That means you must fight your way to a crate to get a temporary crack at some random,
potentially useful equipment.
Not exact matches
Writing about head impact sensors in the March 2013 issue of the British Journal of Sports Medicine, [13] Jeffrey S. Kutcher, MD, of the Department of Neurology and Michigan Neurosport at the University of Michigan, concurs that the «development of easily deployable sport
equipment - based accelerometer systems... provide [s][a]
potentially useful, clinical information.»
«The weak activity previously published for the ACT family as a whole probably explains why this group was not further evaluated, and it is intriguing to think that other
potentially useful antibiotic groups are languishing in obscurity in academic journals just needing expert review using modern processes and
equipment.»
As summarised by the Department for Education, «used with care, leasing can be a
useful way of paying for
equipment over the period it will be used, avoiding a large one - off payment, and
potentially saving money.»