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In the readaptation did not have more characters as the original.
Therefore, the effects of flight duration on physiological adaptation and readaptation could be examined.
This is the aid commonly known as readaptation aid.
One basic assumption of ecological modernization relates to environmental readaptation of economic growth and industrial development.
Therapeutical treatment is also required in article 178-A - after medical examination - for all sexual offenders in order to facilitate his social readaptation.
The second series was a twelve-episode readaptation and was broadcast between January and March 2007.
This readaptation, along with the open plan of the building allowed Villa Shodhan to be integrated into the Indian environment.
"If you like historic readaptation projects," said John Ferchill, chairman and chief executive of the Ferchill Group, "it doesn't get any better than this."
But the readaptation of the human body to earth gravity after an extended period of weightlessness or reduced gravity was a far more intractable problem to solve.
A Readaptation of 'Compulsion' Meyer Levin wrote four dramatizations of his novel "Compulsion."
When the life of a people is going through this process of readaptation, it has to remedy its own defects, and get rid of those elements which become useless.
This readaptation of Viking Line's funnel colours remains Star Cruises' funnel colour scheme to this day.
Although the focus of the mission is the microgravity experiments, numerous medical tests are also planned so doctors can learn more about astronauts' adaptation to space and readaptation to gravity.
Skylab 3 continued a comprehensive medical research program that extended the data on human physiological adaptation and readaptation to space flight collected on the previous Skylab 2 mission.
"It's sort of a modern surreal readaptation of the great classic epic Homer's 'The Odyssey,' set in Seattle underworld," said Mr. MaGun.
On the basis of the Treaty, several specific economic and social instruments were developed, which were very useful to the coal and steel industries and regions during their difficult processes of readaptation.
"There's an awful lot of momentum in the right direction," said W. Robert Bates, senior vice president of Mansur Real Estate Services, an Indianapolis-based company that specializes in downtown historic readaptation projects.
Recovery, the aim of individuation, "is not only achieved by work on the inside figures but also, as conditio sine qua non, by a readaptation in outer life"-including the recreation of a new and more viable persona.
These awards, intended as a reward for firms, could provide a significant incentive to adopt appropriate management procedures and to speed up the training and readaptation process for managers and employees, in order to provide them with the qualifications and skills they need.
We will also do everything possible to persuade them to fulfil all their obligations laid down in both the OSCE Treaty and the current Treaty on Conventional Armed Forces in Europe, the readaptation of which will probably be approved at the Istanbul Summit.
Continuous obsolescence or perpetual revolution is a phenomenon where industry trends, or other items that do not immediately correspond to technical needs, mandate a continual readaptation of a system; such work does not increase the usefulness of the system, but is required for the system to continue fulfilling its functions.