More extreme members of right-wing groups tap into this divide by encouraging mistrust of city dwellers and the educated. |
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Traditionally, material comfort, wealth, and security are the least of the concerns of forest dwellers. |
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Britain's countryside was placed on red alert yesterday as both city and rural dwellers were told to keep away from farmland. |
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It was also a chance for city dwellers to take a closer look at ferrets, birds of prey and working dogs. |
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He takes every opportunity to highlight the negative aspects of city life and comment on the remoteness of urban dwellers. |
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The sites are home to a vast variety of reef dwellers such as the damselfish, angelfish, butterflyfish and sweetlips. |
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With its river beds, attractive hill ridges and stunning mountains, it provides city dwellers access to nature right on their doorstep. |
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Like other desert dwellers, the aoudad is most active in the cooler hours of dawn and dusk. |
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Both land and water dwellers believe in river spirits, and aquatic masquerades reflect a shared ethos. |
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The music is inspired by the Ancient Greek myth of island dwellers whose diet of fruit from the lotus tree makes them forget their past troubles. |
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The lurex and chain versions were adopted by the more street-wise city dwellers at the same time. |
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They will also prey on crayfish, frogs, tadpoles, and other aquatic dwellers. |
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There was a growing tendency among city dwellers to install power showers instead of baths. |
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Rents were horrendous for urban dwellers, with entire families doubling up in crowded single room tenements. |
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Neighbouring condo dwellers hang outside on their balconies watching the festivities. |
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Rural skills in craft making are often unique and in varying demand from city dwellers. |
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Rustic, self-sufficient country dwellers, Cajuns lived along the bayous and swamps of Louisiana for more than 200 years. |
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We city dwellers basically live on top of each other, so interactions sometimes get tense, especially when our kids may be threatened. |
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Rural dwellers have traditionally believed in the existence of a variety of supernatural beings. |
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People like them will never be rural dwellers, just townees with a house in the country. |
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The poorest peasants and urban dwellers build their own adobe huts or wooden shanties. |
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Zebra sharks are primarily bottom dwellers that live in warm shallow inland waters, of continental and island shelves. |
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Transplantation of slum dwellers from the cities to other areas has been under way. |
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Countryside dwellers are planning direct action protests should a North Yorkshire landfill site be used to bury foot and mouth culled cattle. |
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The large mammals such as uintatheres, pantodonts, and tapiroids may have been stream-side or marsh dwellers. |
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That makes a big difference from eastern regions, where most city dwellers have only studied Ukrainian as a foreign language in school. |
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Sodden and anxious, riverbank dwellers gazed skywards as the heavens opened. |
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There is also a primary school at the premises run by the committee for the poor and slum dwellers in the locality. |
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Bottom dwellers in the nearshore region of lakes and in rivers, gobies prefer rocky habitat that provides lots of hiding opportunities. |
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Long curls of smoke ascended from the huts of the dwellers in many directions, and mountains were snow-capped in every direction. |
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One thing we coastal dwellers have that upcountry folk don't, is our beaches. |
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It may come as a surprise to city dwellers, but urban environments could be the ideal place for humans to live. |
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This lode gold is the stuff worked by legendary dwellers below the earth, like the dwarf who forged the treasure of the Nibelungs. |
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Spot the walnut tree, toss the multi-hooked seed heads of the burr plants, help these path dwellers hitch a fleecy ride. |
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The consequences of ill-health for bustee dwellers are examined and the coping strategies employed are described. |
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Set among peace-loving forest dwellers in the swinging 60s, the lively production even features a guest appearance by The King himself, Elvis. |
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Very few city dwellers are willing to go to the trouble of catching a wild cat, which is a dangerous exercise anyway. |
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Walthamstow is like any other anonymous London suburb flourishing from the overspill of city dwellers from areas such as Islington and Hackney. |
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Ecologically, they range from forest dwellers, such as wild pigs and chevrotains, to dominant large herbivores on grasslands. |
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Since some of these sites have now been developed as homesites, they still pose a health risk to city dwellers. |
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In particular, Richard Skinner is dubious about the President's supposed improvement among urban dwellers. |
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City dwellers are flocking to South Lakeland to snap up farms as they try to buy into an idyllic rural life. |
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Austrian city dwellers often take a midafternoon coffee break at a national institution, the coffeehouse. |
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Rural dwellers have traditionally lived in whitewashed stone cottages and farmhouses. |
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In the months following the school's inauguration, some village dwellers paid to have the same kind of work done on their own homes. |
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Marsh dwellers, acting on their own initiative, have begun breaking down the dams and embankments that were holding back the waters. |
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But for more and more renters, particularly young city dwellers, the great Australian dream is becoming a pipe dream. |
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Wooden shoes are an item of traditional dress among rural dwellers in the interior of the region. |
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Demolishing slum areas and constructing apartment buildings for former slum dwellers has never been a success in helping the poor. |
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Remember, a long time ago it was the cities that converted to a new faith and the country dwellers were slow to follow. |
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Urban and rural dwellers have adopted creative survival strategies, that have helped them cope with difficult times. |
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Many city dwellers still view themselves as partly rural, a fact attested to by a weekend and holiday return to cottages in the countryside. |
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The most popular form of relaxation for city dwellers is to spend a weekend at a country cottage. |
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Tensions have increased between the cosmopolitan city dwellers and their recently-arrived country cousins. |
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Everyday low prices no doubt appeal to city dwellers no less than to their country cousins. |
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Among the poverty-stricken urban dwellers children often work as mechanics' assistants, tea sellers, or maidservants. |
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Before man provided shelter in the shape of overhanging eaves, martins were cliff and cave dwellers. |
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Care of infants is largely a female responsibility, though forest dwellers tend to share parental duties. |
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Past efforts to try to entice dwellers to stay in rural settings have failed. |
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For most New York City apartment dwellers, though, the answer lies somewhere in between. |
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Later, their decay uses up oxygen needed by fish and other aquatic dwellers. |
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A channel of fat and bone in the lower jaw replaces the external ears and auditory meatus of land dwellers. |
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Coast dwellers are accustomed to the daily rhythm of the tides, which are primarily lulled in and out by the gentle gravitational tug of the moon. |
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The hutments and slums have also assumed a political dimension, since slum dwellers have voting rights and get to flex their muscles in elections. |
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There was a marginal difference in the levels of support among urban voters compared to rural ones, with city dwellers only slightly more likely to vote no. |
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A contretemps involving mistaken identities reminiscent of the opera lightheartedly weaves through the antics of farmers, dwellers, and other rural folk. |
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But uncomfortable as dust-storms may be for town and city dwellers, by far their worst effect is the stripping of topsoil from Australia's arable land. |
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Some anthropologists believe that the very earliest cave dwellers used everything from thorns, sticks, bones and stone to fashion crude hair pins. |
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You'll also be less likely to fall victim to the muscle tension and strain that most keyboard-tapping cubicle dwellers are afflicted with every day. |
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Standing on the bank of a canal together with other joyful dwellers of a clay town, the guardsman was watching the impetuous flow, a broad smile on his face. |
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Holding the chain railing, we followed our leader and had up-close encounters with yellow tails, sergeant majors, blue tang, trumpet fish, and other reef dwellers. |
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It is therefore natural for them to avenge themselves on city dwellers. |
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More serious still, the slum dwellers face enormous risk from unsafely built environments. |
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The dolphins made it to the beach and the capitulators made it into deep water with minimal disturbance to the circadian rhythms of the seafront dwellers. |
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With the progress of civilization all over the world, forest dwellers that were hunters and fruit gatherers have turned into denizens of the concrete jungle. |
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They who follow him should not be puffed up with pride at the idea that they are the seeing, the dwellers in the sunshine of Truth, the living who are not dead in spirit. |
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For how long will rural dwellers subsidise city petrol prices? |
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The cave dwellers equate the shadows with reality, naming them, talking about them, and even linking sounds from outside the cave with the movements on the wall. |
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Country dwellers often had precise knowledge of the quality and value of their neighbours' properties and estates, in relation to both moveables and immoveables. |
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And it directs us to become, as bioregionalists, dwellers in the land. |
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Peasants and town dwellers paid numerous taxes to the church. |
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Most of the exhibitions left the viewers with the conviction that the most authentic identity of an urban environment is determined by its dwellers. |
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The country dwellers and habitants of market towns and traditional villages keep away from the large towns and cities unless absolutely necessary. |
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Its massive platform gives city dwellers the opportunity to traipse around with relatively painless added height. |
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The Arabian house will be home to the scymitar oryx, a medium sized antelope with long curved horns believed to be extinct in the wild, and other desert dwellers. |
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Foliage dwellers vary in colour from fawn to brown or bright green. |
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Being dwellers on an island which is frequented by a teeming weekend population of sightseers, they have become very used to the tourists and are quite unafraid. |
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They include such things as spiders, leeches, millipedes, pill bugs, flatworms, mites, beetles, and water dwellers such as water scorpions and nematode worms. |
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As unpleasant as it may seem, the dwellers had become accustomed to their surroundings and the unpleasant odor and stenches of the dirt, grim, mud, and rat droppings. |
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A spectacular array of bottom dwellers such as sea lilies, brittle stars, sponges, and bivalves congregate on coral reefs at depths of up to 1,340 meters. |
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Large areas of the countryside were out of bounds to both city and rural dwellers today as Government officials tried to halt the spread of foot-and-mouth disease. |
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These urban dwellers wanted their recreational sites near at hand. |
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The zoo here is now playing host to a pair each of seamy crocodiles, alligators and caimans, giving the city dwellers a glimpse of some rare species. |
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During a recent visit, I found liberals and intellectuals, jet-setters and slum dwellers, men and women, Brahmins and untouchables expressing this Hindu pride. |
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It was the night that dwellers in caves had watched from some high place among rocks. |
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But we do not accept this fate with the torpor of other city dwellers. |
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Rather than developing zygodactyly to aid running, Harris suggests that both the roadrunner and its predecessor began as tree dwellers and moved to the ground later. |
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However, years spent among the farmers, fishermen, lepers and slum dwellers of more than 20 different countries rid Stackhouse of these easy assumptions. |
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After four days' travelling, he teamed up with a group of forest dwellers called the Evenk and set about honing his techniques. |
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Iwould not be surprised to hear the tent dwellers at St Paul''s are being charged ground rents. |
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Cycling in Denmark is a common form of transport, particularly for the young and for city dwellers. |
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Fish bones and shells are common in the middens indicating that dwellers ate seafood. |
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Both cetaceans and sirenians are fully aquatic and therefore are obligate water dwellers. |
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As a result, creatures such as fish, shrimp, and especially immobile bottom dwellers die off. |
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Cape Cod became a summer haven for city dwellers beginning at the end of the 19th century. |
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Historically this contained marshes and gave the name to the Durotriges, water dwellers, the Celtic tribe of Dorset. |
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However, most of the time they seem to mean northern dwellers with a mobile life style. |
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Huguenot numbers grew rapidly between 1555 and 1561, chiefly amongst nobles and city dwellers. |
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About half of mountain dwellers live in the Andes, Central Asia, and Africa. |
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January is when most dwellers are seriously starting to look rather Voldemortesque avec alabaster lustre. |
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But farmers and beachfront dwellers aren't the only individuals likely to suffer directly from greenhouse effects, scientists reported last week. |
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In 1971, slum dwellers accounted for one in six Mumbai residents. |
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Well, newly-promoted Leicester City, Burnley and QPR are the cellar dwellers facing a swift exit from the Premier League. |
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Sunday's match against Deccan Chargers provides them an opportunity to complete a double over the cellar dwellers. |
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Either scenario would preserve the Aviva Premiership status of Newcastle, champions in 1998, but top-flight cellar dwellers for the past decade. |
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Then you can include typical woodland dwellers like epimediums, uvularia and hostas. |
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Predominantly farmers and business people, and urban dwellers, an estimated 30 million Igbo people live in Nigeria. |
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He cannot afford to be indifferent to social habits of man, the pattern of life, individual likes and dislikes of the dwellers, household furnishings and equippings. |
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Cellar dwellers Gold Coast United will not be turned into a travelling road show to combat poor home support according to the club's owner Clive Palmer. |
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If they lose the spoils are divided among the dog pound dwellers. |
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Nevertheless, the former King of the Seven Seas remains determined to protect both the Atlanteans and surface dwellers from those who endanger them. |
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The Chattuarii, whose name appears to mean that they are dwellers upon the Chatti lands, or else Chatti people, lived near the Rhine, probably between IJssel and Lippe. |
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First, the birth rate of new urban dwellers falls immediately to replacement rate, and keeps falling, reducing environmental stresses caused by population growth. |
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From a distance it might be hard to tell the Delmarva fox squirrel from the nosy, noisy grey squirrel familiar to most urban and suburban dwellers. |
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For the landless cabin dwellers it meant emigration or extinction. |
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The enormous growth of industrial production and industrial potential also led to a rapid urbanisation of Germany, which turned the Germans into a nation of city dwellers. |
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The emergence of Congo hemorrhagic fever in provincial capital Quetta is posing a serious threat for the bio-safety and bio-security of all dwellers. |
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In a statement in Islamabad on Friday, he said the violent action against the katchi abadi dwellers showed how the PMLN government is becoming increasingly fascistic. |
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Cellar dwellers Wolviston travel to Seaton Carew with manager Steve Cook looking for a maximum return against a Seasiders team who are struggling as much as the Villagers. |
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The Premiership's cellar dwellers are frustration in rugby form. |
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Other areas where progress has been significant include the reduction of people suffering from undernourishment and the decline of the proportion of slum dwellers in cities. |
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