But this is a question to be determined by a court and, again, this question was not the thrust of the Romney ads.
In its two recent series, especially against Pakistan, England played a brand of cricket from the days before DRS. The batsmen were repeatedly pinned on their crease, playing back in an attempt not to thrust their pads forward and pop a catch to a nearby fielder, but instead getting trapped in front of the stumps.
With a failed right engine and a malfunctioning left engine that was not generating sufficient thrust, the aircraft quickly lost altitude.
Many college heads, while unhappy about some of the specifics, are not against the main thrust of reform.
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Though his diary project was defined by the search for self, he was not yet ready to thrust himself into it.
And yet here, too, the thrust is not especially political.
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Certainly not against Vokoun, thrust into the lineup after Bylsma benched Marc-Andre Fleury, who had started 79 straight postseason games but struggled in a 6-4 loss in Game 4.
His jibe, though not without logical bite, neglects the democratic thrust of pragmatism, as Mr Menand reminds us: not only codes and categories, but hierarchies and establishments were anathema to it.
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Vertical thrust alone may not be the most appropriate memorial or the most fitting gauge of capitalism's resilience.
"It's not our natural tendency to thrust ourselves into a crowd of 20, 000 people, but for a Muse concert or a Radiohead concert we'll do it, " Levitin said.
It seems that sitting in our pajamas all day does not always trump the cut and thrust of face-to-face office work.
The ever-confident Torvalds told panel moderator Catherine Heenan, an anchorwoman for a San Francisco evening news program, that the sudden spotlight thrust on Linux was not surprising, given its technological merits and the fervor of its acolytes.
Istanbul was visited by Bond in From Russia With Love, The World is Not Enough, and will be thrust into the spotlight when it hosts perhaps the most famous moment in any Bond film, the opening action sequence, for Skyfall.
Now, the thrust of this polling is not that everything has changed, but that the balance has shifted in the other direction.
It was near impossible these days to have a conversation with a doctor, a farmer, a policeman, a teacher, even a politician and not meet that staring look, that thrust into your hand of some missive from health and safety, human resources, risk assessment or 360-degree feed-back review.
Even though bonus pools will be smaller than last year, the politicians are warning the banks that, if they do not exercise restraint, they could have restraint thrust upon them via yet more taxes.
Unfortunately, that fact may well have contributed to recommendations concerning Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty that not only detract from the overall, sensible thrust of its proposalsthreaten to add substantially to the human and material costs involved in meeting objectives identified by the Commission.
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Whether our aging parent has planned ahead or not, the adult children have a new responsibility thrust on us.
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That's not the kind of profit that causes people to thrust billions of dollars at you, as very smart investors thrust at Meriwether and his partners (who included Nobel economists Robert Merton and Myron Scholes).
They were helped by the hosts lacking their usual cut and thrust, but it would be unfair to not give Wolves a lot of credit for stifling their opponents.
Otherwise, we thrust into situations we have no stake, do not understand and as a result, provoke international ire.
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Shadow business secretary John Denham welcomed the "broad thrust" of the plans but warned that exports were not sufficient without a "credible plan for growth".
Shadow business secretary John Denham welcomed the "broad thrust" of the plans but said exports alone were not sufficient without a "credible plan for growth".
Universities UK (UUK), which represents university leaders, says it supports the "broad thrust" of the plans, but that universities do not want to "take ownership" of the qualifications and that the timetable for change is "too ambitious".
It's impossible not to grin as you tap the gas pedal and feel the kind of thrust normally reserved for astronauts and test pilots.
You may believe that the broad thrust of the book or the basic question he was asking was not, but much of the content of it was.
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Querying the foreign relations thrust of the legislation, the plaintiffs argued that other countries would not be influenced by preventing reliance parties in the U.S. from using works that had fallen into the public domain.
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There is, however, one aspect of this story that has not been amply covered and where, I suspect, we find the true thrust behind the McKinsey Report and why it ever existed in the first place.
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Much was made of Bernanke's mention of the dollar a few weeks back, but the main thrust of his "dollar speech" was that rising commodity prices are not a result of monetary mismanagement, but instead a function of too much growth.
Chief BRATTON: Well, that's the other major thrust of the Rice report, the idea that the problems in Los Angeles are not created by the police and they're not going to be solved by the police, that it's the city that's going to have to get its political and societal act together and recognize that a lot more is going to have to be done.
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