The egg creams Rachel and I had afterwards at the Howard Johnson's were mighty tasty, though. |
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Then again, I probably wouldn't have been able to hear much ukulele over Johnson's overdriven polyrhythms and unusual Dorian modes. |
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Barry Johnson's father was an engineer whose first jobs used his skill as a toolmaker, then later he became a planning engineer. |
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But the critics who long for Johnson's departure may be in for an unpleasant surprise. |
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In their strong colors, direct frontal poses, and careful detailing, the Burnett likenesses are typical of Johnson's best work. |
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In what seemed to be Zachary Johnson's most vulnerable moment, he still had that aura of conceit or self confidence. |
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Adam Johnson's deep cross from the right found Martin Packer on the opposite flank. |
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I particularly admired his performances of J. P. Johnson's stride pieces, boogie-woogie, and of his own works for organ. |
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Few franchises in the league are equipped to neutralize the potential that would be generated by Johnson's addition to the Ravens. |
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Most of the chapter consists of criticisms of Johnson's writings on naturalism and the philosophy of science. |
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When they see Johnson's daisy ad the first time, they're shocked and find that to be very dirty pool. |
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Matt Johnson's deep, brooding voice gets prominence in the mix, and is often double-tracked. |
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Their first meeting around Johnson's dinner table ended in a quarrel since Wollstonecraft disagreed with Godwin's sweeping atheism. |
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The only sign of Johnson's spending was a people-carrier bearing a personalised number plate in the driveway outside the house. |
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Johnson's army, on the other hand, was composed primarily of New England militia men, Mohawk and Oneida Indians, and almost no British regulars. |
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Johnson's analyses are based on a case study of a single institution that has unique attributes. |
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Johnson's argument is based on some obvious fallacies, such as information requiring an intelligent author. |
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In exchange for Johnson's immortal soul, the devil tuned his guitar, thereby giving him the abilities, which he so desired. |
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On that summer league floor, James showed off the best of Magic Johnson's towering court vision, and had Jordan's lift to boot. |
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Among the exhibits at the rally will be a steam-driven threshing and baling set demonstrated by Johnson's of Banks, near Southport. |
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But Johnson's latest performance in the red and green of Leicester showed that he still has a ravenous appetite for club rugby. |
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Johnson's passion for wine began when he was at Cambridge University, where he read English. |
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But quick-thinking Sgt Lynne pulled Mr Johnson's tongue from his throat and put the biker in the recovery position until paramedics arrived. |
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She says that despite their political differences, Johnson's the first person to turn to over any knotty policy question. |
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The battle went a couple rounds, with Johnson's daughter krumping and busting out all kinds of moves with an exceptional amount of sass. |
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Johnson's biography is an engrossing portrait of a brilliant physicist who happens to be a complex and, at times, troubled character. |
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Sauntering along the park and past the bingo, I reflect on the only fact I know about Dr Johnson's amanuensis, other than where he's buried. |
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One might draw an analogy between Johnson's approach and President Bush's reliance on faith-based initiatives. |
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The four short interludes don't do much except show Johnson's talent for the portmanteau word. |
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Further weight was lent to that argument in the 2004 Six Nations championship, the first after Johnson's retirement. |
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Lyndon Johnson's political genius was creative not merely in the lower, technical aspects of politics but on much higher levels. |
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Hopkins' answer anticipates Charles Johnson's assessment of the no-win situation faced by the African American periodical press. |
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Johnson's voice is darkly pessimistic, yet trapped in the formulas of the Cold War. |
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As a messenger of peace, Johnson's cosmopolite offers redemption to a violent, racially striated world. |
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Speaking of Chinese translations, Harper's Magazine, once published a list of Chinese books riffing on Johnson's earlier classic. |
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Johnson's cosmopolites respond to changing dominant discourses of nation and citizenship. |
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Johnson's initial heyday was in the early 1970s when Pink Floyd and David Bowie grabbed the headlines with prog and glitter. |
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And Nick Johnson's work with the glove will probably convince Giambi that the free agent should take up DHing after all. |
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Johnson's study continues the important scholarly work of correcting this misreading. |
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Sally Johnson's Liza provided a lovely voice, equally rich and fruity in solo work. |
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Information was passed to West Yorkshire Police and a search warrant was executed at Johnson's home last November. |
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Robert Kennedy hated Johnson's grossness, his lies, his bullying of staff, his self-indulgence with whisky and food. |
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Since Johnson's legitimate and completely justified request Jordan has come out in the press and said that Johnson will be playing his football at Selhurst Park next season. |
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I suspect his obstruction of Johnson's appointment due to the abortive toxics study is related more to political posturing than to anyone's health or safety. |
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Burns not only tells the story of Johnson's rise and fall from sport's greatness, he also frames it with chilling accounts of the times in which Johnson lived. |
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If Queensland had deliberately targeted Johnson's suspect temperament ahead of the Test series, as some feared they might, then the tactic worked a treat initially. |
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This spelt trouble for Johnson's Indian nations, which had previously been a buffer zone between the French and British, while also holding a degree of the balance of power. |
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That win reduced Johnson's handicap, which was trimmed yet further when she won the overall trophy in the Charity Medal Shield open to men, women and juniors. |
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As the unexpectedly civil interaction continued, a woman toweled sweat off Johnson's head. |
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Woolf enjoys furnishing Johnson's London house in her imagination as much as she enjoys, we suspect, conjuring up the anemic-brained man in the ulster. |
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More significantly, this newfound appreciation of Johnson's work has sparked the latest in a series of blues revivals in North America and Europe. |
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He cited both Lyndon Johnson's and Richard Nixon's presidencies as examples of presidencies that were toppled by torrents of negative public criticism. |
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Kaufman is riffing on well-connected dots from Wolfe's reportage, as well as having a little fun with Johnson's reputation for old-school bullying and sulking. |
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On the same program soloist Robert Johnson's Five Loaves of Bread and Two Fish reached out in sinuous, endless curves that spoke of a different kind of quest. |
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Johnson's imagery is circumspect and oblique, his lyrics often indecipherably garbled, as if he were backing off from the concept even as he committed it to tape. |
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Some gospel music, like Blind Willie Johnson's, chronicles an indeterminate journey to an unknown destination. |
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Johnson's attempts at municipalising Cleveland Electric were frustrated by a state law that prohibited municipal ownership of a street railway company. |
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Johnson's work was highly praised by critics and showered with awards. |
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Johnson's expression is manly, vigorous, grandiloquent and bombastic. |
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Mr. Johnson's book, by contrast, abounds in strong opinions. |
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This notion has undoubtedly partly arisen because of Doctor Johnson's famous observation that going to sea was akin to being in prison, with the added danger of drowning. |
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Richard Johnson's mount has won his last two starts, following up a victory over this course and distance with a facile success at Folkestone last time. |
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Because of Johnson's strong family ties, the Falcons have gone the extra mile in accommodating his wish to spend the majority of the offseason with his wife and two children. |
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The official on the field ruled the catch good, but TV replays showed Johnson's elbow landed out of bounds before his second foot came down in bounds. |
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After returning from Atlanta to the New York area, Johnson's first journalism job was as a copy editor and writer at City News, a New Jersey weekly newspaper. |
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Johnson's chronic back problems flared up during that same game. |
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Johnson's painted organisms suggest a world we associate with that examined by paleobotanists and biochemists. |
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The defender climbed majestically at the near post to convert Johnson's corner. |
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The medic worried that Private Johnson's wounded leg was looking more gangrenous. |
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Johnson's account states that he married the daughter of a local plantation owner, although there is no supporting evidence for this. |
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During this time, Johnson's future was uncertain because his father was deeply in debt. |
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Towards the end of Johnson's stay at Oxford, his tutor, Jorden, left Pembroke and was replaced by William Adams. |
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By 1731 Johnson's father was deeply in debt and had lost much of his standing in Lichfield. |
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At the time, Warren was starting his Birmingham Journal, and he enlisted Johnson's help. |
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Johnson left for London with his former pupil David Garrick on 2 March 1737, the day Johnson's brother died. |
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In August, Johnson's lack of an MA degree from Oxford or Cambridge led to his being denied a position as master of the Appleby Grammar School. |
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For a decade, Johnson's constant work on the Dictionary disrupted his and Tetty's living conditions. |
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Philip Stanhope, 4th Earl of Chesterfield, was the patron of the Plan, to Johnson's displeasure. |
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It was years before Johnson's Dictionary, as it came to be known, turned a profit. |
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This only exacerbated Johnson's feelings of loss and despair after the death of his wife. |
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Johnson's work on The Plays of William Shakespeare took up most of his time. |
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There were heated exchanges between the two, and according to one of Johnson's letters, MacPherson threatened physical violence. |
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Burney waited for word of Johnson's condition, along with Windham, Strahan, Hoole, Cruikshank, Des Moulins and Barber. |
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Johnson's works, especially his Lives of the Poets series, describe various features of excellent writing. |
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Johnson's thoughts on biography and on poetry coalesced in his understanding of what would make a good critic. |
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Boswell's emphasis on Johnson's later years shows him too often as merely an old man discoursing in a tavern to a circle of admirers. |
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Two hundred years after Johnson's death, the posthumous diagnosis of Tourette syndrome became widely accepted. |
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They began to study Johnson's works with an increasing focus on the critical analysis found in his edition of Shakespeare and Lives of the Poets. |
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There are many societies formed around and dedicated to the study and enjoyment of Samuel Johnson's life and works. |
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The London Times and Punch produced parodies of Johnson's style for the occasion. |
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Dulles rebuffed Johnson's request, and informed Eisenhower of the objections made by the Senate. |
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Johnson's persistent requests, was partially due to the Americans failing to support Britain during the Suez Crisis. |
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She also wrote reviews, primarily of novels, for Johnson's periodical, the Analytical Review. |
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Jeff Johnson's nebbishy Blanche, for example, is a complete comic character, a demented Dorothy who can write her way back to Kansas. |
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This information will also be collated and analysed by Johnson's team both for content and for where it was reported. |
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But they were stunned when Glen Johnson's error let in Peter Odemwingie to fire past Pepe Reina on 75 minutes. |
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They came to the fore after the 1866 elections and undid much of Johnson's work. |
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Johnson's Literary Club, and looked in from time to time on his friend Holroyd in Sussex. |
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Johnson's dictionary was not the first English dictionary, nor even among the first dozen. |
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Johnson's dictionary was the first to comprehensively document the English lexicon. |
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Johnson's Plan received the patronage of Philip Stanhope, 4th Earl of Chesterfield but not to Johnson's pleasure. |
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Chesterfield did not care about praise, but was instead interested by Johnson's abilities. |
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On a more serious level, Johnson's work showed a heretofore unseen meticulousness. |
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Johnson's dictionary was made when etymology was largely based on guesswork. |
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Johnson's Dictionary has been available in replica editions for some years. |
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This information will also be collated and analysed by Johnson's team both for content and where it was reported. |
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The term is also common in American blues music, such as with Robert Johnson's 1937 song, Hellhound on My Trail. |
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But Johnson's tactic of forcing batsmen on to the back foot worked once more, as a widish fuller delivery was slashed behind. |
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Johnson's incredible driving skills enabled him to stay two steps ahead of the revenuers. |
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But despite dominating the first half, it took City 56 minutes to break the deadlock, Johnson's lovely left-footer finding the top corner. |
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The Reds carved the first opening of the second period as Glen Johnson's pull-back found David Ngog but the Frenchman hooked wide from six yards. |
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In 1944, soon after marrying, Woods and her husband, Herbert, moved to Harlem and she began working as a waitress at Johnson's Luncheonette. |
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In addition to Uncle Tom, I also analyze the similarities between Johnson's narrator and Stowe's biracial character, Adolph. |
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Johnson's Buck's party was also held at a location in the Perth Hills away from prying eyes. |
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Over the next four years, many of us went through a range of emotions as we all worked to reclaim what was once Johnson's Shut-Ins State Park. |
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In response, Johnson's organization is harvesting desert foods like tepary beans that were once common among his people. |
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Howard Johnson's team are dominating the northern scene and can add yet another winner with Spellchecker at Musselburgh. |
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The 15-year-old, who trains with Johnson's Kong Sudo in Coventry, is delighted to have reached this stage in her training. |
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Head offers eleven loosely linked stories reminiscent at times of Denis Johnson's Jesus' Son, at other times of dirty realism. |
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Johnson's previous Broadway stints include Hair, Catch Me If You Can and Hands on a Hardbody. |
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Remember back in junior high, you either wore Air Jordans by Nike or Magic Johnson's Converse high-tops. |
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Nobody predicted mass public endorsation of Jean Charest as Daniel Johnson's replacement. |
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If Mr Johnson's investigation reaches the same conclusion then the pricey consultants can be shown the door. |
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After flying the nest to start a family of her own, Sally worked for years at Johnson's dry cleaners and has fond memories of the friends she made there. |
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In Johnson's case, he's parlayed the wealth he gained as a result of launching, building, and ultimately selling BET into sports franchise ownership and the lodging industry. |
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Old Etonian David Cameron's endorsement of fellow school chum Johnson's candidacy does little to endorse his public utterances that the Tory party is a modern meritocracy. |
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Much to Johnson's surprise, his studies of such mutant mice have led to the identification of the gene responsible for a rare human disorder called nail-patella syndrome. |
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The product, known as DJ Spuddles, was first launched four years ago by Peter Johnson's Park Group but failed due to a lack of interest from supermarkets. |
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England France 12 19 by Adam Hathaway MARTIN JOHNSON'S boss flew into New Zealand on Friday but cosy chinwags will not be on the agenda after this shambles. |
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Eyelid scrubbing with Johnson's Baby Shampoo and hot compresses help people with posterior blepharitis, a dysfunction of the meibomian glands that line the eyelid margins. |
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Johnson's designing stays clear of straight edges and angular forms, its inspired by biomorphism and brought alive through surreal lighting effects. |
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As editor of The Spectator, Mr Johnson's crime was to sanction publication of an article suggesting that Liverpudlians were, among other things, hooked on grief. |
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For all this, one wonders if Johnson's aesthetic working of Merleau-Ponty retains enough phenomenological openness to render it a genuine aesthesis. |
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Loomis Fargo, the company created in the merger of Wells Fargo and Loomis Armored Car Services, have offered a pounds 300,000 reward for Johnson's capture. |
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Kasper Schmeichel brilliantly denied Marouane Chamakh before Bacary Sagna thumped home a second, though Bradley Johnson's screamer halved the deficit. |
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United began with more purpose in the early phase of the second half and Liverpool were grateful for Glen Johnson's crucial block from Young's goalbound shot. |
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But there are numerous examples of influence beyond Johnson's own circle. |
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Exuberant in its primitivism, High Kicks has a joyous, slightly naive spark that sometimes evokes the sort of tuneful messes to which Calvin Johnson's name is often attached. |
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He made major contributions to George Thomson's A Select Collection of Original Scottish Airs for the Voice as well as to James Johnson's Scots Musical Museum. |
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The condition was unknown during Johnson's lifetime, but Boswell describes Johnson displaying signs of TS including tics and other involuntary movements. |
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However, in Johnson's time they were very cheap and eaten by the poor. |
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On 17 June 1783, Johnson's poor circulation resulted in a stroke and he wrote to his neighbour, Edmund Allen, that he had lost the ability to speak. |
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The family remained in poverty until Sarah Johnson's cousin, Elizabeth Harriotts, died in February 1728 and left enough money to send Johnson to university. |
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Liverpool did have one moment of danger in the first half when Chelsea failed to clear Glen Johnson's cross and Branislav Ivanovic blocked Craig Bellamy's goalbound shot. |
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Yet other ballad operas from around this time, such as Charles Johnson's The Village Opera, also have arias sung to the tune of All in the Downs', but print Leveridge's tune. |
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