The Moon's orb of around 12 degrees is also that which separates the luminaries when the new crescent Moon reappears after conjunction. |
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As is the custom with visiting luminaries, he was asked to give advice about other problematic patients. |
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There were suggestions, denounced as ludicrous by a raft of academic luminaries, that her research did not make the grade. |
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In the capable hands of his bandmates, largely comprised of Cowtown's art rock luminaries, they swell to epic freakout proportions. |
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Sipping bottled water before the concert in Huntington in March, he ticked off a long list of luminaries with whom he had worked. |
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It is a humble but honest place, with food more hearty than fancy, and prices appealing to mere mortals and theatrical luminaries alike. |
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They might be the product of his confabs with the management luminaries of the European game at a forum in Geneva a week past on Friday. |
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Noel Coward called such luminaries as Dietrich, Garland, Burton, Taylor, Sinatra, the Oliviers, and the queen mother his friends. |
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Each generation reinvents history in its own image, especially when reimagining the lives of luminaries. |
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The book features rich, critical depictions of today's leading lights, and the luminaries fare worse than the nerds. |
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The roll of honour includes luminaries such as Theodor Mommsen, Max Planck, Albert Einstein and Werner Heisenberg. |
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The event featured daily keynote addresses from industry luminaries and more than 60 technical seminars. |
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Analytical articles by legal luminaries will be a regular feature of the journal. |
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The retreat is a weekend of tutorials from leading business luminaries on entrepreneurship. |
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Politicians and legal luminaries rubbed shoulders with film stars and top scientists recently. |
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Audiences at two screenings in Los Angeles, packed with film industry luminaries, were equally receptive. |
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With a leadership vacuum within the committee, various luminaries have weighed in with their preferences. |
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Indeed, a petition against the boycott idea has garnered thousands of signatures from intellectual luminaries here. |
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The Europeans seem to be relying on the doubts of certain American luminaries, while those luminaries rely on lack of support by the Europeans. |
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There are 10 planets in Astrology, beginning with the Sun and the Moon, which are also known as luminaries. |
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We offer an exciting range of lighting and luminaries that have the ability to accentuate, to harmonize, to enhance, and to convey a mood. |
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The fact that neither of us had read these great luminaries didn't stop us nearly coming to blows. |
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Pete Rose and other baseball luminaries have been seen at Donatello, an upscale Italian restaurant. |
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However, you get to meet luminaries of the opera world, work with fine, like-minded colleagues and are on the spot when opportunities arise. |
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So they cadged meetings with 86 luminaries, successful leaders in an eclectic array of professions. |
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Exposure to luminaries such as Milton Glaser and techniques such as photocomposition engendered a catharsis. |
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The practice of the Sahaba and the fatwa of all these luminaries is sufficient to establish karahat. |
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It brought together luminaries in the struggle for democracy including actors within political and civil society. |
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This closest of sky luminaries, a sphere as well as the Earth, casts its own shadows on its surface, tracing the shape that is then turned away from the sun. |
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I spent a surreal evening watching all 85 episodes and gathered the best of the worst big ideas from the firearm luminaries. |
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Designed to simulate conditions just about anywhere on the planet, each height-adjustable light pole is equipped with three different kinds of highway luminaries. |
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The 60s saw the biggest names in rock history pass through its doors including such luminaries as the Rolling Stones, The Beatles and Jimi Hendix. |
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Michelle met with arts luminaries in the gallery in the Egyptian wing named for Hatshepsut, the woman who ruled as pharaoh. |
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In the second part, the author gives a fairly detailed sketch of six Sanskrit luminaries whose formal education proved no yardstick to measure their scholarship. |
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On Friday evening, a crowd of Hollywood luminaries gathered to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the spike Lee classic. |
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He won a fiercely dedicated following of young Chicano and Anglo organizers and the support of Hollywood celebrities, political luminaries, and social reformers. |
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This is the sort of thing jazz luminaries do these days to make a living. |
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The lyrical declamation has inspired luminaries ranging from Kurt Vonnegut to Robert Frost. |
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At 28, Eleanor Catton became the youngest ever winner of the Booker Prize with her swirling, mesmerizing epic The luminaries. |
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He was followed by a number of good panels filled with various luminaries. |
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From American presidents to movie stars and journalists, luminaries around the world honor the father of modern South Africa. |
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Since then, birding luminaries and legendary enthusiasts have sacrificed huge chunks of their lives to catch the merest glimpse of the wondrous woodpecker. |
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But gradually Frost was able to lure for interviews senior politicians and luminaries from all sides of public life. |
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Well, they should parade, in authentic ancient style, stark-naked – with Boris and other luminaries leading the way. |
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To a considerable extent, a tight circle of New York intellectuals, Ivy League stars, Nobel laureates and Oxbridge luminaries replaced him and his cohort. |
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These luminaries can be computer operated, sweeping a defined area with a powerful and precise shaft of light. |
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This section is dedicated to luminaries, pioneers and individuals who have made significant contributions to the international art, science and technology community. |
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During the roundtable, the present luminaries were most interested in whether Putin could have ordered the hit. |
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The use of efficient luminaries with special reflectors can reduce glare and increase illumination levels. |
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The theory those 19th-century luminaries propagated is supported by an increasing number of people on this side of the Atlantic. |
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Such members may be experts in anti-corruption matters legal luminaries or members of the public interested in anti-corruption matters. |
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Having a knack for publicity, he persuaded luminaries such as General Douglas MacArthur to visit the Iron Mountain site. |
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Katie bought paper bags and used my paper punches to make luminaries. |
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Later the 30-acre property became a dude ranch for movie stars and the sixteen rooms housed such luminaries as John Wayne, Rock Hudson, and Katherine Hepburn. |
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Since the most productive of heat and warmth are Cancer and Leo, they assigned these to the greatest and most powerful heavenly bodies, the luminaries, as houses. |
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He has even played a few warehouse raves with some of these luminaries. |
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He was the last of a deified generation of CBS News luminaries that included Walter Cronkite, Andy Rooney, and Ed Bradley. |
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Hats off and hands out of pockets, tourists peer at the corpse in the flatteringly dim light, before being directed along the Kremlin wall, where other Soviet luminaries are interred. |
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In terms of other luminaries, I actually had the pleasure of having dinner with Professor Sir Michael Marmot and we might collaborate on health inequities re-search. |
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She's one of the few contemporary stars who conveys a high ratio of experience-to-age, like those early-era Hollywood luminaries who ran off to become chorus girls or roustabouts at fifteen. |
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Octavio Amado is an Argentinian artist, editor and designer living in Paris. He expresses a contemporary style as regards lighting, metamorphosing the luminaries into art work. |
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His paintings were praised by Whig luminaries such as John Dryden, Joseph Addison, Richard Steele, and Alexander Pope. |
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The council's decision was swiftly criticised by Amnesty International, the human-rights lobby group, and secularist luminaries like Richard Dawkins, as well as by the theatre-goers of Belfast. |
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See Australian acting luminaries such as Cate Blanchet and Geoffrey Rush tread the boards at the Sydney Theatre Company or enjoy a blockbuster musical in Melbourne's opulent theatre district. |
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On a recent Saturday evening, diners included Canberra arts luminaries, athletes from the Australian Institute of Sport and two nervous students on a first date, all of whom lingered well into the night. |
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This is presumably ahead of a deal to release Lies, the song in question, and join the list of luminaries who have passed through NG's ranks, such as Passion Pit, Ellie Goulding, Marina and the Diamonds, Gotye and Icona Pop. |
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Nearing completion at the end of the year, the launch is scheduled for May 2001 with a guest list that includes the Prime Minister and such luminaries as astronaut Marc Garneau and Olympic rower Alison Korn. |
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Modemakt' also includes a temporary exhibition called 'Trend' that focuses on contemporary clothes design in the 2000s as interpreted by twelve Swedish fashion luminaries such as J Lindberg, Cheap Monday and Camilla Norrback. |
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Along with such luminaries as Jean Jaurès, Léon Blum, Pierre Mendès-France and François Mitterrand, Rocard helped lay the intellectual foundations of French socialism. |
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Fronted by the Nobel luminaries, Myron Scholes and Robert Merton, and John Meriwether, a formidable trader, it made galloping returns by wagering billions in mostly borrowed money. |
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In this context, he associated with Lord Monboddo and other Scottish Enlightenment luminaries in Edinburgh. |
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After about a decade his comics had gained a solid cult following, and praise from such luminaries as Robert Crumb, Art Spiegelman, and David Cronenberg. |
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Our invoices are payable in totalities with the order for the totality of the products presented, tables, chairs, luminaries, and all produced decorations by bank check, mandate letter or credit card. |
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Kennedy's assassination in November 1963 caused a profound shock and sadness expressed by many politicians, religious leaders, and luminaries of literature and the arts. |
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Among the luminaries who judged were Victor Hugo and Alexandre Dumas. |
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Mounting a bandwagon of praise for the later volumes were such contemporary luminaries as Adam Smith, William Robertson, Adam Ferguson, Lord Camden, and Horace Walpole. |
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It is the privilege of the celestial luminaries to receive no tincture, sullage, or defilement from the most noisome sinks and dunghills here below. |
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Her funeral was attended by the luminaries of British stage and screen. |
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After traipsing through Paris and listening to reactionary luminaries like Henri Bergson, he arrived as Fabianism became the rage among undergraduates. |
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Leyser incorporates rare archival photos and interviews as well as new ones with luminaries like punk poet-singer Patti Smith and director Gus Van Sant. |
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