Happy Father's Day to all the fathers that pass by this blog and may you continue being the good fathers that you are. |
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Movie producers decided to head that threat off at the pass by agreeing to rules of self-censorship which Hays helped form. |
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All three pictures that follow were taken today in a single pass by the satellite. |
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Mr Flynn, the country's leading private industrial relations mediator, has been handed something of a hospital pass by the Government. |
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I'm a veteran of this route and as usual, I'll be craning my neck when we pass by the ballpark and the marina. |
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A pass by Sue Gilmour found Olympian Rhona Simpson in position to slot home the only goal of the first half. |
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I lied down between the gaping doorways and watched the openness of the world pass by, napping in the sunlight that flooded our car. |
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For example, in Disneyland there are fake birds worked by electric motors which emit caws and shrieks as you pass by them. |
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Despite the contentiousness of a mandatory fee for a universal transit pass, it did pass by a small majority. |
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I walked quickly and quietly up to the corner and took out a small bat, waiting for the guard to pass by to clock him over the head. |
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The little church has seen hundred of years pass by and lives long forgotten have played their dramas out around it. |
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Whenever I go to London I pass by the site of the Battle of the Thames, where Tecumseh died and we administered a drubbing to you chaps. |
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The ban on what opponents call partial birth abortion is likely to pass by a wide margin when it comes up for a vote scheduled in the Senate. |
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He also said cars are unable to pass by parked cars in the same area without being forced up on the kerbing and grass margins. |
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My husband jokes every time we pass by a shop window because I have to stop and be amazed at the sparkles. |
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The priest and the Levite who pass by unconcerned are the Old Testament law and prophets. |
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Every time we pass by the Angelika, that once great bastion of independent film for downtowners, we look to see what's showing. |
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Millions are expected to pass by his body as it lies in state, and there will be considerable numbers attending his funeral. |
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I slowed down to allow an out of control roller-blader to pass by in front of me and was rammed from behind by a woman in a small car. |
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These traces of identity pass by the spectator in ephemeral moments, reflected, refracted, and distorted, as in a funnyhouse mirror. |
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With Phil Berry, our mountaineering guide, I pushed up to the top of the pass by noon. |
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It's early-season, but you never know, a manta or whale shark could pass by. |
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Whale sharks pass by in late March and early April and the occasional dugong has been seen. |
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Did it just pass by the mods 'n' rockers battling on the seafronts at Brighton, Bournemouth and Great Yarmouth? |
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Place herbs and fragrant flowers in raised planters near walkways, so you can enjoy their scents as you pass by. |
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Alternative treatments, though, are often given a pass by Western medical practitioners. |
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This involved brief informal conversations with the women about their attitudes regarding the men who pass by their windows. |
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The screen was turned on again and it showed Jordan pass by a boy her age with brown and red tinted hair. |
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Physiological signs of stress such as high blood pressure become measurably lower when drivers pass by vegetation. |
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We talk for quite a while, their cigarettes aglow, while I watch a local denizen pass by on the sidewalk three times. |
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A misplaced pass by Bloom led to Wilson being played into the box and his low shot nestled into the far corner of the net. |
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City were getting closer and a misplaced pass by Tony Barras set Ward away. |
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I had a book with me, but most of the time I spent gazing out of the window, watching California pass by. |
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The article contained potentially explosive material, yet its contents pass by the editors without comment. |
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Also, there are inconsiderate golfers who tend to walk ahead or pass by others immediately after executing their shot. |
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Maybe they decided to find a quieter location after realizing the frequency with which unmufflered motorcycles pass by on the street. |
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All the good things this Labour Government has done pass by ignored, unheralded, unpublicised by either the press or the government itself. |
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When Derek Adams set about shielding a pass by Jason Dair, Moore attempted to body-check him, but succeeded only in bouncing off the Motherwell midfielder. |
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Witnesses say that they saw it pass by a weigh station at high speed. |
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If, like the priest and the Levite, 10 or 20 members of the public pass by the injured man without rendering assistance, which of them is responsible? |
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I watched the city pass by, the narrow, winding streets with their rounded paving stones, the precarious buildings that'd never known an architect's touch. |
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The Lana Del Rey of Born to Die and Ultraviolence never lets her sexual orientation pass by unmarked. |
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Spectators watch as models pass by during the Concept Korea show at mercedes-benz Fashion Week in New York on Thursday. |
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He owned a bar in Puebla and when I would pass by it to and from my work as a nanny, he would come out to talk to me. |
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They may or may not have noticed the performers, standing stock-still and scattered throughout the room, whom they had to pass by in order to get to their seats. |
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The enzymes enter the narrowest ducts of the branching secretory system, and then pass by larger and larger ducts to the single pancreatic duct itself. |
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Rachel was somebody who did not stand and just watch life pass by she was a participator, someone who was always willing to involve herself fully in projects. |
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In despair, many seem to have passively thrown up their hands and resigned themselves to observation of these despicable indecencies as they pass by. |
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The labels are fed into the labeling machine, which has a spinning device that rolls glue onto the labels and then sticks them to the bottles as they pass by. |
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Sciorelli's dark eyes watch a young gamine pass by the table. |
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We avert our collective eyes as we pass by the gentlemen and ladies of the road and each time we do it we create ghosts to people the shadows of our world. |
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Kobe Bryant nearly picks off a pass by San Antonio guard Terry Porter in the first quarter Sunday. |
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The children of light, whether they are Chestertonians or not, cannot afford to pass by The New Jerusalem. |
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The prefabs are long gone of course but when I pass by I often think of the happy childhood I enjoyed. |
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Who honours not his father, Henry the fifth, that made all France to quake, Shake he his weapon at us, and pass by. |
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A simple gate adjustment on the counter allows only one tablet or capsule to pass by the machine's electric eye at a time. |
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The Messenger of Allah happened to pass by a person who was busy in praying while the dawn prayer had commenced. |
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Don't let this opportunity pass by if you are looking for a no hassel food business. |
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But, as I have remarked before, few events pass by these days without some confected moral outrage. |
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He was presented with a boarding pass by the British Airways CEO Willie Walsh for the first departing flight, BA302 to Paris. |
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I GET chivvied something rotten about my bus pass by my good pal Peter the curly-locked carpenter. |
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Might it not be possible, that this wandering star would pass by the sun and reappear in the east? |
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The assemblies pass by on a conveyor, or if they are heavy, hung from an overhead crane or monorail. |
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Like NunatuKavut, the straits is also known for its Labrador sea grass and the multitude of icebergs that pass by the coast via the Labrador Current. |
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On their very first play from scrimmage, after Utah State free safety Caleb Taylor had picked off an errant pass by UO quarterback Justin Roper, the Aggies called a timeout. |
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Keep an eye peeled, you never know when the ice-cream truck will pass by. |
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In addition to spotting Pinyon Jays and Ptarmigans, visitors will also pass by the highest, largest and one of the most distinctive peaks in the state. |
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One of the British titles, plus the foreign ones, would pass by some legal jiggery-pokery known as a special remainder to his older brother William, a Norfolk clergyman. |
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