A female usher was seen at the bottom of the theatre talking on a two-way radio. |
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An usher at the cinema said the attendance had been better when the film was first released some weeks ago, but there were no sell-outs. |
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Welcome greeter, cocktail server, hors d'oeuvre passer, reception bus person, buffet runner, front server, back server, and exit usher. |
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Contrary to the old predictions that new technology would usher in an age of leisure, they are working harder than ever. |
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The workers' revolution would thus usher in a lasting age of genuine Utopia. |
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Idealistically believing we could usher in an Aquarian Age of Love was perhaps naive, but was not, and is not now, irresponsible. |
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Television channels are living it up this Deepavali, with special programmes and colourful fare to usher in the festival of lights. |
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Volunteers explain court procedure to those giving evidence, take them to the courtroom before trials, and introduce them to the usher and clerk. |
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For example, both finales use a slow introduction to usher in the faster movement proper. |
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Aidia thought that this seemed silly for a moment, until one of the long, dangling willow branches rose up as if to usher them in to its depths. |
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One can only hope that the recent thaw in Indo-Pakistan relations will usher in a new era on the sub-continent. |
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They serve as the prototypes for the Messiah from Joseph, and the Messiah from David, who usher in the Messianic Era. |
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With the three as one, the weapon will bring order to the land and its warring Duah, a firm hand to smite the darkness and usher in peace. |
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If anybody wants copies of the judgments in either case there are a few copies here which the usher will be able to distribute. |
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A woman put her hand up and the teacher with an usher went over to her with a microphone. |
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When one arrives at the platform, attractive and modishly adorned stewardesses usher you to your berth. |
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As he was about to usher Elizabeth into the small dark room, a voice from above urgently cried his name. |
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Her big, tattered coat made women at doorways frown disapprovingly and usher their children inside. |
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These rites control the pollution occasioned by death, and also usher the soul from one life to another. |
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We have come a long way since 78 rpm records helped usher in the jazz era almost a century ago! |
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I entered the chapel late, I remember the kind usher who showed me discreetly to my seat. |
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Portugal's prolific voyages in the 15th century served to usher in this age of exploration with superb navigators and trading ports. |
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So it is just fair that the wings of the councillors are clipped to usher sanity in the councils and for the sake of development. |
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I couldn't believe our luck when we went to get our seats and the usher pointed them out. |
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Its ostensible purpose was to usher in yet another Five Year Plan, this time on law and order. |
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He would more or less single-handedly usher in the performance-art phase of the New York counterculture. |
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In some extraordinary way the Kennedy visit seemed imperceptibly to usher Ireland from the past tense into the present tense. |
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Sadly, we tried to usher the creature out the window, but ended up hitting it inadvertently. |
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Age 35 seems to regularly usher in the beginning of a career plateau of sorts for knuckleballers. |
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It is, I believe, vital that the human race develop a sense of oneness to usher in an era of harmony and peace. |
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This great event would usher in the historical stage of production known as socialism. |
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The end of the twentieth century, with the collapse of the Stalinist states, seemed to usher in an era where democracy would rule supreme. |
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Not only decorative, it was hung in the palace during the first month of the lunar year to help usher in spring. |
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The belief is that chancing upon a coin in the heap would usher in good fortune for the coming year. |
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You can tell a judge is popular when an usher at his court fashions a humorous painting of him enjoying his favourite pastime of gardening. |
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At the top of the climb an usher showed you where to park and pointed out seating in an area outlined by lanterns. |
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Although the concept is fatally flawed, the idea of a dynamic Earth helped usher in the concept of plate tectonics. |
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In establishing the Roadmap, NIH purposefully intended to usher new researchers and new fields into the fold. |
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This year, he helped usher in girls' ninth grade basketball and cross-country. |
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He admitted defeat and asked the usher if she'd seen Cecelia, offering the turquoise turban as a cue to memory. |
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In New Brunswick, the 20th century was marked for Acadians by a man who would usher in many important changes, Louis-J. Robichaud. |
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Whether this change at the decision-making level will usher in changes in the more traditional societal expectations of women remains to be seen. |
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Let us hope that the newly elected parliament will usher in new winds of humanity. |
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Justin Bieber, Lady Gaga and new kid on the block, Iggy Azalea were discovered by Akon, usher, and T.I., respectively. |
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If I am ever assigned to a case that involves people I know personally, I ask another court usher to replace me. |
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My prayer is that this centenary year will usher in a renewed love and appreciation for this wonderful Franciscan woman. |
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Yield Protection Technology from Performance Plants may usher in a new era for drought tolerance in crops. |
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Mrs Muscardini, if there is a problem with the spring in your chair we will get an usher to come and deal with it. |
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Then there is the United States war on Iraq, the 21st Century version of 19th Century gunboat diplomacy which threatens to usher in a new era in international relations. |
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Because schools are lagging, parents must usher children into a higher level of fitness, Dr. Cooper stresses. |
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In addition, instead of fashionably dressed young ladies stationed at the gate to usher in the movie-goers, formally attired old gentlemen will be assigned to do the job. |
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At the hospital, the medics rush him into the emergency room, and the doctors usher me into the roomette where they work. |
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The usher at the cinema introduced the movie, and gave away the plot. |
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Veteran usher, Neil, has worked at the same theatre for seven years. |
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I've also been a wedding usher, which is a breeze by comparison. |
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If he succeeds, it would spell the end of the narrow-based gerontocracy that has dominated French political life for the last generation and could usher in real change. |
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Just as George and Laura Bush usher in a new era in presidential partnerships, here's a new book championing female compliancy. |
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My mother had got busy with various fund-raising schemes for the theatre and donated her services as an usher. |
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The usher is from the Bismarck Food Service, wearing a blue Bismarck jersey, carrying a Bismarck bucket filled with soft drinks. |
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It would be tempting, at this point, to say that the Internet will corrode religious authority and usher in the Great Secular Age. |
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When soldiers returning from the Crusades introduced wind technology to Europe in the eleventh century, the windmill helped usher in the Industrial Revolution. |
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As she carried a tray of beer, an ice cream sandwich, and a bag of kettle corn, the septuagenarian usher decided to sweat her presence in the upper deck. |
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The sexual revolution helped usher in gender equality not simply in the bedroom but in the workplace and everywhere else too. |
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You can't talk to a neighbour or eat a snack, because if you do, the court usher will come over and have a word with you. |
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He describes the plush upholstered seats, the polite young usher, the antiseptically pure air, etc. |
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The juror then asked the usher to hand to prosecuting counsel a note. |
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Jesus' belief that the Son of Man would soon arrive to usher in the kingdom is confirmed as authentic by multiple attestation. |
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The democracy which all political parties claim that they aim to usher in and defend, in justice and solidarity, is thereby vitiated. |
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The friendly usher greeted her at the door and helped her up the flight of steps. |
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Mr Prodi has therefore passed up the opportunity to usher in a new start for the Commission, which is needed. |
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These events are tailor-made for sponsors, because they draw big crowds and plenty of regional coverage that can usher people into your place of business. |
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It's like some ritual to usher people into the neighborhood. |
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Two years later he took a job with Jack Kemp, whose 1981 Kemp-Roth tax cut had helped usher in Reaganomics. |
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It is the present moment that is pregnant with future possibilities and can usher in Awareness and Transcendental Vision. |
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By teaching Yoga, you will be helping to usher in a better society, now, and also for our children in the future. |
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And the days in which a director, even Alfred Hitchcock, can get him for a million are gone the way of the sweet-tempered usher. |
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These new technologies, if strategically harnessed, could usher in a new era of digital public service broadcasting. |
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We must also usher in light and do so through the choices we make and courses we chart. |
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I'm convinced that these investments and initiatives will help to usher in a new era for the North and for Canada. |
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It was the biggest gathering of world leaders ever seen and I hope it will usher in a new era of international cooperation. |
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The evaluation provides a huge opportunity to usher in changes appropriate to the times and circumstances in which we live. |
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To conclude, the sudden entry into a deflationary economic climate will not necessarily usher in a golden age for bond management. |
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They expect to usher in the millennium before Christ's return. |
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But its chances also depend on how Fidesz will legislate on voter registration, because its goal is to usher Fidesz voters to the polls and keep the undecided at home. |
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The usher withdraws, and when the jury have arrived at a verdict, they push the button. |
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Constitution from exilic incatenation will usher in the chaos and lawlessness of Positivism. |
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No. The P.D.A., the cellphone and the computer did not usher in our hypermobile, split-focus, cybercentric culture. |
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Unlike England's World Twenty20 match against New Zealand in Bangladesh last year, the umpires were quick to usher the teams off the field when forked lightning struck close to the ground. |
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Local volunteers sew, paint, chivy, usher, host. |
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Freddie Scroggins, the chief usher, steals the cash box. |
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In today's world of religious militancy, we are witnessing a quest to re-moralize the modern world, to usher in a new axial age like the one that gave birth to the original sacred texts. |
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One, opportunely, was as an usher in a burlesque house. |
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He refused to give the microphone back to the usher. But then a most impressive thing happened, just as the crowd of a few hundred started to yawp and cat-call. |
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If you wish to change the vote you have cast, just ask an usher for a new ballot paper and hand back the incorrectly filled out paper, which will be destroyed. |
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In my opinion, if a Member of the European Parliament is asked to put out his cigarette by an usher, it is his duty to acknowledge civilly that the usher is doing his duty and thank him for it. |
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His grandmother was an usher at the Théâtre des Champs Elysées, the Paris temple of classical music, and his grandfather, Jean, was designer and stage manager at the Opera. |
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But they have also helped usher in a period of hair-raising volatility. |
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They usher in fears about nuclear proliferation. |
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The earthquake could usher in such a boom in Haiti. |
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That could usher in a turbulent period in the markets. |
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We must be ready at all times to usher in new hope in Jesus Christ. |
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This could usher in an important change in the trend. |
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For example, with the e-cinema that Daniel Langlois talked about, the idea is to develop a satellite broadcasting system which will usher in times when there will no longer be any image or product manipulation per se. |
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There are indications of intellectual and policy development that can help to usher in the next phase in this evolution, where the core idea of sustainable development can come into its own. |
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They will bring more energy and resource efficient processes, improve computer memories and processors and could usher in a new age of customized pharmaceuticals and medical procedures. |
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Will the measures laid out in this declaration usher in stronger military cooperation between Greece and France in the construction of a European defense program? |
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Regarding the disarmament pillar, the United States and Russia would replace START I with a legally binding agreement that would usher in further cuts in nuclear weapons. |
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He introduced new policies that would usher in a period of renovation aimed at making the Principality a modern State looking towards the future while preserving its traditions. |
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That would cement Poland's turn to the right, create a new dynamic with other European countries and possibly usher in a less welcoming climate for foreign investors. |
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Andrés Iniesta has now set up goals in three different Champions League finals and what a way for Xavi Hernández to usher himself out of the club he has served with such distinction. |
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The court usher is in some ways the person who makes the whole thing work. |
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The limestone path and the entrance door in oak elegantly usher visitors indoors, where the same materials are used for the floor, walls, and fixtures. |
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The international community has a crucial role to play in facilitating the development of the will to peace in order to help usher in a new political dispensation in this troubled area. |
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Each student served as an usher for veterans at the Juno Beach ceremony and performed a variety of tasks from handing out hats, water, umbrellas and programs to assisting the veterans to their seats. |
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He is among the last living physicists who helped usher in the nuclear age. |
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The middle of August is supposed to usher in the dog days of summer. |
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Behind the usher, wearing black gowns and white wigs and facing the judge, will be the prosecuting and defending barristers. |
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Etiquette usually requires reporters to identify themselves to the usher before taking position here and starting to write. |
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During deliberations only limited contact is permitted with the outside world, always via the usher. |
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He was steadily promoted, becoming a box office clerk, usher, assistant stage manager and lighting operator. |
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His discoveries helped usher in the era of modern physics, laying the foundation for such fields as special relativity and quantum mechanics. |
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Apart from the judges there would be a clerk, an usher and sometimes two professional pleaders. |
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In the history of archaeology Ramsauer's work at Hallstatt helped usher in a new, more systematic way of doing archaeology. |
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No more than a dozen people came to the cinema, but the usher insisted on conducting me to my seat with a torch, as though I were Lady Muck. |
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Organisers flew in usher girls from Beijing, an orchestra from Vienna and a troupe of synchronized swimmers from Ukraine. |
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Suggestions included getting a cowboy on a cutting horse to usher the birds out the doors. |
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He wanted to usher her into the flat but the bin bag made the action potentially dangerous, so rather than sending her flailing off back down the staircase he went on in. |
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Despite challenging moments and threats to her life, she returned to her homeland, her people, to challenge the obscurant forces and usher in an era of democratic rule. |
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The trade-union movement in Brazil had a similar effect, helping to end 21 years of oppressive military rule and usher in 15 years of representative government. |
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High technology, most notably in the form of the Internet, is poised to usher us into a brave new twenty-first-century world of wondrous global interconnectedness. |
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With Moore's Law expected to run out of steam, quantum computing will be among the inventions that could usher in a new era of innovation across industries. |
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Pathfinder overcomes these obstacles by allowing test to occur on industry standard film frames to safely usher diced and thin devices through the test process. |
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