The elongated stars drifted by as the ships chronometer counted down to zero. |
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Seventy percent of the stars in the galaxy are binaries, so this has huge implications for the number of solar systems that could exist. |
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Shadowy clouds completely obscured the moon, leaving a meager handful of stars to vainly attempt to provide light. |
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Cotswold 16-year-olds had stars in their eyes after scooping a hatful of top grades in their GCSE results. |
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For a brief time, Fish has stars in his eyes but soon realizes it's a kind of bribe. |
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The various guardians of the under-aged stars fell out over the money which slowly evaporated into the hands of lawyers. |
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His regulars were bright friends with beguiling personalities and good stories, not stars with a movie to push. |
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I suppose we could just thank our lucky stars that all the negative prognostications were all wet and leave it at that. |
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Maybe they just act like rock stars because it's a lot easier than acting like ordinary people. |
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The visual changes included seeing stars and bright lights, occasionally with accompanying nonspecific dizziness. |
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There are some female stars past the halfway mark in their lives who can still sell out world tours. |
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He stars as Macbeth in Theatre Babel's memorable production of the Scottish play. |
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He's going to allot a section of the sky to each member of the family and have them count the number of stars in their designated astral plot. |
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The triangulated space frame of the roof is made up of solid stainless steel rods that form six pointed stars screwed into nodal connectors. |
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He butted me quite intentionally and from there on in I was actually seeing stars a bit. |
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The Fringe likes to think of itself as the festival where you see the stars of tomorrow today. |
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Large pictures of fifties stars hung along the walls and a song from the musical Grease played on the jukebox in the corner. |
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The stars shone down on the camp and just past the tree line, a graceful elf with golden hair stood. |
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The tourists will no doubt rest some of their big stars and allow some of the junior members of the team a chance to play. |
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We've heard nothing but praise for this film so far, but strangely it gets three stars across the board from the broadsheet reviewers. |
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The project received one star, in a system where no stars indicates poor and three excellent. |
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Only the moon and the stars provided me with light, and considering they are both millions of miles away it was only a dim, and weak light. |
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These are young, massive, bright stars that undergo periodic changes in luminosity. |
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The staff have a thousand stories of golf stars who have stayed at the hotel in days gone by. |
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Although new stars primarily radiate ultraviolet light, the dust they generate absorbs that light and re-emits it in the near-infrared. |
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Al-Mahri used astronomical observations of the height of stars to determine the difference in latitude between two places. |
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He described hundreds of stars and the constellations and in the Milky Way which had never been seen or even suspected before. |
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For Copernicus, this meant gazing at the stars through scientific instruments of his own invention. |
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Overhead, a glittering canopy of stars shimmers around the broad sweep of the Milky Way. |
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You get old-age pensioners labelled as bad boys because they were rock stars years ago. |
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And the stars that were splashed across the sky flickered like candle flames. |
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Mr. Crich testified that after the assault he was dazed and seeing stars as blood ran into his eyes and down the side of his face. |
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The water vascular system is not filled with seawater as in sea stars and urchins, but rather with a special body fluid. |
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In addition, students started their day by pledging allegiance to the stars and stripes flag. |
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Surveys showed how the stars are bunching up near the center of Omega Centauri, as seen in the gradual increase in starlight near the center. |
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During the show many people of prominence and film and singing stars will be on hand to receive phone calls and accept pledges of donations. |
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Soon Sasha found herself riding in Hardy's carrier under the strange stars of the island continent. |
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We also managed to get a few photos of the stars themselves on and off the stage. |
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The young stars of the production will be singing a medley of songs from Joseph at 4pm tomorrow, on Oxenhope's millennium village green. |
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Moving from Libra into Scorpius on the 20th, Mars buzzes past the arc of three stars known as the Crown of the Scorpion. |
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Huge cauliflower soft corals, basket stars and brightly coloured sponges seem to cover almost every centimetre of reef. |
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Green, who chartered a plane for all 200 guests, is no stranger to hiring top stars to perform at his bashes. |
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Frankie errs on the side of edgy celeb rather than pimping stars spruiking the latest big Hollywood blockbuster. |
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We would like to go further next year and get four or five stars if we can. |
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It was late at night and the stars and moon had entered the sky, radiating the eerie light onto abandoned walkways and rat infested ally ways. |
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Since then, we've tabbed 17 players as the brightest new stars at the prep, college, and pro levels. |
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If you do have to work, then thank your lucky stars that you have an afternoon off to spend with a book. |
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Overhead, the stars wheel in the heavens and a bright, bright moon shines down on the fields and on the house itself, for it's clear tonight. |
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One of the problems with the star ratings is that the margin of failure needs only to be quite small for vital stars to be lost. |
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Lights were slowly springing up all over the city and the stars began to appear over head. |
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Behind the scenes, she agitated for parity with the male stars of the Paris Opera and for a say in how the company was managed. |
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In place of the Queen's crest on the front would be the 12 yellow stars of the European flag. |
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Afterwards, at the after-party at a swanky uptown bar, the stars gathered to drink and revel in their love of the violent sport. |
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Astrophysicists believe black holes are commonly formed by the inward collapse of stars that have burned out. |
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The tools are also helping astronomers measure the rate of birth of stars in extremely red and distant galaxies. |
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The celestial globe is an astronomical instrument used to measure the stars and the nature of the universe. |
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Arab craftsmen produced complex astronomical instruments, astrolabes, which helped them plot the positions of the stars and tell the time of day. |
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These sources have been attributed to white dwarfs, neutron stars and black holes. |
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Neutron stars such as IGR J16283-4838 are often part of binary systems, orbiting a normal star. |
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In this way, astronomers will perform very precise astrometry to detect the reflex motion of stars due to orbiting planets. |
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As stars began to appear and dot the night sky, she decided to take up her books and move to the Library. |
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And the cook, Jay Jay, earns five buckets of stars for serving happy drinkers real good food, not idiotic nuked empanadas! |
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The density of stars makes the region in and around the Arches cluster a microcosm of what is likely occurring in starburst galaxies. |
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The current stars in this field are the cholesterol-lowering drugs known as statins. |
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Barring martial arts kit such as nunchakus, throwing stars and kubotans is understandable. |
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Perennials like geraniums are the seasonal stars of gardens all around the country at the moment. |
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The film stars Ewan McGregor as Joe, a Scottish bargeman who lives and works on a boat with a family of three. |
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She gave me her phone number in blue felt tip, with little blue stars by her name. |
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Could mathletes someday compete alongside track stars and basketball players under the aegis of the five rings? |
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Does a restaurant get three stars here only if the identical restaurant would get three stars in Paris? |
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Eventually the stars would burn out and a curtain of frozen darkness would enshroud all existence. |
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The atmospheres of these stars pulsate in a very regular cycle, on timescales ranging from 2 days to a few months. |
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Such entertainments offered alluring images of appealing stars surrounded by an abundance of consumer goods. |
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Used mostly for cooking, not flavoring, the brined variety earned its culinary gold stars in a classic dish, steak au poivre. |
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The absorption nebula contains dust that scatters starlight and hides stars from our view. |
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The play is in the capable directorial hands of Sir Peter Hall and also stars Janet Suzman. |
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By contrast with other echinoderm species, basket stars are unknown in storm drift lines. |
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Ophiuroids are a large group of echinoderms that includes the brittle stars and basket stars. |
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Talented stage acts in Trowbridge are being given the chance to reach for the stars in a major national competition. |
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Army ranger Lt. Colonel Mucci stars as a young officer handpicked by MacArthur to lead the raid. |
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The seven stars pictured as Buddhas demonstrate the incorporation of originally Shaman concepts into Korean Buddhism. |
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And while the restaurants may not win any stars in the Michelin Guide, their food sure tastes good after a morning on the slopes. |
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Most of the platinum stars today started out on the road from rags to riches with their own independent label. |
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Egg, Morgan Stanley and Tesco Personal Finance also fared well, with four stars each. |
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Ordinary Mayo sportspeople turned into sports stars of the same quality as Roy Keane or Eddie Irvine. |
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His Sheriff Hutton stables trains a host of future racing stars amid top-class facilities. |
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Sports stars can be incredibly talented, innovative and breathtaking, but they're not geniuses. |
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And Diamond got a chance to reach for the stars after Miami inventor Ivan Yaeger heard about her disability. |
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Other stars of the collection are remnants of medieval glazed jugs, tableware, and three-handled drinking cups from the 17th century. |
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Just pick off the little round jobbies, and give yourself invisible gold stars for going with the flow. |
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Well, former Major League Baseball player Jose Canseco has said some of the biggest stars in his sport used steroids. |
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Unlike Bollywood actors, the Southern film stars have a different attitude to politics. |
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Gemini, the most northerly constellation of the zodiac, is dominated by the two bright stars that represent the heads of the Twins. |
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In America, women players are genuine stars and the sport is far more established. |
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Showbiz Tonight sits down with some of the stars of that star-studded cast. |
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While viewing ice hockey on television is fun, seeing world class NHL stars perform live is an unforgettable experience. |
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So next time you go out at night to watch the stars with a group of friends and you have to share the only telescope, be patient. |
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The racing heroes he refers to are few and far between compared to the hundreds of soccer stars being hero-worshipped up and down the country. |
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Back in the middle 1930s the stars of the silver screen were goddesses, such as Greta Garbo. |
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The film stars Tom Skerrit as the fire chief in a political battle with the mayor. |
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Fred naturally takes the opportunity to romance Lady Alyce, who still has stars in her eyes over his supposed leap. |
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It's reassuring to know our numbers are in agreement with previous estimates of the mass of the stars based on the stars' motion. |
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But the service gets only one out of three possible stars because the inspectors believe the service is unlikely to get any better. |
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After the afternoon watersports, a festive luau was held under the stars adjacent to the village structures. |
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At first Jaime was terrified, but the music of the wind rustling in the leaves and the dazzle of the stars overhead calmed his fears. |
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I can relate to that desire to light a wood fire and sleep against the ground and watch the stars and the coming light. |
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The invitation of five internationally prominent male ballet stars showed that the Kirov's ballerinas were equal to the skills of their partners. |
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But Malaysia stands alone among the airlines flying here to score a marvellous five stars for its economy class long haul seating. |
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These stars are generally separated by distances of several astronomical units or more. |
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The audience included young and old, soap stars and Shakespeareans, household names and the hard to put a name to. |
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The director was remarkably candid about making the leap from Europe to Hollywood, and working with stars of the calibre of Owen. |
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The hours had flown by, and the sky which had been bright and blue when we first met was now filled with a bajillion stars and a giant full moon. |
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The platform was actually some kind of map to the stars above with thousands of tiny specks of light dotting the dark blue steel. |
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These galaxies are so young that astronomers can still see a flurry of stars forming within them. |
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But it is a moving zodiac that no longer bears direct relation to the constellations of stars in whose honour its signs are named. |
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As these stars used up their fuel, they would eventually contract and cool as white dwarfs or explode as supernovae. |
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North of Orion lies a pentagon of stars which mark the constellation Auriga, the brightest of which is Capella. |
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All this was stamped on a background of indigo blue dotted with white as the stars winked at us from far away. |
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We just thank our lucky stars that she is still with us and is doing so well in her recovery. |
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It circles between two stars in a binary system, wavering in and out of nebulae, carrying its on rings like Saturn. |
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She stared wakefully at the stars which peeked through the canopy of trees overhead, and wondered how Adam was doing, and if he was all right. |
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The former Heriot's flanker knows he is reaching for the stars at Headingley today. |
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And they were also quick to slam high-spending pop stars and other celebrities who they said were a bad example to youngsters. |
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Children had stars in their eyes at a special award ceremony in Farnworth when they were joined by a pop star. |
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Perhaps this goes some way to explaining why one of our biggest stars is such a Janus-faced mess of narcissism and self-loathing. |
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In an age where most Bollywood stars would kill for a role in a Hollywood film, the opportunity has come on a platter for Satish Kaushik. |
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Orion is home to the famous Orion nebula, a glowing cloud of interstellar gas where new stars are being born. |
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He persuaded a number of former TV child stars to play cameo roles in the movie. |
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Four talented youngsters from Bolton are reaching for the stars after winning the first leg of an X-Factor style contest. |
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One reason stars become stars is that they are highly talented and charismatic. |
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Sport stars are big news these days, and not always for how they perform on the pitch, the track, the arena or in the pool or the ring. |
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Do the recent track records of returning stars warrant their elevated status in new shows? |
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Just as opera stars interpret their roles differently, so do chief executives. |
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Diane Keaton directs and stars in this patchy comic King Lear about a dying father and his three daughters. |
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Wiltshire Ambulance has been awarded no stars in NHS performance ratings for two consecutive years after failing to meet response time targets. |
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Her visage set against the wide expanse of the stars like the faded misty memory of a dream. |
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Even with its lineup of stars and decent acting, the film doesn't adequately capture your imagination. |
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Some candidates have a ring of stars indicating they are running for Europe. |
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Now Stephen has stars in his eyes because Mem is expecting their first child. |
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Sports talk-radio jocks hammered at the stars for betraying the public trust. |
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And by now it's a foregone conclusion that these two stars will generate a certain special something anytime they're paired together. |
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Just as the music-loving crowd, a majority of them youngsters, were getting into the groove with some static jiving, the stars arrived. |
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Though such behaviour often turned out to be self-destructive, that didn't prevent stars from replicating Chaplin's actions. |
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There will be the usual posters of film stars and starlets looking alternatively menacing and pouting. |
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First of all, it's odd that the film stars a Scotsman and an American when it's set so prominently in Belfast. |
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This challenged the accepted view of the stars as dead heroes placed in the firmament by the Olympian gods. |
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This process also stabilizes white dwarfs and neutron stars against gravitational collapse. |
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But for now, journeymen players and even certain stars would be wise to jump at their first acceptable offers. |
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People have always been interested, perhaps pruriently in stars who prematurely flame out. |
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The stars in the sky glowed with an ambience only seen outside the urban conurbations. |
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Sometimes I can only wonder in amazement about how our pop stars are forced to suffer for their art. |
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Let us admit that Cygni, Tauri, and others, are stars of the second magnitude, such as are here to be considered. |
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The stars were glimmering across the night sky and the moon's rays shone upon her. |
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The Great Depression bequeathed us screwball comedy, a genre beyond the stars ' grasp in this train wreck of a revival. |
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He classified the stars into 6 magnitudes where 1 is the brightest and 6 is the faintest visible to the naked eye. |
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Neither fish is brightly illuminated, with only three of the constellation stars appearing slightly brighter than 4th magnitude. |
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By using a list of stars of known magnitudes it is possible to determine the magnitude of the faintest visible stars on any particular night. |
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Astronomers measure the brightness of stars in units called magnitudes but this is not a unit like a meter or a kilogramme. |
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This show is featured mainly to break the myth that film stars can never be good cooks. |
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Soon, he contented himself with simply staring out the window at passing stars and planets. |
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The subject is a rendering of a female in repose, wrapped in a blanket of stars and night sky. |
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Another plus is that the Latin music scene is hotter than ever, with crossover stars producing albums with Latin beats but English lyrics. |
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It's a program called the Anglo-Australian Planet Search Program, and what you're looking for is stars whose motion encompasses a wobble. |
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At one stage we tried counting how many stars there were, but it got too confusing as we counted and recounted a dot or two. |
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A film with a budget of this size but without stars to lure moviegoers is unlikely to stay out of the red. |
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Provided you are satisfied that the market has undervalued that business, thank your lucky stars for the golden buying opportunity. |
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The first video features Hollywood stars on various red carpets taking a minute to say hello to everyone at the awards. |
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Pop and sports stars will get the message out on radio and TV, and schools are being asked to sign up to an anti-bullying Charter for Action. |
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It was hoped that this dark matter would be mostly in the form of small stars called red dwarfs. |
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Research on nuclear fusion in the 1940s shifted the focus of plasma research from the stars to laboratories on Earth. |
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Far more than in the past, companies are using their paltry salary pools to reward stars with relatively meaty raises. |
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Multiple collisions involving red giants and other stars might yield the random orbits her team has observed. |
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You can explore glorious colour images of galaxies and the remnants of dying stars through an interactive jigsaw puzzle. |
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Then, there you are, seated among the stars with a front-line view of movie history in the making. |
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Some of the vocals are provided by guest stars or are sampled from recordings by other artists. |
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It was a clear night, the stars shone brightly over the river, and the city lights were reflected in a spectrum of colored points in the water. |
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Barring only a single star, all your beneficial stars are ahead of their malefic counterparts. |
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Sports stars have been invited to visit the borough schools in a bid to promote team games and competitive sports. |
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The Beatles, Gene Vincent and Buddy Holly were among stars performing to packed houses. |
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If you're planning to take the kids with you, Emirates has to be the choice because it rated five stars for assisting parents with children. |
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The all-star cast, many of whom are stars of television and national theatre, gave an outstanding performance using the bar area as a stage. |
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With him will be the Vietnam veterans, the rock stars and the celebrities who have followed the campaign trail for months. |
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He stars as the hard-bitten ex-cop who gets drawn into a tangled web of drugs, murder, and ultimately, revenge. |
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Looking at the same stars the Anasazi looked upon a millennium ago is spooky fun. |
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Film stars and directors, business magnates and corporate houses are now keen to acquire timeworn artifacts. |
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Likewise, when talkies replaced silent movies, many stars of the earlier era were unable to adapt and became human relics. |
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From Hollywood, he created depictions of the screen stars Charlie Chaplin and Fred and Ginger. |
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Ryu's world exploded into stars as the blow connected with the side of his head, staggering him. |
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This inspired NASA to name the program after the third constellation of the zodiac, which featured the twin stars Castor and Pollux. |
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We're loyal to our favorite stars through thick and thin, but a select few never go through the thick period. |
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With the aid of his telescope, Galileo could resolve thousands of new stars which were invisible to the naked eye. |
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Normally, stars balance the gravitational force with the pressure from the nuclear fusion reactions inside. |
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Now players have the whip hand, just like Hollywood stars of the post-studio era, and they often behave badly. |
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They're big huge rock stars who don't stoop to reading my lazily written, wildly inaccurate little website. |
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We watched the moon shine over the water and the stars coming out to fill the sky. |
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Also, it stars Michael Kitchen as a bloke who manages to weasel out of a murder, witnessed by the waitress at a party. |
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These young stars will move on to be part of an album, which will be put together by leading lights from the music industry. |
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The stars failed to sparkle but Bangalore found its own son shining brilliantly on Sunday morning. |
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There would only be a few stars at the huge party which will be thrown at the 1,000 acre, 17th century estate. |
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She stars as Schatze, the recently-divorced mastermind, incredibly efficient and calculating but deep down she really wants to marry for love. |
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For the first time, he was able to resolve individual stars in the Andromeda Galaxy. |
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In other words, a telescope must have sufficient resolving power to distinguish individual Cepheids from all the other stars in the galaxy. |
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Unlike stars like the Sun, brown dwarfs don't have enough mass to generate energy through nuclear fusion. |
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Astronomers know little about the strength of stellar winds around young stars and red dwarfs. |
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You know you've really made it when you get top billing ahead of veteran stars and consummate actors Gene Hackman and Dustin Hoffman. |
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Despite holding on to two stars for the past two years, the hospital could not make it three in a row. |
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The leading aviators became as famous as sports stars and Hollywood actors. |
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Silicon has also been detected in the Sun and stars and is found in certain types of meteorites known as aerolites. |
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Tory tried to see her reflection, but the moon was waning, the stars obscured by clouds. |
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Yes, it was a thoroughly enjoyable and fun night and real stars did in fact emerge. |
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The Sun agglomerated from a huge cloud of gas and dust, which was largely the debris left from previous expired stars and supernova explosions. |
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The two very sexy stars provide enough chemistry in this stylized thriller but the movie runs out of steam halfway through. |
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This is an easy way to differentiate Mars or Saturn from the stars at night. |
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While Antarctic sponges are indeed subject to little, if any, fish predation, they are heavily preyed on by sea stars and nudibranchs. |
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But what of other sports stars and their sporting tics, traits and peculiarities? |
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Naturalists who collect and classify living species or astronomers who map the stars in the sky are examples of Baconian scientists. |
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But Tarenghi is most thrilled about the observations of pulsating stars known as Cepheid variables. |
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The stars are replaced by a homogenous sea of glowing hot gas with embedded jewels of stellar accretion disks, neutron stars and super nova remnants. |
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The 44-year-old stars in Jason Wu's fall 2013 campaign, photographed at legendary New York restaurant Mr. chow. |
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Pop fan Katie Storey is reaching for the stars after winning a competition to watch the sparkling Christmas lights in Oxford Street being switched on by some of her pop idols. |
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The twin entrepreneurs and stars of HGTV's Property Brothers will be taking your questions live on Tuesday, December 16 at 2pm. |
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Yet the fact that he's about to shoot a new feature in colour with Bill Murray and other prominent stars also suggests he's willing to push the limits of those margins. |
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As Hunter looked up at the ceiling, he saw that the it was covered by a single piece of a black jade, mixed with the gems, sparkling like stars in the night sky. |
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We don't need redwoods and whales at all, not for ordinary life at least, no more than we need Plato, Beethoven, or the stars in the firmament of heaven. |
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He is iron man, after all, and one of the biggest movie stars in the world. |
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But it's just kind of interesting that the Ainu, who are the original inhabitants of Japan, once spoke of there being seven stars in the sky, The Seven Sisters. |
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She is an astrochemist who has studied the formation and destruction of dust and molecules in regions of our galaxy where stars are known to be forming. |
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The dynamic field of astrochemistry brings together ideas of physics, astrophysics, biology and chemistry to the study of molecules between stars, around stars and on planets. |
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I suppose Hollywood stars must consent to be godparents to a lot of the children of their staffs. |
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The discovery of planets orbiting other Sun-like stars in the galaxy is a key scientific discovery that has played a central role in the astrobiological revolution. |
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Even with all the money in the bank, most Hollywood stars and executives are loathe to squeal to protect their own hide. |
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Now that one of America's most white-bread movie stars has shown that he's keenly aware of the racial inequities of Hollywood casting, what's everybody else's excuse? |
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The film, which was just picked up for distribution by IFC Films and Sony Pictures, also stars Pierce Brosnan and Marisa Tomei. |
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Although many of the regulars and go-getters didn't show up at this theme night at the pub, those that did were definitely the stars shining that evening. |
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Giacconi, who shared the 2002 Nobel Prize for Physics, was on his way to showing that neutron stars could be bound in binary systems along with normal stars. |
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She thought about this as stars began to dot the darkening sky. |
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When it comes to appearing as themselves in movies, however, both stars are ice-cold. |
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However, these binary systems don't contain stars of intermediate mass. |
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Elliptical galaxies typically have few large stars that could go hypernova, but are rich in binary systems, with pairs of compact stars closely orbiting each other. |
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I tricked it out with the little hanging stars in the corners. |
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Pupils attending a workshop at a Bradford school yesterday were reaching for the stars when a rocket scientist dropped in to give a lesson in rocket-making. |
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If she were a cartoon character, she'd have stars in her eyes. |
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Instead, everyone will greet each day with a cheerful heart and a song on their lips, thanking their lucky stars for living in this fine historic city. |
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However, the meteors or shooting stars last for only a few seconds. |
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Her timeless look, retro style, and wounded, coquettish gaze recall classic film stars like Grace Kelly. |
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Yes, it's a binary, too, but of the spectroscopic type, which means that you won't be able to distinguish its two component stars even with the help of a telescope. |
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It's eccentricity and garish wrapping make the album a supermarket standout but one wonders what motivates sunset strip rock stars produce such obscurities. |
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Pasto is almost 8,300 feet up in the mountains, so it was cold and crisp, with a blaze of stars across the sky. |
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The idea that most stars are unhappy is not my experience, although it doesn't stop them from whingeing when they don't have it all their own way! |
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The kids have also produced a range of beautiful, whimsical mobiles of chameleons, shongololos, birds, fish, stars and planets made out of junk and found objects. |
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Just ponder a world without that song, without the Stock Aitken Waterman power years, and thank your lucky stars that Darius was given the flick when he was. |
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Equestrian stars frequent horse trials staged on our doorstep, while sporting royals are among those taking part at polo events at Ansty and Tidworth. |
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Almost every one of the albums was rated four stars by customers. |
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Most stars in the Milky Way have humdrum lives, tracing slow predictable orbits around the galactic center. |
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A star-studded evening it would be as some Tollywood stars are expected to turn up at the event, and the movie-crazy Hyderabadis can have their own share of fun. |
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The crystals, called cristobalite and tridymite, swim in clouds around stars just before they begin to form planets. |
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The stars of her kitchen are her sauces, created by first seasoning and browning the meat, then letting it cook down slowly to exquisite tenderness in a rich brown sauce. |
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Masses of glittering stars that shone from an ebony sky lit our trail. |
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Since then, though, the NBA has been struggling to find the stars to propel them to Jordan-like mega heights. |
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A grand mega show featuring several mini screen stars would be held as part of the launching of the cassette on July 14 at the Kalabhavan Auditorium. |
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But the money is not trickling down to the real stars of the show, the student-athletes. |
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So it's incredible to think that millions of people from housewives to world leaders rely on the stars to determine their fortune, financial or otherwise. |
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Many Hollywood stars today care about the environment, or gay rights, or animal rights, or what have you. |
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Most neutron stars are created when a large star dies as a supernova. |
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As a young person growing up in society, she said the speech motivated her to be the best she could, reach for the stars and still help others along the way. |
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No one dares answer back as Sam berates his stars and tells three of the players that they face an early bath and will not be playing in the second half. |
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His dresses were worn by Hollywood stars and first ladies, emanating glamour and sophistication. |
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Few people thought the government would totally end child poverty, but in reaching for the stars there was some hope they might hit the top of the tree. |
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The explosions of low-mass stars can be triggered by the accretion of mass from a companion star in a binary system to create classical, or Type Ia, supernovae. |
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The stars bear symbols of hope, peace and love in 10 different languages. |
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The comforter was a dark blue, with silver moons and lavender stars on it. |
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The usual rag-tag bunch of Z-list reality stars were out in force. |
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They would never have confided such a mission to someone who spends his free time suing film stars and having himself idolised by a camarilla of cameramen. |
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This past weekend saw two would-be blockbusters bursting at the seams with stars crash and burn at the box office. |
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But he ended up reaching for the stars in a more glamorous way as Queen's guitarist when the band zoomed into orbit as one of the most successful acts in the history of music. |
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Zach Braff and Donald Faison The scrubs stars reunited to sing this holiday duet. |
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This is a woman who stars in and produces Web Therapy, a show that started as a web series and moved to showtime. |
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But big brains were exercised in how the stars were produced, directed, scripted, and managed. |
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Cowboy stars underscored the identity and nature of the enemy for their juvenile viewers and urged all citizens to do their part to help win the war. |
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Married country stars Miranda Lambert and Blake Shelton neglected to thank each other when they each won at the acm Awards. |
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Sagittarius A sort of rebirth is in the stars as Mars enters Cancer, signaling Sagittarian psychological transformation. |
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The league needs more stars who not only are exquisite athletes but cherish the game and play with joie de vivre. |
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A new computer model designed to explore the range of possibilities for planet formation around other stars had no trouble coming up with worlds similar to Earth. |
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The film also stars A-listers Reese Witherspoon, Benicio del Toro, josh Brolin, and Owen Wilson. |
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Political parties have roped in Bollywood stars only to woo the young. |
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Writing on stars are mostly about gossip and scandal, a degeneration into lifestyle reporting. |
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They might not be world-beaters in waiting for 2004, but at least they will get an invitation to the party, one from which the global stars of the future may be identified. |
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This is where I thanked my lucky stars that it wasn't a jumping spider. |
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Making his screen debut, Daniel stars in the film as a newspaper reporter who attempts to track down a satanic conspiracy, only to get caught up in a black mass. |
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That they are influenced by, as sad as it is to think that we are influenced by things that reality tv stars say. |
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From Tobey Maguire as Spider-Man to Edward Norton as The Incredible Hulk, see more stars you wouldn't peg as crime-fighters. |
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The decadent food, which include lashings of pricey ingredients such as lobster and goose liver, has gained the restaurant two Michelin stars and a sheaf of awards. |
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But now, like its near neighbour Corsica, the Sardinians have realised that what is good for the stars should also be shared with the rest of us mere mortals! |
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Simple shells consist of a paper tube filled with stars and black powder. |
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And since films have room only for a handful of stars but can accommodate a whole lot of extras, cinema was a very limited avenue for the star-struck. |
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The main work was to photograph the Southern skies with various instruments and thereby to derive the positions, magnitudes and spectra of stars and other objects. |
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Older stars and dense dust lanes near the heart of the galaxy are red. |
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He is the only man to have been awarded five stars on the Hollywood Walk of fame and this collection is a worthy testament to his singing talents. |
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With the help of Afuni, Kiesza began writing songs for big-name pop stars like Kylie Minogue, Icona Pop, and Jennifer Hudson. |
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She'd been to juvie, was living on her own by 16, had been banned from some of the clubs, and partied with the rock stars that rolled through town. |
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