Can makeovers, borrowed ideas and a sprinkling of stardust make Howard a winner, or will Boris Johnson become the party's Schwarzenegger? |
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When astrophysicist Joseph Smith, Ph.D., was diagnosed with multiple myeloma in 1984, he may have been tempted to pin his hopes on stardust. |
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That great sprinkling of stardust over a plausibly assumed 'ordinariness' with which we identify is what chemistry is all about. |
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It is possible that the increase of stardust in the Solar System will influence the amount of extraterrestrial material that rains down to Earth. |
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He might have never made it to superstardom in Bollywood, but this has not stopped him from chasing glittering stardust dreams elsewhere. |
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He coaches on the show and will soon be sprinkling some stardust on her debut album. |
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It is a nebulae system, planets and stars bobbing in and out of blue, purple, and pink stardust. |
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Until 10 years ago, most astronomers did not believe stardust could enter the Solar System. |
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Glass fell, twinkling in the firelight like stardust dropping from the sky. |
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Adding a dash of stardust will be Bollywood actresses Urmila Matondkar and Amisha Patel. |
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It's a sign of an important shift when a leader needs to sprinkle the electoral stardust of Mr Kinnock over a speech. |
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With the Sun warming your aura, cheerleader Mars egging you on and generous Jupiter strewing your path with stardust, you Cancerians are this month's lucky ducks. |
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And for a third, Ewan McGregor will be attending the opening of the film at the UGC Fountainpark to scatter the event with some badly-needed stardust. |
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It is the lure of celebrity, the dazzle of stardust, the yearning for intimacy with the famous that are the most powerful commercial forces in the world today. |
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The comedy circuit on the Fringe has been a trading floor, with television and radio producers buying talent and sprinkling stardust over performers. |
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The moment he sprinkles some stardust around the Cadillac Championship, up pops the master scene stealer to bask in the associated glow. |
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These are real, warm, outspoken women, who should have had a word with Curtis, before he morphed into Hughes and sprinkled stardust in their eyes. |
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Tinseltown magic sprinkled its stardust to cast a spell over Southampton, lending the city some of the glamour and glitz of a Hollywood premiere last night. |
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We are becoming conscious that this soil, which feeds us, is a living entity consisting of billions of living creatures and is made up of stardust just like we are. |
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Energy takes starstuff and turns it into a horse. Dissolves the horse back into stardust and uses the same starstuff to grow a tree. |
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My sister's eyes were full of stardust, and she'd spend hours lazily planning her future life when she would make her big break in the movies. |
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A flourish of trumpets and a shakerful of stardust to welcome Jeff Irving into the role. |
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And if midweek racing is not to expire completely under the onslaught of successive superduper Saturdays it needs the odd sprinkle of stardust. |
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Stardust drove through the rain at a blinding speed, the rain pelting off Kristine's face, stinging her cheeks. |
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Because the theater at the Stardust has the quality it does, that takes care of a great deal of my frustration right there. |
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Stardust will be coming out soon in a mass market paperback edition, with a cover that is meant to look like an old brass-bound diary. |
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I was re-reading Stardust for the nth time, and I couldn't help realizing how similar it was to Great Expectations. |
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Stardust Mel is the best mudder in California. Early last month Mrs. Marjorie Lindheimer Everett's rangy gray gelding splattered through the rain and murk to win. |
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And in her front room every inch of wall space was plastered with album covers, clocks, pictures, newspaper cuttings and a large Ziggy Stardust mirror. |
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If successful, Stardust will become only the third spacecraft to capture such a close view of the dark heart of a comet, normally obscured by a bright veil of dust and gas. |
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Around the corner is Ellen's Stardust Diner, which seeks to re-create the 1950s heyday of midtown luncheonettes. |
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Today's picture shows singer Alvin Stardust meeting fan and receptionist Karri Prinn at the Holiday Inn, Wideopen, Newcastle, but in what year? |
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Stardust Forums today announced the third annual IP Multicast Summit to be held Feb. |
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These performers were soon followed in the style by acts including Roxy Music, Sweet, Slade, Mott the Hoople, Mud and Alvin Stardust. |
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His notable works include the comic book series The Sandman and novels Stardust, American Gods, Coraline, and The Graveyard Book. |
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Hawkins is at his smoochiest, swooning best on the ballads like April In Paris and Stardust. |
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Footage from the final show was released the same year for the film Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars. |
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Musically it was very diverse, varying between the simple rock and roll revivalism of figures like Alvin Stardust to the complex art rock of Roxy Music. |
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Since its launch in 1999, NASA's Stardust satellite has traveled 3 trillion kilometers just to collect dust particles from a comet's tail and bring them back to Earth. |
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Dogwood Junior High School is hosting the yearly Stardust Dance, a night when the ordinary school cafeteria is decorated like a glittering wonderland. |
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David Bowie is set to resurrect his Ziggy Stardust alter-ego. |
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From 1971, already a minor star, David Bowie developed his Ziggy Stardust persona, incorporating elements of professional make up, mime and performance into his act. |
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Bowie declared himself gay in an interview with Michael Watts for a 1972 issue of Melody Maker, coinciding with his campaign for stardom as Ziggy Stardust. |
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Meredith Collins, for instance, has commented upon the degree to which his novel Stardust depends on allusions to Victorian fairy tales and culture. |
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In 1999 first printings of his fantasy novel Stardust were released. |
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From late 1971, already a minor star, David Bowie developed his Ziggy Stardust persona, incorporating elements of professional makeup, mime and performance into his act. |
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