Schools that need a helping hand will be able to call on volunteers to help in their activities. |
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But the City keeper will give his old club no helping hand at Blundell Park tomorrow. |
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You were a very caring and compassionate man, who was always there to lend a helping hand. |
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Offering critics a helping hand by planting for their use a ready-made descriptive vocabulary reflects his shrewdness of strategy. |
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Padraig was a true blue follower of the games and was always willing to lend a helping hand whenever the need arose. |
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Fish struggling to find their way through a fish pass have been given a helping hand by the Environment Agency. |
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Even the conductress will occasionally offer a helping hand to an overburdened bumpkin. |
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Poets are selfish, self-centred people who regard neighbours as noisy interruptions rather than deserving objects in need of a helping hand. |
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I now have my get-up-and-go back, which has meant I've been able to do things like giving my son a helping hand with his new bike. |
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I have no doubt it would lend a listening ear and give a helping hand to the prosecution of the work. |
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She said though the race was a women-only event, men should not be afraid to offer to lend a helping hand. |
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The Environment Agency has been giving nature a helping hand by re-introducing water crowfoot plants into the River Coln near Whelford. |
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He was also a wonderful neighbour and was always ready with a helping hand when needed. |
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She was always hardworking and industrious and ever ready with a helping hand. |
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Instead of kicking them when they are down they should be extending a helping hand to the unemployed people. |
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The two sitting Conservative Ward Councillors work very hard on local issues and are always ready to lend an ear or a helping hand. |
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Meanwhile, Ryder Cup hero Paul McGinley got the helping hand he was looking for to give himself a chance of victory. |
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Are Hansons' ghosts likely to give Howard another helping hand come the 2004 election? |
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Mayors are to be told the Government is withdrawing the helping hand it has given them to cover their debts. |
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This is the latest service to be set up for south west London's time-poor residents who need a helping hand to organise their lives. |
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Little sisters are doing it for themselves, with a helping hand from their big sisters. |
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A group set up to help children get a helping hand from big business has closed. |
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He shipped a sea or two, as the sailor would say, before he was rescued by the helping hand of his companion from a watery grave. |
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I accept that he has had trouble reading it, and I will give him another helping hand. |
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Personally I would like you to respond to my comments and give me an adult's helping hand in understanding this political mess. |
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Instead, he should lend another helping hand to the organization, coming up with another one of his multi-team trades. |
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All the donations are distributed by the Rotary Clubs, who take a list of people who need an extra helping hand this Christmas. |
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We need a kickstart, we need to be given a helping hand and we appeal to you to offer that helping hand. |
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Many of his colleagues in that administration were avid to extend the helping hand of government into family relationships. |
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As a Paralympian, the disabled athletes are forever reaching out with a helping hand. |
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A joint enterprise would give Siemens the helping hand it needs to make next generation handsets for the European market. |
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Go to any corner of the world and you will find a Rotarian extending a helping hand to the poor in his own small way. |
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Some said it fostered a feeling of brotherhood, and, that like any helping hand, could bring the two nations closer. |
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And, to the extent that fate sometimes lends a quirky, helping hand, relief may come from an unlikely source. |
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She was a fine neighbour who could always be relied on to lend a helping hand and good advice. |
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The school authorities identified three meritorious students from below poverty line families and gave them a helping hand. |
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To Kathleen and the children he was kindness personified and was always there to lend a helping hand when anyone was in trouble. |
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The bank realized that during this difficult situation it had to lend them a helping hand. |
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People who lived in a community all knew each other and lent a helping hand whenever they could. |
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Bridget was a lady of gentle manner and a fine and dependable neighbour who was always happy to lend a helping hand. |
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I thought my first exam paper would be easy and I've been stuck on this question for two days now Hopefully my tutor will give me a helping hand. |
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The Games got a helping hand from no fewer than 5,100 volunteers, without whose sweat equity was applied to all aspects of the Games. |
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The guy who was up gave a helping hand to the guy who was lower down, knowing that their positions could be reversed without warning. |
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Around midnight however the skies lent a helping hand with a steady drizzle. |
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They were gentle people who went quietly about their lives, always willing and glad to be able to lend a helping hand to neighbours and friends. |
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He seemed to always know just exactly what to say and he was always ready to lend a helping hand to anyone. |
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A good and kind neighbour, Josie always liked to lend a helping hand and sound advice. |
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Jim was a good-hearted and kind man, who always had time to lend a helping hand or stop and chat. |
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Farmers need a helping hand with assistance for the transport of fodder, livestock and water. |
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Billy and John are great supporters of the guild always ready to lend a helping hand. |
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She was a wonderful neighbour and friend and loved to lend a helping hand and words of encouragement. |
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Sean was a pleasant, courteous and gracious neighbour who could always be relied on to lend a helping hand. |
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However, it was hard to see how Bolton could have kept Spurs out had Mr Dunn not given the home team a helping hand. |
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Richard and I believe in giving that helping hand to those that otherwise might struggle to overcome inequalities. |
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Most of us know the Order of Malta as those who are always willing to give a helping hand at local events. |
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Bradford's Industrial Museum has been giving a helping hand to a textile archive in Leeds. |
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The Sunni Kurds, who tend to be secular in their politics, have offered them a helping hand in recent years. |
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And by extending a helping hand, you are extending yourself. |
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I just wonder if a single one of them got a helping hand from staffers for McConnell or Paul. |
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The emporium has also extended a helping hand to artisans from Nagercoil who were affected by tsunami by giving them a chance to display their cutwork embroidery at the expo. |
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They offer a helping hand, reliable information, entertainment in good taste and a strong tool for community identification. |
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And of course the credit crisis is lending a helping hand in spreading the word. |
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Only this way, only once they are prepared to lend a helping hand and act with foresight will they avoid having to say sorry later. |
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This would be a good time to take an interest in a child, to get to know him and give him a helping hand. |
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Here, people put their heart and soul into it especially David Herzog, our managing director in Italy who gave a helping hand at site. |
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Since this is a very competitive market, we should give a helping hand to the vintners. |
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To her, they have been much more than just a helping hand with the children and housework. |
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Will the government finally step up and extend a helping hand to working families with cellphone charges? |
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This prep day was created to give young musicians a helping hand, but is by no means compulsory. |
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Our 'built on' monitors can sometimes need a helping hand, which is why we have equipped them with installation brackets as standard. |
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If everyone gives a helping hand and is compassionate towards the homeless, anything is possible. |
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Those against this directive are thus giving the governments a helping hand. |
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And they promised to work constructively and in solidarity and to offer each other a helping hand. |
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Careful and cautious, the animal keeper will be a helping hand for years to come. |
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The integrated table system offers a way to expand your operation and gives you a helping hand with your everyday business. |
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But first we should make sure that these children know a mother's smile and a father's helping hand. |
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Could you do with a helping hand in beginning to address these issues? |
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Lisa considers me a traitor to the very essence of America, providing a helping hand to those in genuine need. |
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Facing a regime that bombards them from above, the Syrian rebels want the West to lend a helping hand. |
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She had made it clear that she was more than capable of being happy without him having to offer a helping hand, and that bothered him to an infinite degree. |
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But fate ordained otherwise, and he lost his life in the most tragic way as he was lending a helping hand at the new home his daughter Jane and her husband were building. |
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The Asian diplomatic community has lent a helping hand to the students. |
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It is a budget that brings hope for people who need that helping hand. |
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Spirituality in medicine is more about the genuine compassion, presence and the helping hand we offer our patients than the specific questions we choose to ask. |
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And the fundraising champion has been given another helping hand from a local gym, who have vowed to sponsor him with a personal trainer for a year. |
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That would have the advantage of setting skills within a framework and provide a helping hand to local authorities with difficulty in finding the appropriate resources. |
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When a Francophone organization is vulnerable for any reason, the other organizations will lend a helping hand to bring it back on course and ensure its sustainability. |
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In view of the previous generosity of the Iraqi people at a time when Iraq was prospering, it would be fitting for them to see that the countries of the world are now extending them a helping hand. |
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Ontario workers need a helping hand, not a cold shoulder. |
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Asad Shariff, aged 14, gets a helping hand from Fusileer Richard Marsh to scale the wall of the assault course. |
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Youngsters from Stockton gave the environment a helping hand as part of their Duke of Edinburgh Award. |
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We offer a helping hand to people who find themselves out of work. |
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Generous towards his neighbours, Mr. Lude was always ready to give a helping hand. His actions would be rewarded later on when several neighbours, looking to sell their woodlots, would sell to no one but him. |
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The most precious ways to share these gifts are the simplest, and the most appreciated: a word of welcome, a helping hand, an encouraging smile, a sympathetic ear, a respectful attitude, a generous heart. |
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All this has to be done with minimal resources and under the gaze of a skeptical international community that is more likely to adopt a wait-and-see approach than offer a helping hand. |
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France, which has long been committed to this fight, calls for the rapid adoption of this text, which may be seen as a helping hand extended to all those who wish to defend their identity. |
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Help Infinity elderly home health care services offers compassionate in home health care and personalized services for seniors who need a helping hand once in awhile. |
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Typical projects include the development of children's hospices, care centers for the elderly, camps for disabled children, and vocational training centers for at-risk youth and others who need a helping hand. |
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The Irish Coast Guard went along to lend a helping hand to their friends. |
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This helping hand made all the difference. |
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A passionate defender of 'techno culture', Garnier has always shown himself willing to give a helping hand to up-and-coming techno acts, frequently mixing little-known records into his sets. |
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The ACT Government also had a helping hand from the miniscule eight-legged gorse spider mite. |
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But Germany's manufacturers have been more than compensated by the weak euro, which allowed its export machine to whirr on. Fiscal pragmatism lent a helping hand. |
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Eventually a woman emerges from the crowd to give the rodent a helping hand, knocking the rat from its handrail perch and allowing it to scuttle off from whence it came. |
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La Poste is also test-marketing personal services such as child-minding, tutoring, odd jobs and household help for the elderly, in an effort to become a dependable port of call for those in need of a helping hand. |
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Finally, she extends to the souls in purgatory, who implore her intercession and her prayers, the helping hand which may lead them happily at last to eternal blessedness in heaven. |
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This funding will assist young men and young women to find shelter in the short term, and stability in the long term, as they receive a helping hand at a critical moment in their journey. |
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Of course, becoming an au pair in Great Britain sounds great. It makes you think of vacation with free board and lodging in return of giving the host family a helping hand. |
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We are here today to encourage the government to finally, at long last, offer a helping hand to those who have been callously neglected for so many years. |
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With a helping hand from Bikoko and a handful of other musicians including accordionist Pascal Pallisco and drummer Fabrice Thompson, Mikidache set about producing his debut album himself. |
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So, armed with pickaxes, citizens would descend on the wharves in springtime, eager to lend nature a helping hand by breaking up the remaining blocks of ice. |
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Robson's shot-shy troops even I wasted the helping hand given to them by referee Matt Messias when he awarded them a late penalty. |
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At previous Evening With Al Pacino shows he has been remarkably candid, revealing everything from the best kisser he's worked with to the actors he's given a helping hand. |
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Confused whisky drinkers are being given a helping hand by Diageo, which has designed a Malt Whisky Map to demystify the category for retailers and consumers. |
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Even at a time when we are all feeling the pinch, there is always a remarkable willingness to extend a helping hand to those less fortunate than ourselves. |
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The set of three Bach flower remedies are made using natural flower essences and are designed to give a helping hand with diet and healthy living regimes. |
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However, in many meetings there is no official list of deacons, the work of deaconship being shared by anyone willing to give a helping hand in a particular task. |
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