But I will add that it often happens that after I publish a novel or story, some event in the news echoes it. |
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It was never his intention to publish the manuscripts, but a friend who was a teacher read them and sent them to a publisher. |
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The NPC's manifesto is being given to all candidates and we will publish their responses before older voters go to the ballot box. |
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We have also started our own publishing company and the aim is to publish theosophical and theosophically related literature. |
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Every day for over a month on the front page of the paper, right next to the masthead, they publish a countdown to the start of the World Cup. |
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Meanwhile they continue to publish more third-hand hearsay from the British insurance industry. |
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We'd be happy to distribute maps, publish guidebooks, plow roads, and build trailheads. |
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Can an author with reason complain that he is cramped and shackled if he is not at liberty to publish blasphemy, bawdry, or sedition? |
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Random House trade imprints now publish lead titles as print books and e-books simultaneously. |
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He was also a famous bee-keeper and one of the first Dutchmen to publish a book about bee-keeping. |
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Accept and publish any bad trick reports you get even if it might seem like a less serious incident. |
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We commit to continuing to publish the serious scoops, the weighty investigative pieces and the incisive political analysis. |
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Small presses also publish most English translations of French-Canadian literature. |
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Mr Bayley urged him to put pressure on the Environment Agency to publish the report as soon as possible. |
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Bryologists from all countries are invited to publish original research from any field of bryology. |
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Just give 'em a bit of a spit and polish, then publish them as exciting new takes on the cultural zeitgeist. |
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No, I don't imagine he would use the N-word to describe a black person, or that eye would publish it. |
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In the academic world, we don't get to publish our books at academic presses without peer review. |
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The company should also publish a price list for Windows and charge all computer makers the same rate schedule. |
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I have developed more appreciation for how hard it is to publish a webzine. |
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For example they worked together on caustic curves during 1692-93 although they did not publish the work jointly. |
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The fact that the New Statesman can't find anything more grown-up to publish than this sort of stuff is indicative of its sad decline. |
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We would really love to publish your work, hopefully your present submission and future ones as well. |
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Then I'll find out how to stalk, bribe and blackmail book editors and publishing honchos until they relent and publish your book. |
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The reason I did not publish such stuff is that it was inconsequential claptrap. |
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The convention will publish periodicals and establish a Web site to promote distant and Internet educational programs. |
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The media are the media and the immutable fact is that they will only publish sensationalistic material. |
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The paper was forced to publish a humiliating front page apology for the fiasco the following day. |
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As a privately held company it did not publish financial performance figures. |
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During his very active life Zeisberger managed to publish several works in the Delaware tongue. |
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Seventy years ago, the Philological Society had resolved to publish a completely new English dictionary. |
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Contributing editors publish monthly columns, ensuring that we continually update our readers. |
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They publish online documentation that you can access from the program's help menu. |
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The company went so far as to publish its own statement of disinterest in the global credential. |
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The plan which we will publish will not be a collection of disjointed projects with no connecting logic. |
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That employer engaged other artists to finish the drawings and undertook to publish them on his return to England. |
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But if I take it in mind to publish an epithalamium without the author's consent, I commit an offense. |
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If any of you can provide me with examples of this character's cretinhood, I will happily publish them. |
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So I would be grateful if you could publish this letter to get people to register! |
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We also publish six of these opinions every week in our print Sunday Viewpoints section, using each vehicle to promote the other. |
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One of the projects under-taken by the students was to publish and illustrate a book of poetry with a peace theme. |
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Since the newspaper staff is inundated with these letters everyday, they have no choice but to publish at least some of them. |
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We are proud of our high journalistic standards and we would not publish any story unless entirely convinced of its accuracy. |
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The best independent cookshops in the country come together each year to publish a compact catalogue of the best of the products in their shops. |
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This should be an important reminder to all webmasters not to publish sensitive material online. |
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What should writers do in order to avoid the kind of heartache which arises when you publish a book and no one takes a blind bit of notice? |
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When I write and hit the publish button, I feel a proud sense of achievement and accomplishment. |
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Why would we need to publish trash books from other countries when we have so many of our own? |
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Try as one might, it is hard to think of another jailbird who was allowed to publish a book while still doing porridge. |
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It was, as Freedom of Information documents revealed, solely because he dared to publish this book. |
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Kent State University Press will soon publish a book of his Cleveland landscapes. |
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In other news, Art In Motion has signed a new agreement to publish open-edition prints from the Sloan McGill Collection. |
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As if his novels weren't enough, he went on to publish his very own prison diary after doing porridge in London's Belmarsh jail. |
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Today we are beginning to publish abstracts of speeches made at the conference. |
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The firm continued to publish books, and there was talk of opening a bookshop. |
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The journals would also publish letters and articles sent in by readers, thus keeping the public actively involved in their content. |
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Some will use print to publish well-researched news stories that threaten the powerful, some will write pamphlets, others lies and libels. |
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As sequencing projects had grown larger and larger it had become quite impossible and pointless for journals to publish the sequences in print. |
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The Register has shamed itself by printing this and should publish an immediate retraction. |
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Alves says he hopes to publish a journal article this fall detailing the 2004 findings. |
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Firstly, the reason why we publish pictures from crashes is to show people the consequence of accidents. |
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The Inquisition had accepted Cardano's private abjuration, extracting a promise from him never to teach or publish in the Papal States again. |
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Sports Illustrated will publish its world-famous swimsuit issue next month. |
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We chose not to publish at the time as independent confirmatory evidence was too flimsy. |
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Will it publish its questionnaire and advise us of the cross section of people it interviewed? |
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For all the time he spends in the lab, he must publish at a pretty impressive rate, huh? |
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The gas industry regulator is currently investigating high prices and is expected to publish its report soon. |
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If at all they publish some true news involving big politicians or ministers they are forced by some higher forces to publish corrigendum. |
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This ubiquity and open-source freedom lets you publish and share your documents portably and freely among platforms. |
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He decided to publish a book of his various works after assembling a portfolio that spans several decades and several coasts. |
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Printers have won the race to publish all the 14m postal ballot papers for the north west and three other regions, the government said today. |
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Once I'm done playing whack-a-mole on the hype surrounding this issue, and we complete some other tests, I'll publish what we've found. |
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A number of internet sites publish current lists of gold funds, ranked by performance. |
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Would someone please publish the address of the postmaster general so I can personally put it back in the post with his address on. |
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He continued to write poems as he grew up, and received the usual quota of rejection slips when he tried to publish them. |
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The development of science did not slow down a whit when scientists ceased to publish in Latin. |
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Now the book is in its third printing and I just threw away 1,900 rejection slips I received denying my request to publish this book. |
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The cabinet has agreed to publish agendas before each meeting, publicly going into depth on the issues which will be discussed. |
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I publish my own zine attacking the media monopoly, and I also write for the National Post. |
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She began writing full-time in 1980 and went on to publish more than 150 books for children and young adults. |
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As it happens, the cowardy custards didn't publish it, so with his permission I am going to reproduce it here. |
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The company got its start in 1964 by Bill Ellis, who originally founded the company to publish limited-edition prints. |
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One of the primary benefits of a weblog to an ad agency is its ability to simply publish current agency thought. |
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They will have to publish the full report, so that will put it all in perspective. |
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He is due to publish it tomorrow at a Glasgow conference on the private funding of public services. |
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Thus, every effort will be made to publish timely and highly readable essays. |
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So gossip magazines would be free to snap the Streatham girl buying her daily pinta, but could not publish the princess with hers. |
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All this will mean some hard thinking about how we present the information we publish both in print and on the web. |
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Concert listings provide such a danger area, it being so easy to publish and then abandon or forget. |
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This is the first in what we plan to be a regular series of cases, which we will publish in instalments. |
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Here's where we publish promotional material that probably won't be grabbing any front pages. |
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Her desire to publish anonymously was not unusual because, for a woman writer, fame could often lead to infamy. |
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They backtracked hastily and asked simply to be able to publish a prompt response. |
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He made no effort to publish them and did not bother to correct or proofread those his acting company printed. |
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I call on the Government to publish its secret report revealing just how much the sheep ID scheme will cost farmers. |
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They intend to publish shorter reviews of more books across a wider spectrum. |
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For example, most daily newspapers will not publish anonymous letters to the editor. |
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They have to catalogue and index the official record with them and have to publish important decisions and functions that affect people. |
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I have reviewed this subject in accordance with my findings in an appendix to a work that I propose to publish when circumstances permit. |
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Today we publish more pictures of the crazy goings-on during a day of chaotic collections and super sponsored events. |
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I begged him to publish his discovery, but he preferred to depute the task to me. |
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Perhaps you would be so good as to publish the link as a further comment to the topic. |
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So, what motivated the publisher to publish a book that may not have much commercial value? |
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There were rumours of course, but no one could publish the stories without being sued for liable. |
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The government is shortly due to publish its Framework Strategy for e-crime. |
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This is their first effort to publish a shotshell reloading manual, and it's a dilly. |
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His decision instead to publish on the eve of polling day is a small but clear signal of defiance. |
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If you are going to publish a credible disclaimer you should declare all your past and present political affiliations. |
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Several investment institutions are pressing it to publish the finding of its inquiry. |
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We will publish manuscripts over 30,000 words only under exceptional circumstances. |
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Unlike the print magazines, which generally require exclusivity, websites will publish stories that other media also cover. |
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Day after day I have people coming up to me telling me what to publish and what not to publish. |
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States usually publish a list of names of individuals whose property has been escheated. |
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I went on to publish essays, short stories, poetry, and political commentaries. |
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The Inquiry will publish the findings from the survey on its website in August. |
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The organisation plans to publish research on state childcare models in May. |
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When I lived in Manchester that city managed to publish a pamphlet on notable Mancunians in history without mentioning Ann Lee anywhere. |
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In any event, it would definitely not be nice to publish letters in order to display the ignorance of their writers. |
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The larger publishers mentioned above also publish magazines and books in areas outside of manga. |
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Meanwhile, it emerged his former publicist is to publish a tell-all book detailing the singer's relationships with several young boys. |
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We translate and publish documents and manuals produced in any desktop publishing programme. |
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At the same time we're being encouraged to publish stuff in hard copy in journals, refereed journals and refereed books, which is my line of country. |
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What they do publish is a colour-glossy pamphlet telling first-time condo-buyers how they can get in on the ground floor of soon-to-be gentrified neighbourhoods. |
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You want to take your time and sell for the best price, taking advantage of our option to publish your ad until the sale of your property. |
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You have the option to turn the link off, but you will be alerted if you publish the Quest with 10 or more invitees. |
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This time gap becomes even larger when one considers the time needed to gather, process and publish data on already started projects. |
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This is a misnomer, because such a concept could equally apply to the fact that a company chooses not to publish payment data. |
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The 64 pages of a PE would not be enough to publish all the historical photos of our Brother André. |
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Tdh could already unfreeze funds and will publish its official position this afternoon. |
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We'd publish reprints and vintage articles, a new article that had to do with a similar topic, and a technical, aesthetic, history or conservation article. |
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To support this process, a decision was made to publish a monthly supplement in the widely read newspaper Sud Quotidien. |
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It would then be enough to publish the multiple of the solvency margin to have a sort of automatic and arithmetical rating. |
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Webster is in the final stages of editing her children's book and plans to publish it in the near future. |
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Article 5 of the same Law guarantees the right of every individual to collect information and publish it in the mass media. |
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The society doesn't publish a list of its members, although I have a copy of its 2013 membership list. |
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Monica may have lost out by not having Judith publish her book. |
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For the past 15 months, the blog has been used by the minister to publish his portfolio media releases. |
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This may be the case if no commercial publisher would publish the information without such an exclusive right. |
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As a private attorney, he works without charge to help hundreds of intelligence agents obtain lawful permission to declassify and publish the hidden secrets of our times. |
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An allied agency asked permission to publish two of them for its domestic customers. |
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Scientists, for instance, can publish their results to get credit for what they accomplish. |
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The Commission will publish the name and address of the beneficiary, the subject of the grant, the amount awarded and the rate of funding. |
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Father Roy found a way to publish for them a 300 page pocket-size format of the Gospels. |
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As indicated above, it is our plan to publish this letter in our newsletter. |
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The Commission will publish a summary of the rules of the road in force in all the member states on its website in all EU languages. |
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The motion that we publish the names of banks that violated consumer provisions of the act was defeated. |
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The Ombudsman undertook to publish this report on his website, so as to inform citizens of its contents. |
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The independent supervisory body shall publish an annual report concerning its activities. |
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The platform comicstars.de gives comic artists the chance to publish their comics for free. |
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In the framework of testing proposals involving tests on vertebrate animals, the Agency will publish relevant information on its website. |
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Unions may not publish tendentious articles in the press attacking the honour and dignity of a person. |
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If you, too, want to ask us any questions, send us an e-mail and we will publish the most frequently asked questions. |
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The ombudsmen in the Network publish easily understandable information, in widely accessible forms. |
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In the editor you can design your own courses, test them and publish the best ones to be used by other players. |
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I think there'll be posthumous stuff, but I'm not sure that I will publish again. |
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In order to provide transparency, the investigating authorities are further required to publish their reports and conclusions. |
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Taxpayers and businesses have the right to know who is obliged to publish calls for tender. |
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If you feel really strongly that my opinions are shocking or wrong-headed, you could perfectly well publish them with an appropriate editorial disclaimer. |
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Instrument manufacturers usually publish thermal-drift specifications, typically in terms of 90-day and one-year accuracies for a given temperature range. |
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This trend will gain further strength if the journals that make preprints available on the internet or publish internet-only versions of reports are taken into account. |
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We have an ability to contact those importers, recall any products that we consider to be of high risk, and, of course, publish any further information that is necessary. |
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What prompted the Weekly Standard to publish his collection of bad-tempered, ignorant, off-the-mark comments about him and about contemporary literature is a greater mystery. |
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If we publish your report, you will receive a tourist guide or a gift card of Amazon in the amount of 20 Euro as a thank-you. |
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Clearly they get a lot of dumb illiterate wackos writing in, but I bet most publications do, quite frankly, and they don't publish 'em, by and large. |
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If I source one in the future, I will publish an addendum to this review. |
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I discovered that some reasonably well-known names are using Lulu to print and publish collections of their photographs, either in black and white or full colour. |
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One of the biggest complaints that critics have is that companies have an incentive to selectively publish data. |
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Caitlin Doughty is certainly not the first person to publish a book about the funeral industry. |
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Ezra Pound offered to make useful connections for Joyce, and find places where he could publish his writings. |
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He also is the editor of the journal, which seems to publish a lot of interesting if preliminary work. |
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The stories of these individuals are very inspiring, and we will publish more details about each awardee at a later date. |
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For your reading pleasure, we are happy to publish a few of the more reasoned responses from a group of very grown up, brave and clear-headed individuals. |
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I might have been the first to use a computer to cut mimeograph stencils to publish an SF fanzine. |
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Thanks to No Child Left Behind, they all now track and publish the performance of individual schools and intervene at the feeblest ones. |
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In the long run they did publish the book and made a ton of money. |
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By Jason McGahan No newspaper dares to publish the truth about the drug lords in Tamaulipas. |
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If you change the login or password don't forget to publish again your site thereafter to apply this change. |
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The ultimate objective is to merge these forms and publish a user's guide on interactive magnetic disk. |
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New York is one of only two states that mandates that hospitals publish their C-section rates. |
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Nevertheless, the newspaper's editors have acknowledged off the record that it would have been wiser to publish the strategy paper in full. |
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He was also the first Bolognese composer to publish solo violin sonatas. |
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The publisher would not reveal the size of its initial print run but said it was forced to publish a second edition with some booksellers quickly selling out. |
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Life will publish at least eight softcover magazines a year. |
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Scientists who publish from data often do not want to release this professional wellspring. |
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The website reserves the right to publish or reject any message. |
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In May the Government announced plans to publish a draft Bill on corporate manslaughter with the timetable for legislation, plus further details, to be announced this autumn. |
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Societe Generale's management intends to publish complete consolidated financial statements for the 2010 financial year. |
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Let's admit it and this is the real dirty secret of academic publishing one can publish just about anything if one goes far enough down the list of impact factors. |
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At her present pace, in a few short years Mai should be ready to copyread each edition of Human Rights for Workers before I publish it on the Web. |
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Ultimately they would go ahead along with the Washington Post and publish a host of revelations from the Snowden cache. |
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In 1878 Aleko began his studies in Russia, and at the same time started to publish his first poems, and to write plays, compose music and a short operetta. |
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But perhaps most astonishingly of all, one in every ten of its 300,000 inhabitants will publish a book in their life. |
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Only in rare cases did we publish the corroborating evidence that supported our acceptance of a particular person's account of events. |
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According to the guidance, the National Organic Program intends to publish organic certification standards for apiculture, mushrooms, greenhouses and aquatic animals. |
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Following suit, in September 2004, many of the world's major medical journals decided only to publish results of registered clinical trials. |
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But publish and talk are not enough for this passionate and inquiring mind. |
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At least once a year, governments should publish comprehensive welfare and social service manuals written in everyday language. |
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If you would prefer your visiting card to be private, it is possible not to publish it on the Internet. |
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Please send a photographer and take a photo to publish in News Shopper. |
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The tabloid would publish challenges from checkers players and pie eaters. |
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He did publish a number of papers, however, which arose through the various courses such as algebraic topology, functional analysis, and geometry, which he taught. |
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If he declines, you may ask and publish his reasons, but they cannot release you of your obligation to correct your error in publishing his misleading words. |
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He asked interviewers not to publish these events during his lifetime. |
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Our journals were among the first in the geosciences to be made available electronically, but we should continue to publish in paper for as long as we can. |
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In the coming year the Governors will consider the BBC's coverage of European constitutional affairs and religious programming and publish the findings. |
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Please note that we always make an effort to publish the issues errorless. However, it might happen that we oversee a mistake. |
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If they can get it to us, we can publish it whether they are able to get it on the streets or not. |
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Northern Ireland was the first to scrap league tables, in 2001, instead requiring schools to publish their own annual results in prospectuses for parents to read. |
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At this point, I am so sick of looking at it, I would publish it on a postage stamp if I could list that on my CV and reference it in my next paper. |
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I call on you also to publish a league table of those countries which have the worst record of maladministration in the EU and in what areas. |
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Trunk is about to publish a book of library music album covers. |
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Companies are required to publish a summary of their semiannual and annual reports in two newspapers, at least one of which is in Arabic. |
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I am tempted to cite chapter and verse for my statements, but it is not in the public interest to publish the addresses of such websites. |
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In the October Geology, Bawden and his colleagues publish their analyses of samples from a massive zinc sulfide deposit located in a gold mine in Nevada. |
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The facilitation work which it operates with local community groups equips people with skills and confidence to conduct research and to publish their own community histories. |
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With the insistence of friends, family and those strangers who have purchased my teas over the years, I have decided to publish a book with the recipes. |
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The state of California will publish on Friday a proposed regulation that would ban the administration of alkalizing agents to racehorses, a practice known as milkshaking. |
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It is thus with great pride that we today publish this essay by Ms. Bauer which enlightens us as to the challenges that we now must undertake. |
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She feels it would be difficult to publish translations from languages totally unfamiliar to her, and thus only does so on rare occasions. |
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It is unusual to publish two independent reviews of the same book. |
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Empa shall be entitled, by agreement with the Ordering Party, to publish the results of work. |
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No better time, then, to publish a special photo essay celebrating what was perhaps the most dramatic Ashes series of them all, with words by the Poet Laureate, Andrew Motion. |
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They publish the criteria which they apply in dealing with complaints, give reasons for their decisions and report publicly on their activities. |
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Interest in his work was so great that Oxford University Press decided in 1990 to publish his complete works. |
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Whereas Lully was ensconced at court, Corelli was one of the first composers to publish widely and have his music performed all over Europe. |
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The clients are able to discover, browse, create, edit and publish geo-content useful for MR applications. |
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While only the majority opinion is considered precedential, an outvoted judge can still publish a dissenting opinion. |
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Statisticians are also employed by many other Government departments and agencies, and these statisticians often collect and publish data. |
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Newton had been reluctant to publish his calculus because he feared controversy and criticism. |
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Their interest encouraged him to publish his notes, Of Colours, which he later expanded into the work Opticks. |
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He studied algebra in the form of symbolic methods, as far as these were understood at the time, and began to publish research papers. |
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In 1845, an Italian political exile called Gatteschi, whom she had met in Paris, threatened to publish letters she had sent him. |
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It took Emily hours to calm down and days to be convinced to publish the poems. |
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At this time, her father made the first attempt to publish one of her novels. |
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Gollancz refused to publish it, considering it an attack on the Soviet regime which was a crucial ally in the war. |
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Woolf went on to publish novels and essays as a public intellectual to both critical and popular acclaim. |
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Ofsted publish reports on the quality of education at a particular school on a regular basis. |
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During the 1920s Gunn began to publish short stories, as well as poems and short essays, in various literary magazines. |
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Ye publish the musters of your own bands, and proclaim them to amount of thousands. |
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The Kelmscott Press would go on to publish 23 of Morris' books, more than those of any other author. |
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However, almost all Chinese newspapers in the country continue to publish in broadsheet. |
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Throughout, he continued to publish prolifically, producing excavation reports, journal articles, and books. |
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Still, the ABA continues to publish an official annual report of North American list standings. |
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These appear to place John Cabot in London by May 1500, albeit Jones and Condon have yet to publish their documentation. |
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To make the rules more accessible, the Commission should publish the list of the relevant conventions in the Official Journal of the European Union on the basis of information supplied by the Member States. |
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The survey also found that while roughly half of traditionally-published authors would prefer to follow the same route for their next book, two thirds of independently-published writers wanted to indie publish again. |
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This reduces publishing times, when you publish again. |
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After you publish again, you'll be able to see the new animation. |
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Once a year, the Commission must publish forecasts of service contracts to be put out to tender for the twelve months following publication and, once every three months, any amendments to the above forecasts. |
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Maybe after I'm gone you can make a selection and publish it. |
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As for those standing outside with their whistles and T-shirts, I would like to encourage them to stick at it, to publish the results of the vote, to show how each one of us actually voted. |
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Starting on November 20th it will publish projections once a quarter. |
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The circulars shall make mention of the insertion of the prospectus in the newspapers empowered to publish legal notices where the said prospectus has been published. |
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The editor of the Lancet has written that the decision to publish the Wakefield paper must be seen in the context of criticism of the government for not making known early reports of bovine spongiform encephalopathy risk. |
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What do you think about the case when the government tries to withhold information it doesn't want the public to know about? Or when a newspaper decides not to publish certain sensitive information? |
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Some newspapers simply publish the press releases word-for-word. |
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You grant the right for us and only us, to use, adapt, publish and sell any work you publish individually or in collaboration with others of the App. |
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This is in the same line of the current model tries to do so far by not allowing that the portal publish more information than permitted by each national system. |
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In addition to more contemporary books, labutxaca has also begun to publish universal classics and has recovered the legendary crime novel collection La cua de palla. |
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The Commission shall publish periodically in any appropriate medium the list of the independent experts that have assisted it for each specific programme. |
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Lastly, the financial resources that students or unremunerated trainees may be required to have are not determined by the directive, the Member States simply being required to publish the minimum amount that they determine. |
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Courses of fire that do not comply with the Practical Shooting basic principle must publish their rules and must not be publicized or announced as IAPS sanctioned matches. |
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The Vatican must lose no time in punishing those responsible, apologise to the women affected, investigate properly what happened and publish the report in its entirety. |
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The Fordham Journal of Corporate and Financial Law is to publish an article in November about expungement, written by Seth E. Lipner, a professor of law at the Zicklin School of Business at Baruch College. |
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In addition to making information more freely available, the digital library provides IDRC-funded researchers with a much-needed outlet to publish and showcase their work. |
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In May 2007, the Federal Council on Medicine will publish a resolution that adds new items to the expert report done by experts on the corpus delicti. |
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Incidentally, it should be mentioned that companies which publish their consolidated accounts under IFRS are required to write back into their consolidated results the transfer to the captive's equalisation provision. |
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The European Commission will soon publish an animal welfare law which will bring together all existing animal welfare legislation. |
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There are so few residents in Quebec in these corridors that it is the only area where the mapmaker did not think it was necessary to publish a large-scale map. |
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The UEG Newsletter will publish varied information in short and UEG Interview will give the word to different personalities in and outside of the UEG family regarding top current or specific subjects. |
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The obligation to publish registered data in the national gazette has therefore become superfluous, all the more so as the gazettes often do not reproduce the full information but only contain a reference to the register. |
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Groupe Pierre Belvédère is not responsible for submitted plagiarized texts and reserves itself the right not to publish them or to remove them case be. |
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Plans to publish the new magazine with Degen Media House were put on ice early in February, following conceptual and financial differences between the two parties. |
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Under the regulatory scheme, the Minister of Transport had delegated an official of the Department to publish a manual containing standards of airworthiness for aircraft. |
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At least in the sense that it's very easy to publish what many would consider censurable material, even if you have a hard time getting people to listen to you. |
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Pope Francis is shortly to publish his encyclical on the environment, which could make uncomfortable reading for many in the oil and gas industry. |
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Every year, as you know, we publish indicators and tables and it is clear that the Member States are not making efforts to the same degree to give us results. |
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When you publish an E-Sourcing master agreement to ERP outline agreements, you make changes only in the master agreement, and suppress the changeability of replicated fields in SAP ERP with a BC Set or in Customizing. |
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Dr. Kawash says her research is partly fueled by anger toward candy manufacturers who publish inaccurate, often sugarcoated histories of their products. |
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Together with partners from the co-operative world, we shall publish other manifestos demanding the creation of common markets which once more reflect the true value of agricultural prices whatever the economic vicissitudes. |
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In 43 bc he began to publish a series of historical works in a terse, epigrammatic style studded with archaisms and avoiding the copiousness of Cicero. |
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To facilitate this coordination, the central administration as a whole should publish the list of information of a statistical nature, which will be collected in the course of the following year. |
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If you publish the proposals made by all the parties concerned, you will enjoy more widespread support than you could ever gain with the wheeling and dealing between the representatives of the Heads of State or Government. |
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In a print environment, copyright on journal articles restricted only journal publishers-requiring them to obtain permission to publish an article-and would-be plagiarists. |
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In the future, Resilux will publish half-yearly and annual figures. |
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Scientists often find that there are errors in published reports, and unless the errors are fatal, they simply ask the journal to publish an erratum. |
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In no case shall a media make good free of charge an advertisement that has not been identified in accordance with the requirements of the act, or even publish free of charge an erratum. |
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He reported that one of the country's most senior genocide prosecutors had bribed other journalists not to publish stories about his extramarital affairs. |
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At one time it was left almost entirely up to newspaper proprietors and their sycophants to decide how much restraint would be applied on their ability to play with the facts, or to publish absolute falsehoods. |
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After that, he made a rule that Playboy would never again publish a photograph of an unclothed woman under eighteen, but in the following years he did everything in his power to make the centerfold models look like jailbait. |
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If they cannot publish truthful, cool-headed information that could promote a return to peace, the press and other media should at least refrain from adding to the already tense social environment. |
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Another lucky break came two years later, when Brahms heard Dvo?ák's Moravian Duets for two sopranos and piano, and was so impressed that he persuaded Simrock, his publisher in Berlin, to publish them. |
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And it will publish proposals on handling business failure that should help prevent bankruptcies and make it easier for entrepreneurs to make a fresh start following insolvency. |
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Despite the apparent denigration this statement may contain, the numerous corrections and the new versions he would publish over the years proved the importance Rossini would lend to his first works. |
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Network Rail's chief executive has refused to say whether he will take a bonus this year as he promised to publish an internal inquiry into Christmas rail chaos caused by overrunning engineering work. |
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James Ball, an ex-ally now also at the Guardian, says Mr Assange intended to publish the bulk of the cables, unexpurgated, anyway, once he had released the juiciest ones to the media. Either way, the damage is done. |
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If you have the budget and don't have the time, you can hire a freelancer or a firm to conceptualize, develop and publish your email messages and newsletters for you. |
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Invite students to read both the news report and the editorial and ask them to explain why the newspaper would choose to publish both considering they address the same event. |
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Just in terms of getting the training manuals translated, it took years of ministerial pressure to get permission from the General Officer Commanding to publish Frève's work. |
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Over the years, she has amassed a great wealth of regional songs and folklore, which she helped publish in songbook format to preserve the musical heritage of the Miramichi. |
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