... colleagues on the world. The Association has the role of coordinating the activities of the members in order to protect the interests of the members and improve the position of Vietnam inthe international ... that point after starting out relatively small and growing, learning and expanding. With their experiences, they have learned the value of offering quality services. Inthe way of growing, they ... for business associations, as well implemented strategies on developing and increasing the quality of trade services of the Ministry of Trade and the Ministry of Transport.Being the intermediary...
... archives of clinical histories, always respecting the inclusion criteria (period 2000-2004), and the new controls were gathered in a prospective manner inthe Internal Medicine Service during 2003. ... tumour inthe large intestine [31]. The use of LR for the observational studies continues to being authenticated by the bibliography, showing similar results if it is compared with the propensity ... the beginning. Notarmicola et al. have also published very sugges-tive findings on the enzymatic changes inthe meva-lonate pathway in patients with SCRC depending on the location of the tumour...
... they interact during the boot process. As described earlier inthe "Boot Field Settings and the Use of the Boot Command" section, the boot field setting determines the source of the ... and force the system into ROM monitor mode. Regardless of the setting of the Break enable bit inthe software configuration register, pressing the Break key during approximately the first five ... server. In the following example, the software configuration register is set to boot the router from the Flash memory SIMM on the RP and to ignore the Break function at the next reboot of the system:...
... languages involves the translator changing an original written text ( the source text ) inthe original verbal language ( the source language) into a written text ( the target text) in a different ... meanings: it can refer to the general subject field, the product (the text that has been translated) or the process ( the act of producing the translation, otherwise known as translating). The ... cutting grain shipments to Iran, Iran may "dig in its heels" by stockpiling current 22 22 With the drawn main points, the research must be conducted with view to -formulating the theoretical...
... keep + V-ing = continue to inf21. used to + V inf (habit inthe past)=> am/is/are +used to +V-ing (habit inthe present)22. Make sb +to infShe laughed because of the clowns => The clowns ... +er + S+ V, The adj +er + S+ V The more +adj + S+ V, The more +adj + S+ V THE STRUCTURES OF THE SENTENCES IN ENGLISH1.Would you like + Vinf … ?2. Would you mind + V-ing….?Would you mind if + ... + will+Vinf12. Unless = If not13. That is the first time + past clause => S + present perfect + since/ for + time14. If only S+ would Vinf => If only you would stop complaining!15....
... at and record all the things that are happening inthe area, along the roads and in inhabited areas. This is very important as it keeps us informed about what is going on inthe area. Number ... close the distance to the enemy line until they are close enough to launch into close battle. At the Squad level, this is practiced using the combination of the Rifle and Machine Gun Groups. The ... cover and advance towards enemy line. 3. The machine gun team can maintain covering fire until riflemen are on top of the enemy line. 4. If the squad stays inthe same place for too long, return...
... in the present rather than an ‘‘impassable gulf’’ that separates and divides. In race, in language, in literature, too, ‘‘science exercises the reconciling, the uniting in uence’’ in uncovering ... damage the Englishman in icted and the revenge she takes. Unlike the erring Fred – who mistook the real for the romantic, reversing the movement of colonial encounter inThe Wild Irish Girl, at the ... ally, in tandem with the aftershocks in India raised the spectre ofwidespread imperial instability. Palmerston, then Prime Minister, wasso alarmed by the tone of the Irish press on the Indian...
... at the time. The vegetation of the Eurasian Plain during OIS 3, in the west at least, seems to have oscillated between conifer woodland, with shrubtundra inthe north, during warm parts of the ... aminimum or inhibited altogether.Further east, on the Russian Plain, the dense temperate forest of the lastinterglacial maximum was replaced by open, harsh, loess-steppe with the onsetof the ... the Russian Plain during the Briansk Interstadial with the southern limit of the range of a number of Arctic plants being 1200 km furthersouth than today (and a further 600 km during OIS 2). Steppe...
... determining.”If however, the themes of “freedom” and the “thinking for oneself ”were indeed motivating the Critique, one could nonetheless excuse anyreader who found themsomewhat hard to find in ... had already synthe-sized concepts and intuitions. We could not, as it were, introspectivelyobserve the intuitions coming in and then observe the concepts beingapplied to them. Indeed, so it ... –into the notion of their all being perspectival representations of a singleobject (the stone). The intuitions themselves cannot, as it were, tell usof what they are intuitions; we make theminto...
... and the notion of respecting the inherent “dignity” ofall agents (treating people as ends -in- themselves and willing from the standpoint of the “kingdomof ends”) gave Kant, so he thought, the full ... having his rights independently of whether others would actuallygrant him those rights or be sympathetic to his having them). Indeed, the most striking thing about Kant’s thesis was that there ... and the revolution in philosophyKant thought the key to answering these questions lay inthe prac-tical necessity for assuming that we are free. The independence of the normative from the factual...
... imagination and intellect (der Verstand, the understanding”) are in free play with each other – free inthe sense thattheir interaction with each other is not constrained by any rule. When the ... might have the concept of a “rose” and then judgewhether the flower we are observing is indeed a rose – is indeed an“instance” or “instantiation” of the more general concept.) Inthe caseof ... Aesthetic taste, teleology, and the world order to the same things. Something like the “kingdom of ends” thus seems to beat play in aesthetic judgment, except that the “kingdom of ends” involvesthe...
... actions.POLITICISING THE PAST The s were a time of questioning in many Western nations. The generation growing up inthe s, discontented with the complacencyof its parents, rebelled against the values ... Perhaps the main way in whichhe unsettles the question of morality is by unsettling the narrative: ifwe remain uncertain whether what we are reading is a true account,we may be unable to delineate ... turns into something rather less than ethical conduct. In a chapter relating directly to the experiences of the Frankfurt School in the United States, Horkheimer and Adorno then turn to the cultureindustry....
... 139ItiscommonlystatedthattheCourthasbecome‘avictimofitsownsuccess’.IntherunuptoProtocol14,numbers(ofapplications,decisions,pendingcases,judgments)wereconstantlydebated.TheimageofModernTimeswhereCharlieChaplin’shandscontinuemechanicallytotwistinthegesturewhichtheyhaverepeatedlyperformedintheprevioushourscametomymindasIwastoldofthe800letterswhicharriveddailyatStrasbourg.Howwerealltheselettershandled?Iwasshownclosetsfullofdocumentsaswellaspilesofpapersondesks.CouldtheStrasbourgstafflosetheircomposureandstarttotwitchastheysortedletters,affixedstampsandturnedtheirattentiontothenextbatchofdocuments?ThecomparisonbetweentheStrasbourgCourtandModernTimesshouldobviouslynotbepushedtoofar.TheCourtisnotthemadmachineofChaplin’sfactory.Nonetheless,despitesomereassuringsignswithintheConventionsystem,suchasthefactthattheCourthasrecommended,inrespectoftheinitialstageoftheproceedings,neithertheabolitionofthepossibilityofusinganyofthenationalofficiallanguagesrecognizedinstatesbelongingtotheCouncilofEuropenorthecreationofarequirementofbeinglegallyrepresented,67theproceduralstrainsunderwhichtheCourtfunctionsthrowintoreliefthequestionofhowitcanadequatelyrespondtotheindividualapplicantswhocomecallingatitsdoors.Thepertinenceofthisquestionishighlightedinthenextsectionthroughthediscussion ... nephew of her husband. Theythink that corruption stained both the administrative and the judicial proceedings in Romania. The day they received the letter notifying them of the Strasbourg decision, ... learnthattherearesomeproblemsinEurope:civilproceed-ingsaretoolengthy,journalistscannotalwayssaywhattheywant,thedueprocessrightsofwhitecollardefendantsareoftennotfullyobserved.Butonthewhole,Europeisingoodshape.76ThispassagesuggeststhattheCourtisnottacklingtherealproblemswhichbesetEurope.Itsunderlyingthesiscouldbephrasedasfollows:theCourtisfulfillingitsideologicalfunctionofappearingtoprotectthehumanrightsofallwithinthejurisdictionoftheCouncilofEurope,whileinfactconcentratingontheprotec-tionoftherightsoftheprivilegedandforgettingabouteveryoneelse(whothusbecomethe‘Other’).Thelawyer-backedapplicanthasalegalissue,whichnicelyfitsthetermsoftheConvention,constructedoutofhiscase;thepoor,legallyilliterateapplicantisseenasposingaproblemofproceduralefficiency,ofhowbesttoeliminatehimfromthesystem.EversincetheCourthasstartedtofunction,thebulkofitscaselawhasconcernedArticle6oftheConvention,whichguaranteesafairtrial.Withinthiscaselaw,mostcasesconcernthefailurebynationalauthoritiestoprovideatrialwithinareasonabletime.Thefiguresareastounding.OnthebasisofthesurveyofactivitiesproducedbytheRegistryoftheCourtfortheperiodbetween1959–1990,Ihavecountedthat,outofthe272principalissueswhichwereraisedinthe235casesdecidedbytheCourtinthesethreedecades,143concernedArticle6.Ofthese,58concernedlengthyproceedings.Tenyearslater,thistrendhadnotchanged.77Evenifoneputsasidethe‘lengthy’proceedingscases,Article6remainstodaytheprovisionmostoftenarguedbeforetheCourt,immediatelyfollowedbyArticle5,onthelegalityofdetention.78ItwouldberidiculoustoarguethatArticles6and5donotconcerncrucialrights.79FailurebytheCourttofindtheseArticlesapplicablecanhavedramaticconsequences;findingsofviolationofbothArticle6andArticle5canbeveryimportant.Amultitudeofexamplescouldbetakentomakethesetwopoints.Maaouiav.Francewillbereviewedtoillustratetheformer;80Sanderv.UnitedKingdom,81whichhappenstodealwithracism,thesubjectofthenextsection,toillustrate...
... puts the final nail in the coffin of the reception by the Court of a radical feminist agenda is surelyStubbings and Others v. United Kingdom, decided less than a year before Aydin.Stubbings ... member of the directress of the institution whereshe lived. X, the father of the girl and the first applicant before the Court, hadattempted to institute criminal legal proceedings against the rapist ... would then have had in mind.Rather the image of the applicant conveyed by his dissenting opinion is that of astruggling mother who is trying to take care of three children as best she can.The...