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The rumor, and violent variations on it, first popped up Wednesday and spread rapidly across the city by telephone, e-mail and word of mouth, officials said.
Even those rules, though, are now routinely broken in productions of Shakespeare, whose canon is subjected to violent variations of setting and meaning.
The timestep is set to 0.15 times the grid spacing, and the time integrator is RK3. Figure 9 reports the distribution of the viscosity on the equatorial plane, which clearly shows a local annular peak around the location of the stellar surface, where the hydrodynamical variables experience the most violent variations, leading to large values of the viscosity.
In 2013, Sunday Telegraph journalist Andrew Gilligan, known for his sharp criticism of institutions he believes may harbor violent variations of Islam, said the mosque was "mainly free of extremism".
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Then Kyril Bonfiglioli's trilogy of hilarious thrillers about a decadent art dealer and his brutal manservant — sort of a debauched, violent variation on Wodehouse.
The Metro show is his first devoted entirely to ceramics, a medium he took up about 10 years ago, evolving an innovative, violent variation of "hand built" that suggests post-Schnabel Peter Voulkos.
A violent variation on the same mechanical bodysuits reappears, memorably, in "Avatar," which culminates in a scene of bloody single combat between a Na'vi warrior and the evil Marine colonel, who has strapped himself into one such machine.
The result is that in states that became more violent, the variation in violence across municipalities is high (the correlation between average violence and the standard deviation is 91%), which could lead to different perceptions of insecurity and heterogeneous migration responses.
Nevin (2000) finds that the variation in childhood gasoline lead exposure from 1941 to 1986 explains nearly 90% of the variation in violent crime rates from 1960 to 1998, and that lead paint explains 70% of the variation in murder rates from 1900 to 1960.
A May 2000 study by economic consultant Rick Nevin theorizes that lead exposure explains 65% to 90% of the variation in violent crime rates in the US.
There was a significant seasonal variation in violent suicides (n = 1286; r = 0.07 Z == 6.97; p < 0,001).
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com