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Page "Keiretsu" ¶ 2
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had and effect
To this effect I had already severed all connections which bound me to my former existence.
It had drawn them together, and since his release from prison Dill had worked tirelessly to effect this night's escape.
His academic duties had little evident effect on his prolific pen.
It took Pike a long time to realize what Woodruff had done, and it had a profound effect on him.
The orator of this period, in order to earn a reputation, had to pay close attention to the formal composition of his speech, judging how it would appear in print as well as the effect it would have on the audience that heard it.
Consequently, Fred and Tom, the two who had been provided college educations, signed statements to the effect that each had received his bequest in full, and Effie and I were each allotted $5000.
This is not to deny the existence of pogroms and ghettos, but only to assert that these horrors have had an effect on the nerves of people who did not experience them, that among the various side effects is the local hysteria of Jewish writers and intellectuals who cry out from confusion, which they call oppression and pain.
Since appeals to morality, to humanity, and to sanity have had such small effect, perhaps our last recourse is the deterrent example.
Again among those jubilantly reunited bunkmates, I was shy with Jessie and acted as I had during those early Saturday mornings when we all seemed to be playing for effect, to be detached and unconcerned with the girls who were properly our dates but about whom, later, in the privacy of our bunks, we would think in terms of the most elaborate romance.
( Alaska and Hawaii had fixed allotment percentages in effect prior to fiscal year 1962.
( Alaska and Hawaii had fixed Federal share percentages in effect prior to fiscal year 1962.
Since the details of the elections were settled the change of government had no direct effect on the technical aspects of the elections, and may have been more important as an indication of royal displeasure with the U.N.F.P.
The accumulation of such devices, however, soon had the effect of telescoping, even while separating, surface and depth.
The effect is as if he had materialized out of nowhere.
the death of Emma Hardy in 1912, which had a profound emotional effect on Hardy for which he found release in poetry ; ;
This had a pleasant effect upon the Sunday gate receipts as well as upon the intake of the rail and bus companies, some of which began to offer special excursion rates, including seats at the park, just as the trolley and ferry companies had when baseball was new.
On Blanche Jacobs, Kitti Gilborn's death had a quite different effect.
they had orders to that effect straight from President Kennedy, who thought at first, as did most others, that it was four followers of Cuba's Fidel Castro who had taken over the 707.
This whole tendency had an unfortunate effect on Chinese thinking.
In practice the law had little effect, but it did signal political support for abolishing slavery in the Confederacy

had and blurring
It is possible the tradition was carried on by the local community after the travellers had left, or that long term trade led to the blurring of cultures.
He had demanded a payment to compete in a track meet ( this in the days when the lines between professional and amateur were blurring ) and when the promoter refused to pay, Hary refused to run.
Whilst this concept of ' blurring ' or ' fusing ' high art with low art had been experimented during modernism, it only ever became fully endorsed after the advent of the postmodern era.
The formulation explicitly acknowledged a distinction between the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit, ( a distinction that Nicea had been accused of blurring ), but at the same time insisting on their essential unity.
Realists such as Gustave Courbet upset expectations by depicting everyday scenes in huge paintings — at the scale traditionally reserved for " important " subjects — thus blurring the boundary which had set genre painting apart as a " minor " category.
This produced blurring of astronomical images, so all cosmonaut movements had to be stopped during the exposures.
For historical reasons the structure of the industry was different in the High Peak where, mainly because of very long leases, there had been a blurring of the Duchy's authority, and the two largest landowners, the Manners and Cavendish families, maintained claims to mining rights and dues.
The Court held that the Federal Trademark Dilution Act could be violated without the traditional tarnishing or blurring the courts had required.
These changes resulted in a further blurring of the previously clear distinction between " orders " and " congregations ", since institutes that were founded as " congregations " began to have some members who had all three solemn vows or had members that took a solemn vow of poverty and simple vows of chastity and obedience.
When she had obtained the focus required, she reported a sharp pain in her spine and the blurring of her eyesight.
They had considered the alternative of deliberately blurring the middle finger themselves, but decided that Fox would have also refused.
Royall, who had long made Presbyterians a particular object of scorn in her writing, objected to their using the building as a blurring of the lines between church and state.
While colonial warfare had led to a blurring of these distinctions in the British army, tradition remained strong in the cavalry arm of some other nations.
These changes resulted in a blurring of the previously clear distinction between " orders " and " congregations ", since institutes that were founded as " congregations " began to have some members who had all three solemn vows or had members that took a solemn vow of poverty and simple vows of chastity and obedience.
From the beginning this sensor had begun to play up, with only about 80 % of images being without some blurring.
In 1996 it was stated that there had been a " recent blurring of lines between commercial illustrative photography and fine art photography ," especially in the area of fashion.

had and lines
The fear had not entirely gone from her face, but there were some other emotions now, crowding into her eyes and the lines of her mouth.
In a book review of `` The Soviet Cultural Offensive '', he says, `` Long before the State Department organized its bureaucracy into an East-West Contacts Staff in order to wage a cultural counter-offensive within Soviet borders, the sharp cutting-edge of American culture had carved its mark across the Russian steppes, as when the enterprising promoters of ' Porgy And Bess ' overrode the State Department to carry the contemporary ' cultural warfare ' behind the enemy lines.
Sherman insisted that cavalry could not successfully break up hostile railways, yet Garrard's Covington raid and Rousseau's Opelika raid cut two-thirds of the rail lines he had to break and Sherman lived in mortal fear of what Forrest might do to his communications.
The Frenchman had been ordered to approach the enemy's lines, harass them and get intelligence of their movements.
But the real beginnings of this development in him go back to the opposing of grammar school, and probably if it had not been this occasion and these Latin lines it would have been some others, such as the first prolusion, that set off this streak in him of unbridled and scathing verbal attack on an enemy.
Trujillo's dictatorship had been along conservative, right-wing lines.
his lips and the usually sharp lines of his jaw had become swollen-looking.
Never a `` quick study '', he now made no attempt to learn his `` lines '' and many a mile of film was wasted, many a scene -- sometimes involving as many as a thousand fellow thespians -- was taken thirty, forty, fifty times because Miss Poitrine's co-star and `` helpmate '' had never learned his part.
He also bought a huge square of pegboard for hanging up his tools, and lumber for his workbench, sandpaper and glue and assorted nails, levels and T squares and plumb lines and several gadgets that he had no idea how to use or what they were for.
The potters, in particular, had virtually eschewed freehand drawing, elaborate motifs, and the curving lines of nature, while yet expressing a belief that there was order in the universe.
I was so hungry my stomach felt all lines of communication had been severed.
Also, it's far too early in the day for corny lines like the bigger they come You've had your gassy lecture, let's get to work.
It was a face that had lost its childlike softness and was beginning to fold within its fragile features a harshness that belied the lyric lines of its contours.
Moseley, after discussions with Bohr who was at the same lab ( and who had used Van den Broek's hypothesis in his Bohr model of the atom ), decided to test Van den Broek and Bohr's hypothesis directly, by seeing if spectral lines emitted from excited atoms fit the Bohr theory's demand that the frequency of the spectral lines be proportional to a measure of the square of Z.
Carnegie helped open the rail lines into Washington D. C. that the rebels had cut ; he rode the locomotive pulling the first brigade of Union troops to reach Washington D. C.
The current most senior living descendant of the Electress Sophia who is ineligible to succeed due to the act is George Windsor, Earl of St Andrews, the eldest son of Prince Edward, Duke of Kent, who married the Roman Catholic Sylvana Palma Tomaselli in 1988 ; he would now be 29th in the lines of succession if he had not lost his place.
( via the total number of ports that the BBC Micro had, it exposed all lines )
Applesoft was similar to ( and indeed had a common code base with ) Microsoft BASIC implementations on other 6502-based computers, such as Commodore BASIC: it used line numbers, and spaces were not necessary in lines.
Bohr, visiting Columbia at the time, had independently conceived the same idea, and submitted a paper for publication about a month after Rainwater's which discussed the same problem along more general lines.
When he discovered that the original Desiree, Glynis Johns, was able to sing ( she had a " small, silvery voice ") but could not " sustain a phrase ", he devised the song " Send in the Clowns " for her in a way that would work around her vocal weakness, e. g., by ending lines with consonants that made for a short cut-off.
Sometimes they wanted a little alteration, sometimes none ; sometimes the lines needed in order to make a complete poem would come later, spontaneously or with ' a little coaxing '; sometimes he had to sit down and finish the poem with his head.
These BBSes often had multiple modems and phone lines, allowing several users to upload and download files at once.
In Belgium an extensive system of tram-like local railways called vicinal or buurtspoor lines crossed the country in the first half of the 20th century, and had a greater route length than the main-line railway system.
In 2005, there had been only 27, 000 main telephone lines in use.

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