " corte.
After leaving the sport, Hulme led the GPDA ( Grand Prix Drivers ' Association ) for a brief period, but the cut and thrust nature of the post was ill-suited to his gentlemanly nature and he did not fill the post for very long.
The P3I would have been very much like the AIM-132, but with the addition of thrust vectoring to provide increased agility and to carry a larger warhead to meet the requirements expressed by the US Navy led AIM-9X program.
Probable wind variations and the loss of headwind component, together with the early retardation of thrust levers, led to a 20 kt loss in indicated airspeed just prior to touchdown.
The main thrust came south across Lake Champlain under Burgoyne's command ; the second thrust was led by Lieutenant Colonel Barry St. Leger, and was intended to come down the Mohawk River valley and meet Burgoyne's army near Albany.
In the spring of 1863, he led Grierson's Raid, a major diversionary thrust deep into the Confederacy, ordered by Grant as part of his Vicksburg Campaign.
In 737 Charles led an expedition to the Lower Rhone and Septimania, maybe seeing that the Umayyad thrust was threatening his grip on Burgundy, but didn ´ t manage to subjugate and keep the region.
Then they were led to a hut, where they had to sit with smiling faces while the skin of their chest and shoulders was slit and wooden skewers were thrust behind the muscles.
The incident led Boeing to modify the thrust reverser system to prevent similar occurrences.
In preparation for the Scanian War, one of the battalions was sent back to Germany in 1674, and was once again put under command of Carl Gustaf Wrangel, who led a thrust into Brandenburg, which ended in the Battle of Fehrbellin.
This led to clashes between her and some of the members of the mosque committee and thrust her into the public eye.
The combination of flaps 25, no auto-braking, idle reverse thrust, a high and fast approach, a late touch down, poor Cockpit Resource Management and the standing water on the runway surface led to a runway overshoot.

1.269 seconds.