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Page "William Quan Judge" ¶ 40
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vital and error
This motion must be based on some vital error in the court's handling of the trial, such as the admission or exclusion of key evidence, or an incorrect instruction to the jury.

vital and somewhere
Blenkiron reveals that he has been hard at work for some time, around the world and undercover around England, on the track of a huge network of German spies and agents, with their head somewhere in Britain, leaking vital information to the enemy.

vital and
His description is as follows: " The ventricular muscle is thrown into a state of irregular arrhythmic contraction, whilst there is a great fall in the arterial blood pressure, the ventricles become dilated with blood as the rapid quivering movement of their walls is insufficient to expel their contents ; the muscular action partakes of the nature of a rapid incoordinate twitching of the muscular tissue The cardiac pump is thrown out of gear, and the last of its vital energy is dissipated in the violent and the prolonged turmoil of fruitless activity in the ventricular walls.
Young himself reinforced his reputation as a pioneer of romanticism by precept as well as by example ; in 1759, at the age of 76, he published a piece of critical prose under the title of Conjectures on Original Composition which put forward the vital doctrine of the superiority of " genius ," of innate originality being more valuable than classic indoctrination or imitation, and suggested that modern writers might dare to rival or even surpass the " ancients " of Greece and Rome The Conjectures was a declaration of independence against the tyranny of classicism and was at once acclaimed as such becoming a milestone in the history of English, and European, literary criticism.
Enlightenment science and philosophy essentially held a static view of nature and man, but vital nature continued to interrupt this view, and the issue of life, the creation of life and its varieties, increasingly occupied attention and " starting in the 1740s the concept of vital power reentered the scene of generation there must be some ' productive power ' in nature that enabled unorganized material to generate new living forms.
The epithet vital is given to these powers, because on them so much depend the actions of the body during life that they are not referrible to any qualities merely physical, chemical, or mechanical.
The Tampa to Lexington flight is vital because it required permission from the highest levels of our government.
He writes that because most of the English-speaking world “ does not regard as vital the exclusion of evidence such obtained ,” the Court must hesitate “ to treat this remedy as an essential ingredient of the right .”

vital and What
What he learned too was that for his father, training was not a game but something vital, something that enabled him to survive and to protect the people he cared about.
Future President John F. Kennedy sent a contribution, with a note saying " What you are doing is vital.
This conclusion was explicitly ( and notoriously ) drawn by early modern political theorist Hugo Grotius: " What we have been saying the natural law would have a degree of validity even if we should concede that which cannot be conceded without the utmost wickedness, that there is no God, or that the affairs of men are of no concern to him " On such a view, God is no longer a " law-giver " but at most a " law-transmitter " who plays no vital role in the foundations of morality.
What the player has to do in order to obtain certain vital items is sometimes obscure.
What was once farm land has been re-cultivated as forest, part of a vital ecosystem for neotropical migratory birds and other wildlife.
However, to read alone it gives a false conception of Britain as we know her today, and is the sort of work which must be read in the company of others if one is to get a clear conception of the change of British status ... I have some sympathy with the author's criticism of the defects of the English education system in those vital days, not only in the arts but also in the technical field ... What is important, however, to realize in reading Mr Barnett's book is that the greatness of the Victorian age was made up of very much those qualities which he describes as leading to Britain's decline ".
What made CTC machines different from standard interlocking machines and ABS was that the vital interlocking hardware was located at the remote location and the CTC machine only displayed track state and sent commands to the remote locations.
* Oh What a Feeling: a vital history of Canadian music by Martin Melhuish, ( Kingston, ON: Quarry Press, 1996 ) ( ISBN 1-55082-164-4 )
The shoes launch Tina on a journey through her past, from sexy starlet to leading lady to daytime matriarch, ultimately forcing her to confront the question: “ What do I have to do to remain vital ?” Will Tina be able to refashion herself or will the inevitable march of time force her into retirement?
What remained of the apostasy in the less vital areas of Arabia was rooted out by the Muslims in a series of well planned campaigns within five months.

vital and is
Man is not confined to one outlet for his vital energy.
The image of man which enters into force with Aeschylus is still vital in Phedre and Athalie.
But competent observers believe he is making progress, particularly toward what Sen. Jackson lists as the primary need -- `` a clearer understanding of where our vital national interests lie and what we must do to promote them ''.
Nonetheless, although few in number they are a stubborn crew, as tenacious of life as the Hardshell Baptists, which suggests that there is some kind of vital principle embodied in their faith.
Sheer plumpness, he knew, is not a vital part of the body and has no procreative functions.
The task of providing a reasonable level of military strength, without endangering other vital aspects of our security, is greatly complicated by the swift pace of scientific progress.
PMR is currently supplying components vital to the Titan and Minuteman programs.
Here then is our problem: aircraft are vital to winning a war today because they can perform those missions which a missile is totally incapable of performing ; ;
Pre-attack reconnaissance is vital but only post-attack reconnaissance will allow us to terminate the war favorably.
It also provides a frame within which the registration of vital events is gradually gaining force ( though one cannot expect to obtain reliable vital statistics in most parts of the Congo from this source in the near future ).
The fact that such threat is potent in the beginning reading lessons is thought to be a vital factor in the continued pattern of failure or under-achievement these children exhibit.
It is apparent, therefore, that the teacher needs to know what factors have a vital bearing on the learning and adjustment of children.
It is the similarity between Estella's hands and Molly's ( `` The action of her fingers was like the action of knitting '' ) that provides Pip with a vital clue to the real identity of both and establishes a symbolic connection between the underworld of crime and the genteel cruelty of Satis House.
Of the two, Porter is justly the better known, for he went far beyond the vital finding of fiction for films to take the first step toward fashioning a language of film, toward making the motion picture the intricate, efficient time machine that it has remained since, even in the most inept hands.
Although he pointed out that mandatory legislation impinging on home rule is basically distasteful, he added that the vital interest in election results transcended county lines.
If tests are to be resumed, the argument went, it is vital that the U. S. make plain that the onus belongs to the Soviet Union.
This is a vital part of their spiritual growth and assimilation.
An abscess could potentially be fatal ( although this is rare ) if it compresses vital structures such as the trachea in the context of a deep neck abscess.
This is vital when a target is within range of many fire units and the number of fire units needed depends on the nature of the target, and the circumstances and purpose of its engagement.
This difference is vital in appreciating administrative law in common law countries.
" In addition, the CDN is authorized to " propose the criteria and conditions for the use of areas that are vital to the security of the national territory and express an opinion on their continued use, especially in the strip along the borders, and on matters related to the conservation and exploitation of natural resources of any kind.

vital and wanted
In Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, Voldemort sent a group of twelve Death Eaters, led by Lucius Malfoy, into the Department of Mysteries, where he expected them to secure a Prophecy of vital importance to him: having originally attacked Harry based upon a partial recounting of it, he now wanted to hear the full version in order to better, or even fully, understand the connection between Harry and himself.
Syrian-based Vichy air force units saw action against the British from April 1941, when a coup d ' état in Iraq briefly installed the nationalist Rashid Ali Al-Gaylani as prime minister of in order to secure the vital oil supplies at Kirkuk ( under British control since 1934 ) in northeastern Iraq for the pro-Axis nationalists who wanted the British to be expelled from the country.
DirectPlay will be supported in DirectX DLLs for the lifetime of Microsoft Windows XP, but from the autumn of 2007 the headers and libraries — vital components if developers wanted to develop new programs that utilize the technology — were absent from DirectX SDK.
" He went on to say " I wanted to show that the boys in the service are healthy, vital boys: there is nothing sordid or morbid about them.
Boyce claimed the CIA wanted Whitlam removed from office because he wanted to close U. S. military bases in Australia, including the vital Pine Gap secure communications facility, and withdraw Australian troops from Vietnam.
This change, Shaw predicts, will happen through Creative Evolution ( evolutionary change that occurs because it is needed or wantedthe Lamarckian view — and not as a result of natural selection — Darwinism ) as influenced by the Life Force ( l ' élan vital ).
He had vital information regarding the locations of top Al Qaeda operatives including Khalid Shaikh Muhammd and Osama bin Ladin amongst others ( in fact 6 of the FBI's top most wanted at the time ).
In truth he wanted to take over Earth in order to gain a vital place in conquering the universe.

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