Thus, during viewing in the otherwise dark laboratory, the observer saw a rectangular area of light against a dark background. |
|
If reality is subjective to the observer, isn't that the ultimate confirmation of free will? |
|
If the source and observer are moving towards one another, the red shift becomes a blue shift. |
|
Each of the frigate's flights consists of two pilots, an observer and an aircrewman, plus nine engineers and an aircraft controller. |
|
Along the forest edge, an observer can find wild lettuce, blue-eyed grasses, and Venus's looking-glass. |
|
I am a gregarious person and have always been given to being a humorist, but I am also an observer. |
|
Many also suggest that the entheogenic experience helps to cultivate the conscious inner observer so fundamental to the spiritual journey. |
|
One observer looks in the box which starts the process which is verified and solidified through the hierarchy of observation. |
|
As a professed radical, he was to prove a singularly jaded observer of parliaments, parliamentary processes, and parliamentarians. |
|
Hotsy-Totsy observer Curt Salada rightly took me to task for my rather casual dismissal of my favourite film. |
|
Quantum mechanics and information theory both demonstrate that in any assessment of reality, the observer has to be taken into consideration. |
|
Arnold was in short the very exemplar of the detached if benevolent observer and adviser, the non-party independent. |
|
The perspicacious observer may have noticed that most of my hobbyist ventures into the graphic arts are abstract or non-representational. |
|
Attire aside, this woman was an astute observer and clearly excited and eager to take part in this research. |
|
It was a feast to eyes of the observer watching people eat baked water chestnuts. |
|
The power of the strike is such that even a casual observer would sit up and take notice. |
|
The secondary observer records the species detected by the primary observer but also surveys the area. |
|
It never fails to bring a smile and always arouses the interest of the discerning observer. |
|
Linked with each other and supporting batteries via radio net, every observer could fire any or all available support batteries at once. |
|
Over a period of years a sympathetic observer notices marked changes, although such personal reflections are notoriously subjective. |
|
|
All cockpits can accommodate two pilots, one flight engineer, one observer and one instructor. |
|
Because of the eccentricity of Mercury's orbit, the variation in the proper motion of the Sun would be noticeable to an observer on the planet. |
|
Barely perceptible to the casual observer, the creases in his eyes had fallen just a little more than before. |
|
The patient observer may see it trying to nip feeding arms off unfortunate barnacles. |
|
As Wallace rightfully notes, the observer outside of the hole sees it as a void, an empty place in space. |
|
Her medical condition means she has to swim with an observer on the poolside, watching for the first sign of any fit or seizure. |
|
He was a conservationist, a wry observer of human behaviour, a voracious reader, a great storyteller, a fearless reviewer. |
|
The Professor can't vouch for any of this information, but any observer of Fairfax will conclude that it all sounds entirely likely. |
|
He must remain a neutral observer of the game and not fraternise with teams or team officials. |
|
The result is that an observer looking at the front of the object appears to see straight through it. |
|
This double-observer approach is based on a primary observer who relays all birds he or she detects at a point to the secondary observer. |
|
The same observer assessed team behavior quality ratings and team task performance for all teams. |
|
As an observer, I can testify that the comments made by these powerful and successful people were in flat contradiction to the caricature. |
|
A casual observer might have noticed they were all drinking pints of Caledonian 80 Shilling, but they were not only there to enjoy the local ale. |
|
Therefore many take up temporary unpaid observer attachments in the hope of transferring to a training post. |
|
Of course the impression the observer receives from a photograph is, in the final analysis, always subjective. |
|
The weans of today already call the shots, as any observer of a family outing to Safeway well knows. |
|
Seeing any of the whipbirds, wedgebills, and jewel-babblers can be a challenge to the observer. |
|
Musa is Amnesty International's official observer of the Military Commission trials at the bay. |
|
To the casual observer Jake shows no outward signs of having spent 43 years in an institution. |
|
|
The plane is a metaphor for his remoteness, his aloneness, his posture as an observer, an outsider. |
|
But Fielding, as astute an observer of social class as Austen, was actually writing satire. |
|
The question is whether, either in a court of law or in the mind of an objective observer, this defence stands up. |
|
His posthumous political importance is obvious to any observer of the Indian scene. |
|
An outside observer can only wonder what it takes to get the message across. |
|
Only a trained observer would notice her hands and feet look somewhat larger and more masculine. |
|
Our observer noted that the enemy was having some sort of party, which included the consumption of alcoholic beverages. |
|
Compulsions are obvious to an observer and can cause considerable shame and embarrassment. |
|
The Human Rights Commission has turned down a request by Murphy to attend his appeal as an observer. |
|
A fifteenth-century observer described artist's brushes made of miniver fur mounted in quill handles. |
|
This site will no doubt be jarring to the casual observer more familiar with staid academic websites. |
|
The horopter is a curved line which represents the points which are the same distance from the observer as the object of focus. |
|
One contemporary outside observer described the Little Red Book or Quotations from Chairman Mao ZeDong, as formenting a society-wide verbomania. |
|
A specular reflection, or glint, occurs when a smooth, mirror-like surface is oriented so that it reflects sunlight directly at an observer. |
|
One observer said last night that he may be adopting the role of a stalking horse for the party, generating some momentum for change. |
|
Lanza proposes a biocentrist theory which ascribes the answer to the observer rather than the observed. |
|
As one observer noted waggishly, janitors take garbage away, they don't bring us more. |
|
A keen observer can also find around the same area a tiny plant, almost a miniature of the creeper Torenia travancorica. |
|
On the principle that a cat may look at a king, the picture may be painted from the view-point of the humblest observer. |
|
If a perpendicular measurement is impossible, the observer records radial distance and sighting angle. |
|
|
He learnt to become an observer and a narrator because so much of his childhood and adolescence was spent in bed. |
|
Immediately after the cessation of motion stimulation, the observer reports self-motion in the same direction as the previous section. |
|
The camera is a detached observer, and the strength of the film lies in its acute power of observation and detail. |
|
It took a dedicated observer to notice what was going on, but these clouds were estranged now. |
|
Capt Donald regularly flew all types of missions in fixed wing aircraft and acted as an observer in rotary wing aircraft. |
|
This observer has to conclude that something is wrong with the clocks on the train. |
|
At various points, the baritone joins the soprano for his own wordless riffs, perhaps representing the observer at one with nature. |
|
An unrivalled observer of the countryside, he found no Wordsworthian solace there, nor in his own unhappy marriage. |
|
To separate nationalism from regionalism or particularism is difficult and often depends upon the eye of the observer. |
|
This should be enough to make any neutral observer support them, but there is a more important cause. |
|
Lorraine waved her arms in a manner clearly designed to instill a sense of urgency in the observer. |
|
Neither neutral observer nor manic enthusiast, he is a refined amorist of the landscape. |
|
Sometimes when I look back on my life as a child or young adolescent, it is through the eyes of a bemused observer. |
|
As any current observer of demolition will tell you, grapples and thumbed buckets are pervasive for cleanup work. |
|
I was determined to remain a disinterested, objective observer in order to respond to student questions or problems. |
|
A walk down Tokyo's main thoroughfares presents the modern observer with conflicting pictures. |
|
Through the eye of a 5m-tall obelisk, the observer will see the south celestial pole, the point in the sky about which the southern stars rotate. |
|
By the semidiameter of a celestial object, is meant the angle which the radius of its apparent circular disc subtends at the eye of the observer. |
|
The actual contact times for any given observer may differ by up to 7 minutes due to the effects of parallax. |
|
And to even the most casual observer, the conference delegates are clearly very well behaved and polite. |
|
|
The casual observer might find such a slow-paced, drawnout pastime to be something of an anachronism in today's quick-fix high-paced world. |
|
Even as a casual observer, I can tell that there's some real tension in the air rather than the usual feel-good vibe that comes out of the event. |
|
Bertie on the beach in white and yellow check casuals, hair blowing in the breeze, bopping alongside the rest, enjoying his EU observer status. |
|
When one observer sighted a whale or whales at the surface, the other would record data. |
|
The robot can also be an observer, a soothsayer, a malcontent or a destructor. |
|
It was also to be a vehicle for Dickens as an essayist, both as a fanciful observer and as an earnestly satiric social critic. |
|
With pipe clamped firmly between his teeth, Voss presents us with a passive observer simply looking forward to a few days of quiet fishing. |
|
We also recorded terrain inclination angle, observer distance, time of day, date and year. |
|
Whether pushing for observer status or full membership, the bid is a difficult one. |
|
As an observer of people, it is interesting to witness someone who has to study for years in order to achieve what comes naturally to another. |
|
His attitude was doubtless due to his physical infirmity, which prevented him from being either an observer or an experimenter. |
|
After sunset, as the depression of the sun increases the sky gets darker and darker until no scattered light reaches the observer. |
|
Secondly, the uninvolved observer will conclude that Graham got a raw deal. |
|
But one seasoned observer of African-American politics agrees there is potential for blowback. |
|
But a careful observer would notice a second transportation link that leaves from here. |
|
For an observer standing between the Moon and the umbra cone summit the eclipse is total. |
|
During our concise conversation, Conrad proves to be a sharp observer and commentator on the game. |
|
The Gazette is also sure that such an observer would come away with the impression that some sort of solution is needed. |
|
Shall she be the Bondslave of Time, the Handmaid of opinion, or the strict observer of every frosty or cold benumbed imagination? |
|
Ron Lance is a long-term grower, photographer, researcher, and observer of native plants and natural history. |
|
|
If he is a griefer, take his units away and kick him back to observer status where he can beg to play again. |
|
Otherwise, he feels more like an observer than the groom at his own wedding. |
|
An observer leans over the fuselage of an aircraft to use a Mark 1-A bombsight, the first one designed for aircraft use. |
|
In midafternoon, we saw a human rights observer speaking with the prisoners in the cell block beside ours. |
|
He went to navigation, bombardier and observer school at hot and humid Ellington Air Force Base, Texas, near Houston. |
|
Another example of the apposite quotation comes from our Dutch observer of nineteenth-century Mecca. |
|
If that observer is mastheaded, his range of vision is enormously increased as, again, is the visibility of the object by every additional foot in height. |
|
During this process, the safety observer stood off to the side. |
|
It's easy to cross the line, and you are no longer an observer and a gatherer of facts. |
|
Unlike rainbows, fogbows are rare because the light source has to be low at the back of the observer and the fog mostly in the opposite direction. |
|
Only a very naive observer would conclude that this is currently a party with the focus and energy to win another mandate, whoever its leader may be. |
|
The stimulus tanks also were supplied with airstones, but none of the tanks contained filters because they would have impeded the view of both the focal fish and the observer. |
|
He was later promoted to chief observer and professor of astrophysics. |
|
Who could be a better observer than the greengrocer by the mosque or the hospital night watchman? |
|
The only aggro this observer has witnessed in the past couple of seasons has been completely spontaneous, usually involving too much bevvy in the pub after a game. |
|
At the conclusion of one of these eight or ten hour parties, the outside observer and non-participant might have the impression that the scene resembles an apocalyptic movie. |
|
The line drawn on the surface gives the impression of being right when viewed by an observer on the surface, which is why it is also called orthodrome. |
|
The draw took place in Bank House on Sunday, November 7 and the organisers would also like to thank Mr Donnell who acted as an independent observer at the proceedings. |
|
Yes, it has some amusing dialogue, mostly one-liners, but the humor is that of a professional popgun for hire, an impersonal jokester, rather than an observer of humanity. |
|
As a cultural medium based on the notion of spectacle, Sukuma performances presuppose interaction between performer and audience, observer and observed. |
|
|
A global observer sees a region around rotating black holes, called the ergosphere, as possibly bending electromagnetic radiation according to a negative refractive index. |
|
Given the history here, this might have put an uninformed observer in mind of biting the hand that feeds you. |
|
The astute observer would know I wasn't a local farmer because all the cockies in this particular district wear baseball caps sponsored by American chemical companies. |
|
To the casual observer, it probably doesn't make a lot of sense. |
|
The latter was used only on packs that had been followed for more than 9 months and were deemed habituated to observer presence at this critical time. |
|
If good and bad are merely what seem good and bad to the individual observer, then how can one claim that stealing or adultery or impiety or murder are somehow wrong? |
|
The only valid lesson a dispassionate observer can make from the inclusion of that line in the movie is how skilled the director is at the black art of propaganda. |
|
I asked an astute hockey observer about the player, whom even a casual looker-on like me recognizes as a skilled player, himself dogged by clutchers and grabbers. |
|
On the surface it would appear to be a win-win situation for the observer. |
|
Late that night we cleared immigration and added an observer to the crew. |
|
The dish was placed behind the one-way mirror of an observation chamber such that the observer could see the crabs, but the crabs could not see the observer. |
|
The notation of section thickness on a microscope slide informs the observer of the approximate level of magnification most suitable for examination of the tissue section. |
|
She was the observer, not us, which she underlined by bringing out a camera and photographing the upturned crowd. |
|
In 1925, perceiving the potential of aviation, Reeves trained as a naval aviation observer and became the first aviation officer promoted to flag rank. |
|
To the inexperienced observer, sprinters are experts at wasting time. |
|
It can be a height of land, a hummock of ice, or any place of elevation that affords an observer a clear view of their surroundings to make good observations. |
|
A reasonable observer would no doubt conclude that the First Amendment was not meant to be a platform for ritually re-enacting Paul's colloquy with the Roman magistrate. |
|
To my mind, the essential difference between philosophy and religion is in the religious type of contemplative act, the observer is within it, not outside it. |
|
In this resonance, Venus would make, on average, four axial rotations as seen by an Earth observer between successive close approaches of the two planets. |
|
The president demanded that the EC observer and state Chief Electoral Officer countermand the elections to stop the declaration of results tomorrow. |
|
|
The extent to which this is instrumental and forced is clear to any unbiased observer. |
|
For close to five years I believed all truths were relative and assimilable, and that meaning and purpose were nonexistent outside the brain of the observer. |
|
In a right-handed shell, the aperture appears on the observer's right when the shell is held with the apex up and the aperture facing the observer. |
|
His future wife was able to attend the Conference as an observer. |
|
As an objective observer, as you turn on the news every night, and you see what's going on in the Gulf Coast down there, so many people have lost so much. |
|
His correspondence, much of which survives, is that of an incisive and articulate observer. |
|
When the Sun, Earth, and Mercury are aligned, the orbital motion appears fast, because the Mercury is seen broadside on, like a vehicle passing an observer at the roadside. |
|
Throughout, we see Schlesinger navigating the blurry lines of historian, participant, observer, and observee. |
|
Usually a diligent observer, nonetheless Winslow skimmed over the episode in two sentences. |
|
He has been assuring the world for weeks that Moscow is just a friendly observer to the chaos in Ukraine. |
|
Helen Armstead's trajectory, from passive victim to apology guru to contented observer, has little to do with a particular class. |
|
Although the media can be reluctant to analyse or even accept that its own role is any more than that of an objective observer, its networks are formidable. |
|
Barely a day goes by without news of a terrorist incident, and speak to any objective observer and they will tell you that, for all the progress, big problems remain. |
|
When he hits the mark, Lee's a sharp observer of the silly side of life. |
|
In fact, any honest observer who has worked on even the most extensively documented speech communities will recognize the sort of thing that they are writing about. |
|
Just to establish the ground rules, I know I am neither neutral nor the most objective observer on the subject I'm about to discuss in this space. |
|
The stories are so minimal that anything could be projected on them and imbued with a significant meaning to its observer. |
|
A keen observer might notice the Star of David she wears around her neck. |
|
His present partner attends but is an observer not a participant. |
|
This near intervention led one observer to note that gunboat diplomacy was clearly in line with the State Department commitment to pipelines and profits. |
|
|
Even the most astute observer of the healthiest lifestyle can fall victim to the pangs of weather-related headaches. |
|
And the Jamaica observer routinely runs hideous cartoons about gay people and incites violence against them. |
|
A casual observer may have merely thought the moment a little odd. |
|
Every speck of glitter is a tiny mirror reflecting the observer. |
|
He consents to being an admiring observer but not a peeping Tom. |
|
Today, Abbas will go before the General Assembly and seek upgraded status as a non-member observer state. |
|
The act of the secondary observer writing down an observation when the primary observer has not indicated a detection can serve as a cue to the primary observer. |
|
The largest European observer group also found flaws with every step of the electoral process from voter registration and campaigning to the actual vote. |
|
The birds never alarmed while the decoy was placed or removed, but did so during nest visits, so we believe that disturbance due to the observer was negligible. |
|
My guess is that is he is a good observer who draws what he sees. |
|
For an observer to acquire both donor and acceptor fluorescence for this dual-image ratiometric measurement, the fluorescent probes must exhibit spectral overlap. |
|
I inform you that I will be a gracious lord and a faithfull observer of God's rights and just secular law. |
|
One observer has even reported that the Heffalump has been known to audibly snarf. |
|
Haruspex, you've been an observer of medical specialty behavior for quite some time. |
|
Dawkins's meme refers to any cultural entity that an observer might consider a replicator of a certain idea or set of ideas. |
|
These organizations are much less numerous than those in which the Holy See participates either as a member or with observer status. |
|
The Council of Europe holds observer status with the United Nations and is regularly represented in the UN General Assembly. |
|
Yugoslavia had observer status in the organisation starting with the establishment of the OECD until its dissolution as a country. |
|
A number of international intergovernmental organizations have also been granted observer status to WTO bodies. |
|
Rangers captured an Iraqi forward observer dressed as a civilian after sinking his kayak with. |
|
|
On 1 December 2014, an OSCE observer was injured by Ukrainian counter artillery fire while observing militants firing at Ukrainian forces. |
|
John Fletcher, a renowned photometrist and observer of Near-Earth Objects, operates the Mount Tuffley Observatory in Gloucestershire. |
|
Galicia is a consultative observer of the Community of Portuguese Language Countries. |
|
As the observer moves northward the pole rises and the circumpolar stars appear, now unblocked by the Earth. |
|
Its observer states are Belarus, France, Italy, Netherlands, Romania, Slovakia, Spain, the United States, the United Kingdom, and Ukraine. |
|
A key foreign observer of the remarkable and rapid changes in Japanese society in this period was Ernest Mason Satow. |
|
The curved path demands this observer to recognize a leftward net force on the ball. |
|
If there is no sample in the cell, and the second polaroid is rotated until it is at right angles to the first, the observer will see no light. |
|
The UN maintains a small observer force in Western Sahara, where a large number of Morocco's troops are stationed. |
|
Also suppose that this observer is within the plane of the planet's equator. |
|
Allegedly the Florentine explorer Amerigo Vespucci participated as observer at the invitation of King Manuel I in the same expedition. |
|
A line of position can refer to two different things, either a line on a chart or a line between the observer and an object in real life. |
|
In 2006, ASEAN was given observer status at the United Nations General Assembly. |
|
Metamerism occurs when two colored samples match under one light source to an observer but cease to match if the light source is changed. |
|
It has consultative status with the United Nations Economic and Social Council and observer status at the International Labour Organization. |
|
The figure shows how the trajectory of the ball as seen by the rotating observer can be constructed. |
|
Other forms of advertising are ordinarily seen as a matter of choice on the part of the observer. |
|
It is always by this unthank that things are given to the observer that we pretend to have access to the truth of the word. |
|
The APA includes parliaments from all Asian countries as well as a number of international observer organizations. |
|
Fecundity of red king crabs off Kodiak Island, Alaska, and an initial look at observer agreement of clutch fullness. |
|
|
We marked this location and measured the distance from the point of inaudibility to the observer which provided the DTDs for each stand type. |
|
We do not know if he was a misogynist or masculinist or simply a biased observer. |
|
To the casual, uninformed observer, Ahmadinejad might look and sound like a Persian version of a 1960s flower child. |
|
Chris, a great observer, of Parliamentary procedure, argues for constitutional value over the value of the text discussed. |
|
Mahlke began his career as a pre-war Kriegsmarine floatplane pilot, observer, and instructor. |
|
He was a short man, a Sabbath observer, with thick, curly hair, who wore a red tie and a diamond stickpin just below his tie knot. |
|
Then the observer sees the electron moving on a curve which is a cycloid or trochoid, see Fig. |
|
His analysis places him outside the alternatives as a nonpracticing observer. |
|
The tissues were stained with cresyl violet and were examined by light microscopy by an observer unfamiliar with the behavioral data. |
|
Elena Valenciano, head of the European Union observer team, said that the conduct of the election Sunday was nearly normal. |
|
I somehow always felt like an observer instead of one of the people taking part, as if I was having an out-of-body experience. |
|
It has been argued that because an object is epistemologically dependent on an observer, it is also physically dependent on that observer. |
|
The Commonwealth of Nations is represented in the United Nations General Assembly by the secretariat as an observer. |
|
Papua New Guinea has stated that it might join ASEAN, and is currently an observer. |
|
Each is defined by the direction of movement of the ground on the opposite side of the fault from an observer. |
|
During this period, he witnessed a Brocken spectre and glory, caused by the sun casting a shadow on a cloud below the observer. |
|
To a distant observer, clocks near a black hole appear to tick more slowly than those further away from the black hole. |
|
This separation usually makes a colorless gas invisible to the human observer. |
|
Osborn's personableness was not of a kind attractive to the unbiassed male observer. |
|
The handedness of the twist is the direction of the twists as they progress away from an observer. |
|
|
Because of this, this second type of councillor, usually of the nobility, was only allowed to attend the council of Castile as an observer. |
|
The height of Polaris in degrees above the horizon is the latitude of the observer, within a degree or so. |
|
Suppose that Ms and Mt are local theories of the source and the target, available to the observer. |
|
Here, then, the inquiry is directed more towards the actor than the observer. |
|
Figure 1 shows a sketch of an X-ray binary system as it would be seen by a nearby observer. |
|
Respectively, these all impact the perceptions of colorfulness, brilliance and observer variability, the inverse of which can be considered observer similarity. |
|
Kites have been used for signaling, for delivery of munitions, and for observation, by lifting an observer above the field of battle, and by using kite aerial photography. |
|
The Holy See also attends as an observer, as does the Order of Malta. |
|
A second method of determining the latitude of the observer measures the angle of elevation of a celestial pole, north in the northern hemisphere. |
|
When the Western European Union was dissolved, it had 10 member countries, six associate member countries, five observer countries and seven associate partner countries. |
|
An observer situated one metre from a vocalizing whale would perceive a volume roughly equivalent to the volume of a jackhammer operating two metres away. |
|
The IHO enjoys observer status at the United Nations where it is the recognised competent authority on hydrographic surveying and nautical charting. |
|
Seneca and Lucan were from Hispania, as was the later epigrammatist and keen social observer Martial, who expressed his pride in his Celtiberian heritage. |
|
Meqdad was accompanied to the bomb site by Arab League assistant secretary general Samir Seif Al-Yazal, head of the observer mission's advance team which flew in on Thursday. |
|
While most of the energy released during gravitational collapse is emitted very quickly, an outside observer does not actually see the end of this process. |
|
Hence any light that reaches an outside observer from the photon sphere must have been emitted by objects between the photon sphere and the event horizon. |
|
In addition to the above members Cornwall has been a full observer member since 2010 due to the Cornish language falling under the Council's areas of work. |
|
The OSCE considers itself a regional organization in the sense of Chapter VIII of the United Nations Charter and is an observer in the United Nations General Assembly. |
|
The Western European Union had 10 member countries, six associate member countries, five observer countries and seven associate partner countries. |
|
Full membership in the Arab League has been assured, should the country's government choose to seek it, though it could also opt for observer status. |
|
|
The Holy See, which is distinct from Vatican City State, has permanent observer status with all the rights of a full member except for a vote in the UN General Assembly. |
|
Their entrance as observer and associate states respectively into the organisation was aided a good deal by their investments into the Organisation and France itself. |
|
The UAE has the status in the Organisation internationale de la Francophonie as an observer state, and Qatar has the status in the organization as an associate state. |
|
The Labour Party is a full member of the Party of European Socialists and Progressive Alliance, and holds observer status in the Socialist International. |
|
To the observer, an unknown high-context culture can be completely mystifying, because symbols that are not known to the observer play such an important role. |
|
In dreaming humans experience sensory images and sounds, in a sequence which the dreamer usually perceives more as an apparent participant than as an observer. |
|
Sauzee, who also works as an observer for the French League, revealed he will be more than happy to tip the wink to Paatelainen for potential targets in a French market. |
|
This apparent motion is due to the finite velocity of light, and the progressive motion of the observer with the earth, as it performs its yearly course about the sun. |
|
There is, however, no finite set of statements that are couched in purely sensory terms and can express the satisfaction of the condition of the presence of a normal observer. |
|
Procedure of robust observer design ensuring the best robust property of the residual with respect to disturbances in the form a stationary variate is suggested. |
|
But, of course, the doctor himself must be a normal observer. |
|
A more radical movement in cultural anthropology regards fieldwork not as a technique of science but as only personal storytelling by an observer. |
|
Target itself isn't yet sure whether to position the new Tupperware shops in the housewares or food aisles within SuperTarget stores, said a Target observer. |
|
The Witness functions steadily in the present and gradually separates from the doer, the accomplisher, to be the observer, to be 'with' the client. |
|
A keen observer of the human condition, ben Sira wrote in order to help his contemporaries maintain their faith and traditions in ever-changing times. |
|
Turcophile by sentiment, Abbott had joined the Ottoman forces there as a British observer with the intention of writing a history of the campaign. |
|
The other arrow of the pair locates the ball relative to the center of the carousel, providing the position of the ball as seen by the rotating observer. |
|
The PCAOB agreed to play a key role on the Consultative Advisory Group of the IAASB and provides direct input at IAASB meetings as a nonvoting observer. |
|
Blue was not as good a 'womanizer' as the rest of us, but he was a great guy to run into for a drink and a story, and a good friend and observer of the rest of us. |
|
Many plants occasionally benefit from animal protein rotting on their leaves, but carnivory that is obvious enough for the casual observer to notice is rare. |
|
|
It is an international organisation with legal personality recognised under public international law, and has observer status at the United Nations. |
|
This would provide a platform that would allow the observer to remain stationary as the ship rolled beneath him, in the manner of a gimballed platform. |
|
American observer Ralph Ingersoll reported the bombing was inaccurate and did not hit targets of military value, but destroyed the surrounding areas. |
|
To this end, Galileo proposed the celatone, a device in the form of a helmet with a telescope mounted so as to accommodate the motion of the observer on the ship. |
|
A point on the Equator that passes directly in front of this observer later in time has a higher planetographic longitude than a point that did so earlier in time. |
|
In most cases, determining which of the two intersections is the correct one is obvious to the observer because they are often thousands of miles apart. |
|
In order to measure the altitude of a star, the observer would view the star through the sights and hold the quadrant so that the plane of the instrument was vertical. |
|
In 1993, Nasa's Observer spacecraft vanished three days before it was due to enter orbit. |
|
The Observer is on the lookout for ghostly goings-on in local haunted houses and tales of the spine-tingling supernatural. |
|
The Observer has had to apologise for saying the handsome town of North Shields is in Northumbria. |
|
It is mere coincidence that David Aaronovitch used the same stinking ninth category jab in the Observer blog? |
|
The Observer is media partner of this year's Meltdown festival, which is curated by Patti Smith. |
|
The Observer reported that the play was attracting young people who were avid for its message. |
|
The Pennine Acute Trust said the timing of the letter was a coincidence and not connected to the Observer story. |
|
He made a telephone call to the Observer and with readers' help slowly began to piece bits of the puzzle together and build up the museum. |
|
Sharon Leach wrote in the Sunday Observer of the agonies of having to do without water, and she knows whereof she speaks. |
|
Like so many former reformists, liberals and pacifists, however, the Guardian and Observer have lurched ever further to the right. |
|
He then went on to become the athletics correspondent for The Observer and ended up as its sports editor. |
|
The Mars Observer launched in 1992 was lost the following year during orbit insertion. |
|
A beaming Sam was caught on camera in the photograph published in last Saturday's Observer. |
|
|
In his first Observer article Hattersley complained that meritocracy was incompatible with social democracy. |
|
Not wishing to be left behind, the Observer revealed yesterday that it has a blog. |
|
Operated by the Royal Observer Corps, it was also charged with monitoring lethal radioactive fallout. |
|
It jogged my memory and I remembered an article I had read in a Sunday Observer sometime earlier this year, say in March or April. |
|
Military sources told The Observer last week that the Parachute Regiment commanders knew the military police were in the town. |
|
She discusses happiness in the Observer, I think about as wrong-headedly as one can get. |
|
Heavy-handed searches, of the type witnessed by The Observer, involve large numbers of troops, armoured vehicles and attack helicopters. |
|
It's because of the Observer article that James was able to tell his own story to a local newspaper. |
|
These civic-minded Dakotans were members of the Ground Observer Corps, inaugurated in 1950 by the Continental Air Command. |
|
The British critics of The Times, Spectator and Observer were at daggers drawn. |
|
But the coming man of national Democratic politics, says the Observer, is the little-known boss of The Bronx. |
|
Details of the operation were first revealed in The Observer on the eve of war last year, after the leaking of a top-secret memo from the NSA requesting British help. |
|
On Monday, I showed the Observer article to a law professor who has extensively studied the work of grand juries. |
|
It was only too clear that a few of them were simply banking the salary from the Observer and then getting extra work from TV, radio and other publications. |
|
Heartbreak has turned to pure joy for four-year-old Jordan Deegan after big-hearted Observer readers rallied to replace his only toy stolen by cold-blooded thieves. |
|
Trierweiler has also expressed regret over the tweet in a recent interview with the U.K. Observer. |
|
She was suffering from flu but left her sickbed against her doctor's advice to get to the town hall in a car specially sent for her by the Observer. |
|
And its interesting because I went on to the Observer, which is a broadsheet newspaper, and very respectable, and for a very short time in the late 70s I was Woman's Editor. |
|
At James Monroe High School in New York City, Milgram was a member of Arista, the honor society, and became editor of the Science Observer, a school newspaper. |
|
This story from the St Albans Observer is completely incomprehensible. |
|