Only when films regain the sparks of creativity, originality and reality, will we see crowds in cinema halls again. |
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She walked into the direction of the Library, as I continued my aimless wandering down the halls. |
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The beat of the kick drum is the sound of a brass doorknocker thumping outside the vast, hollow halls of limbo. |
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Designated residence halls have specialty equipment such as pianos, pool tables, foosball, and air hockey. |
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As well as four bedrooms, it boasts two bathrooms, three reception rooms and a family room, as well as assorted halls, pantries and studies. |
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When we have been cleared by Canadian customs we will be billeted and taken to church halls and primary schools in school buses. |
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Town halls should discuss the quickest way to redeploy the national guard units in their neighborhoods. |
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Cool air comes up from spaces below, eliminating the need for HVAC installations that would disturb the clean lines of the halls. |
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The enormous building would easily convert into lecture halls, seminar rooms, accommodation areas, refectories and departmental offices. |
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Museums, too, have been transformed from hushed halls of inanimate objects and glass cases into spaces where unexpected things happen. |
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She started to laugh, the musical tones reverberating through the halls before quieting. |
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Wire and plastic are used to partition these halls, and as a result prostitution is now rife in the area. |
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Most theatres and concert halls contribute to the cityscape and weave of urban life. |
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They were increasingly found in city halls, registering births and negotiating with government officials. |
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A city politician today took a swipe at neighbouring town halls for imposing council tax hikes up to four times inflation. |
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As they walked through the halls of a House office building, interns noticed the office of Mary Kaptur. |
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As a result the 115 members of its Beaver colony, two Cub packs and Scout troop have had to meet in community centres and halls across town. |
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Its dining halls are closed and its students have been given chump change for meal money. |
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These theatres focused on legitimate drama and opera but halls providing popular stage entertainments also began to appear. |
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Music halls, theaters, book shops, and art galleries attract crowds of middle-class youth. |
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The halls of the keep were large and airy, with polished stone floors and huge lattice windows. |
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Lenin opened state-run nurseries, dining halls, laundries, and sewing centers. |
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There was an unending search for blockbusters that depended on lavish sets and costly special effects, to draw crowds into the cinema halls. |
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Meanwhile, droves of identical workers toil in vast underground turbine halls, keeping the elite in their poncy satin pantaloons. |
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I was ready to respond to statements and comments and shy smiles in the halls from people who didn't know how to address the issue. |
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Audiences in Bombay's derelict Art-Deco cinema halls often hoot and whistle when their hero vanquishes a villain. |
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This area was the main Presidential site and is home to many impressive palaces, meeting halls and hotels. |
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Both of the penthouses have cherrywood internal doors, halls floored in marble and fully fitted kitchens. |
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But that's not because of his checkered past, which includes two stays in juvenile detention halls. |
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It was so dark out in the halls that he did not see the door and wound up hitting his head against it. |
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We'd had our bit of excitement and the kids were busy chattering about what had happened as they walked down the halls. |
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Dance halls, which were popular haunts for the city's fun seekers in the 60s, have been substituted for mega pubs and a new breed of night clubs. |
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She said local residents would be able to use the high-tech lecture halls and computer facilities. |
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Savvy out-of-towners make a point to escape the fetid air of the casinos and the convention halls by touring the Red Rock Canyon. |
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It was then that they heard the outcries coming from further down The Deeps, as shouts carried through the dungeon halls. |
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A few months before that, a 13-year-old student was stripped naked and paraded down the halls of her school. |
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Yesterday when I was walking through the halls, this thought struck me hard. |
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So, living her dream vicariously through her son, she traipsed him round church halls to entertain audiences of stout women. |
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The dinners were a cut above average at the U.S. chow halls, but that's where the similarity with hearth and home begins and ends. |
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People still conversed with each other in dance halls, sign language was only used by the hearing impaired. |
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Their advocacy of limits on how long elected officials can serve shifts political power to the lobbyists who prowl the halls of state capitols. |
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Military chapels, mess halls, decks of ships, aircraft hangars, tents, and open field assembly areas are frequently utilized. |
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The halls had a slight musty odor and there were spots where pictures used to hang from the walls. |
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The halls will be linked to Essex University's multi-million campus planned for the old Odeon cinema site. |
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My travels brought me to middle schools, firehouses, and town halls, which are, of course, perfect backdrops for snap shots and handshakes. |
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Letters have also been sent to wardens of university halls of residence warning them to monitor students' health. |
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Students in halls of residence who intermit or withdraw will only pay for the time they are resident. |
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But it has not yet been able to break out of the confines of documents and seminar halls. |
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Well, Stanley Donwood's artwork reminds me of the playbills from Victorian music halls or a rickety theatre troupe travelling across the land. |
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Taylor walked down the halls and to the fitting room where Rochelle was just finishing up another girl, who had a ripped seam. |
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A vast stretch of dark silk cloth covers almost the entire length of one of the two large halls of the Convent of the Cordeliers. |
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The crowds were slow enough in the early stages and it took some years for the venue to flower into one of the best known halls in the province. |
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They are full sized concert grand pianos destined to be played by the world's greatest and in some of its most famous halls. |
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In the crowded halls of the huge college, the couples were pairing off quickly and heading off to get ready for dates, or parties. |
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Prowling the halls and courtyards of the castle are legions of unholy creatures. |
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I got out of this strange and foreign bed to wander into the glass tiled halls filled with black marble. |
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Two chimneys collapsed and all that remained from the two halls at the centre of the explosion was a crater 10 metres deep and 50 metres wide. |
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Courses offered for credit and sessions on time management at the student recreation centers and residence halls could enhance efficiency. |
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A toad croaked in the distance breaking the eerie silence that haunted the halls of trees and earth. |
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First year students in the freshwoman halls are placed in both single and a limited number of double rooms. |
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Apart from formal trading in the three halls at the Johannesburg Fresh Produce Market, there is plenty of economic activity on the fringes. |
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Ava strode through the halls with her face in a book, her hair in a messy ponytail with frizzy red hairs everywhere. |
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Blame it on the advent of multiplexes or a dip in the movie culture, its curtains for more than 20 cinema halls in the city. |
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After the curtain call, the back stage halls are filled with chatter and laughter. |
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This will substantially reduce the congestion at the customs counters in arrival halls of international airports. |
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They built halls to serve as language schools and as places for dramas, films, judo lessons, poetry readings, potlucks, and parties. |
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This exceptional exhibition will cover the cymas of some of the most sumptuous halls in the Brukenthal Palace. |
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King Makareus' soldiers entered the earthen halls of the pass of Pindae in the crevasse of the great towers of stone. |
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The atrium style entrance halls are overlooked by an overhanging gallery on the first floor. |
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The development team stalks the halls while the quality assurance team feverishly looks for bugs. |
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The frost is thick on the ground, Rudolf and Prancer are straining at the leash and the halls are decked with boughs of holly. |
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The gossamer-thin spring-roll pastry can be bought from Oriental food stores and some speciality food halls and delis. |
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The exhibition halls will also host a food court providing delicacies from many countries. |
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To continue our example with cream woodwork, the foyer and halls might be painted a pearl gray, light tan, soft gold, or deeper cream. |
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A country whose holidays and putsches all take place in beer halls can't be all bad. |
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He is the only person to be inducted to the respective halls of fame for rock musicians, country artists, and songwriters. |
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I want you to stop picking me up for practice or bothering me in the halls. |
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Campers live in University residence halls and eat meals at University dining halls. |
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A hundred portraits line the corridors of academe, while offices, lecture rooms and even dining halls boast original art. |
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It will differ from normal halls of residence in that each bedroom will have its own front door. |
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There were even training rooms and dining halls and rooms where people could play sports. |
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The kitchen and dining halls offer a visual feast with ultra-modern implements. |
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Enter the restaurant and I'm in a giant room resembling the dining halls found in universities. |
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We are doing that mainly by improving school meals and by making dining halls more attractive. |
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Zola's cheese shop was aptly set in the new market halls, built in the 1850s, for it depicted modern commerce and not immemorial rural custom. |
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Appendices contain a discography and details of concert halls around the world. |
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Some of the huge columns in the entrance halls are engraved with Turkish decorations. |
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The air exclusion zone over London continued and extra armed units were deployed in the departure and arrival halls of Gatwick and Heathrow. |
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Luckily there were plenty of other sideshows around the convention halls to cheer spirits and exorcise such defeatist sentiments. |
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So for the second time that day, she left class early and walked down the halls to her dorm. |
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He risked censure, expulsion from the House, even his life, to ensure that the halls of our government resounded with the voice of the people. |
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I was walking down the halls with my head ducked silently cussing out every pair of eyes I felt drilling into my back. |
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Suedeheads started wearing suits, as well as other dressy outfits, as everyday wear instead of just at dance halls at night. |
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I pounded my beat in the halls of Congress in my role as a trade union lobbyist, trying to win votes to hold back the antilabor tide. |
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Residence halls have not usually been considered critical components in community colleges. |
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It takes him 35 minutes to drive to his job managing the student the halls of residence at Leeds Metropolitan University. |
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In Ibadan 30 Polytechnic students were wounded when police threw tear gas into their halls of residence. |
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The rest of the palace, Timon's room and the banquet halls, had collapsed in a head of dust and smoke. |
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He'd walked the various courtyards, banquet halls and audience rooms during the few times when the Inner Circle had been required to meet. |
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As well as the temple, the Community Centre has a sports facility, a stage with a 600-seater auditorium and several meeting rooms and halls. |
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The show has been packing halls around the country with its combination of top quality characters, high production and sheer entertainment. |
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Immediately he began touring the islands, putting notices up in village halls and organising community meetings. |
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Students could be given the chance, for example, to regulate the tone of voice they use in the halls. |
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Frescoes of demons and spirits writhe across the walls of its prayer halls, and the drone of absorbed monks fills dim rooms and corridors. |
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Although imposing, with giant stairways and halls, accommodating staff create a welcoming atmosphere. |
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The stone stairways and halls of this wonderfully atmospheric venue will be aglow with candlelight. |
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But the bold claims of cable infomercials are nowhere heard in the halls of science. |
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For spiritual nourishment there were halls of worship filled with statues of the Buddha. |
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Although they're hovering, the cacodemons can be lured into chokepoints like doorways and halls. |
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The halls were buzzing with activity per usual, but he didn't comprehend any of it. |
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After he talked to me, he prowled the university halls buttonholing random students and asking them questions. |
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That is not always an easy task in the button-down halls of Congress, where many aides remain closeted. |
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The Old English terms burg, burh, and byrig were used originally for fortified places, including villages and royal halls. |
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Bingo halls can also link games and offer unlimited winnings, while betting shops can offer food and non-alcoholic drinks. |
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Try to avoid the obvious tourist traps as you'll miss out on the ambience and unique characters that more traditional halls have in spades. |
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Maithris and I took our time, wandering through halls and chambers trimmed with gold leaf, floored with veined marble. |
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Missive in hand he strode, excited, through vaulted chambers and stone halls to the private chambers of his court. |
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Inside the exhibit halls, the arched roof trusses are exposed to emphasize the great expansive vault of the structure. |
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Italian theaters and music halls, for example, largely gave way to vaudeville, nickelodeons, organized sports, and radio programming. |
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And the politically correct meddlers, abiding in the town halls and government departments of the land, were sore annoyed. |
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New recruits can be invited to the army halls in order to train and become valiant warriors. |
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The most famous conductors and soloists in the concert halls around the world perform his compositions. |
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Suddenly, an uproar of shouts rang through the halls as both writers and editors alike came to see what was causing the commotion. |
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The affluent in Malay society hold weddings in hotels or large community halls. |
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Her voice no longer can do what it used to do in heavy classical music, at least not in concert halls and operatic stages. |
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That provincial England closed at nightfall, save for two bingo halls and some old boys playing dominoes in the snug. |
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And since it makes sensible use of halls rather than fields, the event is untroubled by rain, mud and overflowing toilets. |
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None of them will be encouraged to abandon school early to spend their formative years in shadowy snooker halls. |
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He's in five bowling halls of fame as a bowler but is just as deserving as an instructor. |
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For now at least, art schools are up there with concert halls and museums as must-have projects for architects. |
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Lautrec lived in the Montmartre section, the nightlife quarter of cabarets, cafes, restaurants, sleazy dance halls and brothels. |
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Suddenly, the bell rang and tons of students piled into the halls with lockers opening and slamming loudly. |
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The cells are cramped and inmates live in vast halls that smell of stale body odour and unchanged beds. |
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The much-needed cash injection means Astroturf pitches and multi-purpose sports and arts halls could be built at schools around the country. |
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The design uses the farm steading model of barns arranged around a court to create a flexible storehouse of large multi-purpose halls. |
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This would mean that more cinema halls and multiplexes could be opened in Pakistan. |
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No other hockey family can make that claim, and neither can any family with multiple members in the baseball, basketball, or football halls. |
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People came and went, and a mound of gifts was slowly piling higher in the halls of the castle. |
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He blew it once, and we marched single-file into the school, then scrambled down the unlit halls to reach our homerooms before the bell. |
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Some colleges are building residence halls with an emphasis on private, single rooms. |
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These systems provide better sound, and also protect musicians' hearing from the blare of the huge sound systems used in large concert halls. |
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While the understory growth of bluejack and turkey oak may be thinned, layers and layers of avian understory abound in these airy halls. |
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He began meandering down the halls, as was his duty as a monitor, trying to forget about the event that had just transpired. |
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Julian winced slightly at the sound of the shrill voice echoing down the halls, accompanied by thundering footsteps. |
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Bermudians will still be able to gamble on horse racing, the football pools, in the bingo halls and on internet gaming sites. |
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The people discover again how to use the foundries, book binderies, breweries, and halls of government that slowly push up out of the ground. |
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But today, with the night spent on action stations, the men move to their respective dining halls. |
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The charity is even planning a portable gym that can be packed in a van and taken to village halls in the area. |
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That group is left to shift for itself in crowded community college classes or in the packed lecture halls of public universities. |
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Construction of mini cinema halls, probably the best way to ensure exhibition of serious films, should get priority. |
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He slowly trailed down the halls in attempt to reach his room, while his mother found various objects to hit him with. |
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Being brought up with traditional jazz and the Edwardian music halls, we added a different approach to American blues. |
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They will have to lobby mightily in the halls of Congress on behalf of broadening their nation's version of perestroika. |
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Everyone was exchanging gifts in the halls and people were leaving to go on vacation and to go visit family members. |
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The six-storey complex houses a plethora of Bengali community associations, a mosque, two boys' schools, a gym, several lecture halls. |
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Interactive digital television and even touch-tone phones may soon act as alternatives to to crossing ballot papers in local schools and halls. |
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Just as I was about to answer, the shrill school bell sounded throughout the halls. |
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Sportsmen and women will be accommodated mainly two to a room in 32 blocks in six student halls of residence. |
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Musically, he began as a boy soprano and his music teacher took him to village halls to perform. |
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In all the halls of the palace servants instantly laid tables for a banquet. |
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The union said it would fight so that the beer halls remain in the municipality's hands. |
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The halls of the Science department were decorated with stuffed animals, molecular models, and beakers of chemicals, all behind glass displays. |
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Emotions of fear, anticipation, and excitement silenced the team, as they walked with pride and dignity through the campus halls. |
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She would walk the halls ignoring everyone and only focusing on her studies and her revenge. |
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The gentleman moved his focus to the intersection between the main and back halls that led to the gardens. |
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Doubts about the success of such a risky venture were soon put on the backburner as cinemagoers thronged to cinema halls. |
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Kirkland's measured arguments, and his sense of fair play, commanded respect in both union halls and the halls of power in Washington. |
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Brothels are usually seedy affairs, tucked discreetly away from churches, town halls and the like. |
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I even think that the baseboards in all the halls have not once made me wonder who is spending my residence fees. |
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Boogie-woogie was generally confined to barrelhouses, dance halls, and houses of ill-repute. |
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Hardly a week goes by without another barmy example of political correctness being imposed by our town halls. |
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The best halls were rectangular, with a platform at one end and the audience seated in rows facing it. |
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Renaissance theaters had been designed to resemble theatrically successful spaces in banquet halls. |
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All three blogs wrote that Wilson later stormed down Senate halls, screaming obscenities. |
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The roots of sweet music grew from the post World War I urban craze for large dance halls and for dancing in hotel ballrooms and private clubs. |
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The song was featured in the title sequence of the movie Blackboard Jungle, which had youngsters swarming cinema halls in droves. |
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Two sports halls would be built to host badminton, gymnastics and table tennis. |
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Twenty-two minutes from a gold medal and with it the promise of a lifetime of backslapping, banquet invitations, halls of fame. |
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Those who ventured outside the convention halls to enjoy the warm weather and the view of Vancouver's scenic waterfront heard the drums. |
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However, now it is common to find more than two marriages being held at the same venue with most halls boasting of an additional mandapam. |
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As I walk the halls, I nervously await one of the rattling tchotchkes to come crashing down onto the quaintly undulating creaky floorboards. |
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Numerous outlets for takeaway foods are open along the main roads, in food halls and shopping centres. |
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From Brahms and Enescu through Gyorgy Ligeti, the Magyar spirit has emblazoned concert halls around the globe. |
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I guess I did everything I can so I'm just going to accept her waltz of displeasure as she avoids me in the halls of the school. |
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With a well known singer, he toured the halls as a professional dancer, excelling at the tango. |
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Who can resist a peek at the salaciousness seething behind the sober suits and marble halls of American government? |
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Darling Harbour is the site for many conference centres, exhibition halls and auditoriums. |
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Scheduled to be released in April, this is one film which will entertain audiences not in theatres but in school halls. |
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Things in the castle had changed a bit, there were new, larger halls here and there. |
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Everyone began moving at their top speed out of the dungeon and through the halls. |
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Her hair was tightly put up and she was again rushed out into the halls, towards the Great Hall and into the royal ball room. |
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Should I wear clothes I wear around the house, or pretend I stalk the halls in a quilted jacket and ascot? |
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When I was looking for my third period class which is Health, the halls were really crowded. |
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You could spend the day exploring its halls, museums, galleries, chapel and arsenal. |
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Should we expect hordes of eager Western tourists to start clogging up the arrivals halls at Bulgaria's airports? |
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Inside, features include white oak floors in the entrance halls, living rooms and kitchens. |
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It gave the County Board of Supervisors the power to issue or revoke licenses of roadhouses and dance halls outside municipal corporations. |
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The bell rings its ugly sound and footsteps speed in the halls, the footsteps of tardy children running to class. |
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Underscored by an ecological development brief, the new campus has a green landscaped centre, ringed by lecture halls and a university library. |
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The halls extended for about 30 feet in each direction before turning at a rigid edge to fit the precise triangular shape of the ship. |
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The two men rushed rapidly down the halls, skirting past servants and other court members. |
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The answer, of course, does not lie within the hallowed halls of government, finance or business. |
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Showmen would also tour schools, libraries and concert halls with the apparatus showing off the latest film slides. |
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House plants come into their own in winter and also bring life to entrance halls and landings, which are often cold, ill-lit and draughty. |
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It's not like you're a civil servant in the faceless halls of bureaucracy, unable to change your job description or influence your bosses. |
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Walking through the halls, I tried to ignore the gasps, whispering, stares, and the glares coming my way. |
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In the 1980s and 1990s, Afro-Peruvian music has witnessed a strong revival and is now popular in the bars and dance halls of Lima. |
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As I wondered through the great royal halls of the old Abyssinian capital of Gondar, I thought of love. |
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Bingo halls will be able to offer much bigger jackpots and rollover prizes. |
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Some colleges even provide faculty with living quarters in the residence halls. |
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The room was jam-packed full of people, even the halls and the doorways were crammed with people just wanting to be near. |
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The fire swept through the halls of the second floor in the north wing of the school, and flashed through the cockloft above the classrooms. |
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However, no furniture was in the halls, except three magnificent crystal pendant lamps with 13 layers. |
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When it was time to leave the cloistered halls of academia and put all her knowledge to use, she chose to come to Pattaya to work. |
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From the 1920s on, acousticians promoted fan-shaped concert halls, virtually free of reverberation. |
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More than 25 years ago, Koestenbaum traded the cloistered halls of academia for the front lines of the global economy. |
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In the last year, countless acts from Moby to Joe Cocker via Bob Dylan have played to half-empty halls in the city. |
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Crowds packed into halls and bars to hear Mick's songs and stories which he had perfected to a fine art. |
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I said to her, if she really was a fairy, she should watch out for the elves that lived around the halls. |
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The names don't sing of cloistered halls and port wine the way Alistair does. |
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Town halls are one thing, but you can keep your catch-and-release handshake, your dandled baby, your pale-brew kaffeeklatsch. |
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Instead, the fire whipped and whirled around me, crawling up the walls and ceiling as it coursed through the halls. |
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But it was merely the most stunning in a series of reverses suffered by Labour in one night of carnage in town halls across England and Wales. |
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Technicians in white coats, latex gloves, and hairnets walk the halls and move about the lab purposefully. |
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Thunder rattled the windows and lightning gave an eerie and unworldly light to halls. |
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As they walked the halls, a rattle of gunfire intruded from across the filtration ponds. |
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He shielded his eyes to look up at the school clock tower, rising high above a sprawling mass of buildings and halls. |
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A special kind of sound reinforcement, called assisted resonance, is used in some halls to increase the reverberation time within certain frequency bands. |
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One by one, loud, rowdy girls begin to file in from the halls. |
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The 422nd also is working on getting lecture halls and classrooms repaired to allow the Center to provide continuing training to its interns and resident doctors. |
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It seems common experience in concert halls and theatres that we cannot suppress a cough, although the cougher and his neighbours may disagree about this. |
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So while chips and garlic bread will be rationed to twice a week in Scottish schools, pupils will be enticed into dining halls which broadcast Sky television. |
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The effervescent and heady drink is retailed in two air-conditioned halls of this outlet, which is frequented by a growing segment of young professionals and students. |
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The die-in involved thirty students who marched the campus halls with signs, drums, and bullhorns in an effort to encourage their fellow students to join the downtown rally. |
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It owns the Moto chain of motorway service areas, provides school meals and operates the dining halls at many of our higher education establishments. |
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Huge banqueting halls with elaborate architectural elements were usually located in the northern wings of the palaces, and were provided with ceramic kitchen and dinnerware. |
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But Cocker proved to be a survivor, bringing his passionate persona to concert halls around the world decade after decade. |
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He recounts to her the bullying he receives at school, with classmates spitting on him as he walks down the halls. |
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I minimize time in crowds and chow halls and take meals to go more often than not. |
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No queues of mourners lined the halls to say a final farewell to the man hailed as the workers' hero as his body lay in state at the House of Parliament yesterday. |
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Radio presenters will travel across the county to report on the progress of quiz teams playing in pubs, clubs, churches, community halls, workplaces and at home. |
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Solicitors acting on behalf of a number of officers have written to cinemas and halls pointing out that they may be liable to action should the film be found to be defamatory. |
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Inside the convention center, workmen walked the halls where, earlier in the day, world leaders paraded among their entourages. |
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For years, you could find them regularly in the halls of Shorecrest High School, medals shining, black shoes agleam, trouser creases sharper than a regulation haircut. |
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Not to mention violating whatever sense of decorum is left in the halls of Congress. |
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Although he is a relative newcomer to the lobbying game, Livingston obviously knows his way around the halls of Congress and how to pitch for a client. |
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In the nineteenth century, theatres, music halls and cinemas were regulated as local authorities responded to fears about alcohol abuse and immorality. |
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There are curtained cubicles for seeing the doctor, dimly lit halls, a smell of stopped-up toilets. |
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Houses sit together at their tables in dining halls under maroon banners emblazoned with their names. |
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By one count, 20 industry lobbyists were in the halls trying to scuttle SB 962 as it came to a vote nine days later. |
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She was told the caretakers would provide a basic service including sweeping and mopping where necessary of halls, landings and stairs and cleaning of accessible windows. |
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It was the mid-morning angelus and the chanting could be heard echoing throughout the halls and vibrating the stiff walls as the slow cries to the Virgin were heard. |
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I have studied under learned professors in stately halls of learning. |
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A young, obese psychic spends her days driving the orbital road surrounding London, pulling up at struggling community halls or greasy steakhouses to perform stage shows. |
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He wanders through the halls of the United Nations, passing out pamphlets and extolling his cause. |
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Heritage is holding anti-Obamacare town halls in nine cities across the country, beginning Tuesday in Fayetteville, Arkansas. |
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To do that, Snider heads out to the various tour stops and surveys the dries, including the hotels they may stay in, the surrounding areas and potential performance halls. |
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It must be hard to walk the halls in Foggy Bottom these days without running into an ex-journalist. |
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Soon enough the dance halls were dominated by the ska beat, which eventually metamorphosed into rocksteady, this transformation paving the way for the emergence of reggae. |
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The finance giants have liquidated their assets, and their grand banking halls have found a new lease of life as dens of iniquity of a different sort. |
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But behind the doors of prisons and juvenile halls, in the rooms of foster care group homes, are people who need us. |
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The arbours were wooden dining halls, surrounded by a hedge and ditch with an elaborate entrance, that were used as places of entertainment and feasting. |
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Like many of Trenkwalder's sculptures, these pieces are strongly architectonic, evoking cathedrals, pillared halls and Greek temples, among other structures. |
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They walked down the halls together to their adjacent lockers. |
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The graffito ashlaring was last restored during the general reconstruction in 1992 together with the renovation of the two original vaulted halls on the ground-floor. |
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The hallways were lined here and there with mirrors, and the creaky wooden floors had an old rug with archaic symbols winding with it, down the halls. |
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They gorged themselves in their mess halls, tossing away mountains of food as starving locals looked on. |
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But in the past few decades, a following of a different sort has flocked to its hallowed halls. |
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Chris could hear his name echoing through the halls of the auditorium. |
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Albert spent three years on the road, headlining in small clubs and opening for rock stars like Neil Diamond in larger halls. |
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Someone called him a hermit crab lurking in the halls of the United Nations. |
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The new dog was incredibly nervous and on edge, patrolling the halls, sniffing in closets, and climbing on and under furniture. |
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Moulitsas is at his best when he snarks about the inanities being passed along the airwaves and through the halls of Congress. |
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The transportation of a distinct and local style of dancing to the dance halls and ballrooms of New York City is a journey made and remembered by the body. |
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As well as providing music for ceremonies and on the march, military bands play on bandstands, in concert halls, and for all manner of social purposes. |
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People bearing placards and tracts appeared outside the assembly halls. |
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And I strolled through the hushed timbered halls of the Casa del Colon, or Columbus House, where he is said to have lodged during his time on the island. |
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The place seemed as an open tomb, an unsealed sepulcher, a deathly resting place, quietly awaiting corpses to crowd its halls and fulfill its purpose. |
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With beer halls and stores selling everything from the latest fashions to gourmet foods, Potsdamer Platz became a central meeting point for pre-war Berlin. |
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All the room walls were a cream color and the halls were topaz. |
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Once in the United States, Finnish immigrants recreated Finnish institutions, including churches, temperance societies, workers' halls, benefit societies, and cooperatives. |
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That goes a long way in the halls of local high schools, where they would otherwise spend their adolescence obscured by the shadows of the jocks and cheerleaders. |
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He walked out of the kitchen area and tranquilly walked through the halls, admiring the paintings and furniture that were artfully placed in different places as decoration. |
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Due to the lack of large orchestras, people flocked to town halls in order to hear the virtuosi of the day play their own transcriptions of music that was popular at the time. |
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The Internet is as much to blame for the growth in gambling as more traditional establishments such as bricks-and mortar casinos, betting shops and bingo halls. |
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I led the way into one of the back halls that branched off the main room. |
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If our bimetallists in the halls of legislation were conversant with sacred history, they might get fresh inspiration from the views of the Patriarchs on good money. |
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A troubling trend is emerging in the halls of higher learning. |
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But uniformed guards do not patrol the halls of even the highest-risk units. |
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In the Cavour high school in central Rome, mice run through the halls, nibbling on open wiring and nesting in the lockers. |
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Overlooking the halls is a multi-storey building where all administrative business is done and where those short of money can access bank services. |
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To even imply that is to insult the mind-set and values of those faceless multitudes who flock to the cinema halls every other day and make or mar the fortunes of many a film. |
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The feud, which culminates in an incompetent duel with pistols, is finally forgotten when the theatre owners try to have the music halls shut down as disorderly houses. |
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The extensive and original programme will bring to life the theatres, bars and music halls of the city for an indoor festival with something for all tastes. |
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Her solo turn as part of the act brought her considerable publicity, and she began to perform in music halls and charity shows with many of the day's top stage stars. |
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Similarly, television has been criticized for replacing the local cinema and for reducing the number of visitors to bingo and music halls, theatres and football stadiums. |
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Blackburn with Darwen Council flies the Union flag outside its town halls all year, except on St George's Day, when it is swapped for the English flag of St George. |
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Yet even his staffers acknowledge he is a wooden candidate, a result of a long career in the ponderous halls of the House. |
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Danzig fielded questions on topics ranging from the possibility of exchanging unserviceable utility uniforms for infantrymen to the size of meal portions at the mess halls. |
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They hastily crept through the halls, towards the bridge of the ship. |
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