"It was a purely scientific research party sent out by my father's father, the Jeddak of Helium, to
rechart the air currents, and to take atmospheric density tests," replied the fair prisoner, in a low, well-modulated voice.
The SEC decision, when finally issued, will provide definitive and just resolution to PSI current corporate challenges, and will enable the hospital to
rechart the course of growth and leadership it has pursued over the last five decades," said Atty.
It would be exciting to see more schools getting disruptive and more students in the UAE being offered opportunities to
rechart their journey of discovery anew.
(126.) James Morgan, "Trying to
Rechart Course for G.O.P.," Daily Boston Globe, 6 February 1938, D4.
As the Bureau's new leadership begins to
rechart the agency's course, the reform agenda aims to outline concrete steps that would improve consumer protection; ensure consumers have access to the marketplace and choice in products and services; and promote access to financial information so consumers can make informed decisions.
For over a decade, this course has given hundreds of adults, some of them immigrants or refugees, the knowledge, confidence, and power to
rechart their lives.
To attempt to "revisit" these places now, these sites of resistance from Basra to Guantanamo, to
rechart their place in literature, review their location in political histories, is less a project in the nostalgics of recuperation than a renewed struggle to recapture, recall, maybe even relive or revive, the liberatory agendas, strategies, outlines, stories, short and long, visions that once led, could still lead.
As a result, Waldie's memoir allows us to
rechart the spiritual geography of suburbia, viewing its limitations as possibility and its possibilities as limitations.
The final two essays in this special issue, Jodi Schorb's study of the representations of heart in eighteenth-century execution sermons and the Declaration of Debora Proctor, introduced and analyzed by Abby Chandler, suggest other ways to
rechart the history of American women writers and, as Gaul writes, "force us to reconceptualize conventional trajectories for the historical development of the seduction and sentimental narratives," not through the transnational but by reconsidering how women engaged legal mechanisms in eighteenth-century New England in ways that were less ideologically fixed than more familiar literary histories of the rise of the seduction novel might suggest (279).
Efforts to
rechart the boundaries of modernism in relation to the middlebrow can be seen in the journal Modernist Cultures, the series Literary Texts and the Popular Marketplace, and in Chiara Brigand and Kathy Mezei.
I always fear for you,dear daughter,and the` spirit that knows no boundsC*.and in panic I tried to
rechart the journey of your life, and give you a new map but Alas!
Yet her gesture is far from modest: The artist proposes to
rechart the world in order to better inhabit it.