The Jim Crow law was winked at by the firm, and many colored patrons were served in the main parlor, which was also on the second floor. |
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One wall is dedicated to announcements, notices and messages that patrons want to put up. |
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A valet whisks a car away for arriving patrons, while down at the corner, a Metro bus wheezes and clanks to a stop. |
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From various patrons they may receive outright gifts, sponsorships, bequests, donations in kind and money. |
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My company launched a woman's forum, newspapers gloated over successful women and hotels and boutiques offered discounts to lady patrons. |
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The patrons who commissioned these memorials, and the dead whom they commemorated, bore both Norse and Celtic names. |
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If we are asking for forbearance from our patrons then we must show our commitment to them. |
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Central to the new building is the two-story atrium, with a north-facing glass wall, where patrons first enter to purchase their tickets. |
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He was a regular attendant at Our Lady's Day Care Centre, Ballylanders and will be sadly missed by all the patrons. |
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Universal differs from Scubar in that the patrons are slightly more palatable, still jockish, however and with an emphasis on the metro. |
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He shows up at a pub and conscripts the patrons for a two-year tour of duty. |
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Mild expressions of lascivious interest in fellow bar patrons or party-attendees also come in handy. |
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Postal patrons also must complete customs forms and declarations pertaining to the contents of parcels being mailed. |
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Such shops can be on any road and its patrons will talk glowingly of their favourites. |
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He teams up with retail shops that refer patrons to the parties and he brings in winemakers to conduct the tastings. |
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Everyone laughed uproariously at this, no doubt making a spectacle of themselves to the other patrons. |
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Breads, pastries, rice and legume dishes were on display for the viewing and tasting pleasure of interested patrons. |
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So, how do you get more of your patrons to drink your beer when the preference for cocktails and more flavorful bevvies is ramping up? |
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Mackenzie is incensed by wealthy patrons hiding works of art away in private collections. |
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Allegations of counterfeit tickets left some patrons standing outside, and ubiquitous scalpers smiling. |
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The room was silent save for the haunting cry of a samisen's vibrations, and the occasional trade of words between patrons. |
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Marbella, with its magnificent boutiques, extraordinary yachts and flashy patrons is best sampled by night. |
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Both bars have also developed a set of sanctions for patrons who disobey the rules. |
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Yet, without strong and committed patrons, there is a real danger that he could become an ineffectual lame duck quite soon. |
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They were a remarkable couple, forward-thinking patrons of the arts who throughout their lives supported the avant-garde in art and architecture. |
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To add to the experience, the museum provides reproduction instruments that patrons can pick up and strum themselves. |
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We have non-chain coffee shops and laundromats whose patrons are a fascinating mix of social strata! |
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We were looking for a restaurant that's famous for enforcing turnover by requiring patrons to order two pieces every three minutes. |
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The patrons came on zippy two wheelers, wearing dungarees, talking a combination of Kannada, Hinglish, and English. |
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In 1840, he presented Lane as part of a conventional minstrel show, without informing his patrons that the man behind the burnt cork was black. |
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The arts have always relied on patrons and angels, whether they be private or public. |
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The financial risks belonged to his wealthy patrons, while he staked his ambitious future. |
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Despite the fact that these books were written in Mandarin Chinese, patrons still took the books home as souvenirs. |
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They claim that city centre businesses which provide toilets for shoppers and patrons will suffice. |
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Like their ancestors, the scions of pre-Hispanic rulers were especially keen patrons. |
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The waitstaff all across the ballroom has begun to shuttle the hundreds of dinners to the gala patrons. |
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The next day, she called me in and confronted me about the issue and terminated me since I had complaints before from patrons. |
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In restaurants, as in theater, patrons pay for a lush, contrived setting replete with stagey scenery and sophisticated lighting techniques. |
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This weekend's patrons can expect to be served shrimp bisque or rabbit pie with bay-leaf juice. |
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Two party patrons swooning over the calorific Oreos were Patty Godfrey and Lyn Stewart. |
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The patrons waiting in line at the club automatically parted as he moved through them to the door. |
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There are no booking arrangements, so it is advisable for patrons to come early and get seats. |
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I'm always amazed with the ease and indifference that patrons shed their stinky workout gear and parade around starkers. |
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Ahead we saw lights and soon entered an intersection which had a population of sidewalk patrons drifting past nightclubs and go-go bars. |
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The bar's owner, to the delight of his patrons, promised to stay open as long as the power from his generator held out. |
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Tickets are available directly from the Arts Centre and patrons are advised to book early as it is expected to be a sell-out event. |
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Commercial influence and the grip of wealthy patrons are obtrusive and obvious. |
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By the time the circus packs ups its tent and moves on, patrons will have consumed about three tons of popcorn and 7 000 bags of candyfloss. |
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The material put up around the walls will keep you amused long enough for other patrons to consider organising a search party. |
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Orchin's difficulty was that to make the association more attractive to members he risked alienating the patrons who subsidized its activities. |
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Back by popular demand is the bar person of the month awards, but this year awards will be dished out to patrons either side of the bars. |
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The ALA has made information available to librarians who opposed government intrusion into the privacy of library patrons. |
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His portraits already included classical allusions which gained him many patrons among the grand tourist gentry. |
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Some friends got together, and using a handy nearby barbeque, on several occasions provided food to the patrons. |
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By 1300 individual patrons had built prominent, canopied tombs, with effigies and small weeper figures. |
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The restaurant undertakes to provide is patrons with the same feeling of unexampled sensuous gastronomic pleasure. |
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An on-line message board, where a web site's patrons chat with each other, is a very simple example of community. |
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The secular churches were prominent patrons, as were the leading individual laymen and ecclesiastics. |
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Hotel proprietors, restaurateurs and publicans are unanimous on the point and not one of them regrets the changed habits of their patrons. |
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Chase shoved past her and rejoined the flow of angry patrons heading for the doors. |
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Many scholars have made a Utopia from an egalitarian society in which coteries of artists wined and dined their rich and enlightened patrons. |
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Well, they are your patrons, old man, so they do have some right to demand work from you. |
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And there will be no shortage of traditional music and some old-time country songs to entertain the patrons. |
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These proposals have more to do with rewarding campaign contributors and lobbying patrons than with economic stimulus. |
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This fast paced show is set to delight patrons in a town well known for its appreciation of quality productions. |
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The reformed orders found rich patrons to finance their new mother churches in Rome. |
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The Rothschilds are still prominent in banking in Britain and are notable patrons of the arts and sciences. |
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By the time the credits roll, the big question patrons may be asking themselves is, what sort of movie was this supposed to be? |
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The first 400 patrons will also receive a goody bag courtesy of Boots of Central Plaza Tralee. |
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Most of the hotel's patrons either frequented the hotel restaurant or chose to get room service bring something to their rooms. |
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The patrons kept their distance from the hearthside, leaving a deserted space around the fireplace and us. |
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She is equally comfortable dealing with blue-collar workers and elite patrons. |
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In the late cinquecento, Florentine patrons seized upon the cloister lunette fresco cycle as an ideal format for reformist didactic painting. |
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He traced the origins of the Order in Ireland back to their arrival with their Anglo-Norman overlords and patrons in the twelfth century. |
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He had no head for business, but he was supported by powerful patrons who commissioned photographs from him. |
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The general manager was carving the meat, and became concerned about having enough for other patrons, John said. |
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To this end they have begun making staff and patrons aware of the Act and its implications. |
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From the long lines to the disorganized, crowded aisles to the stabby patrons, this store is sure to raise your blood pressure a few notches. |
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As several readers have noted, Coleman no doubt slanted his descriptions of the bar patrons to make them sound ill-informed and bigoted. |
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At first, the Kushans attacked Buddhism but eventually they became great patrons, building many monasteries and stupas. |
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You may think that dance patrons would be mainly mature persons but that is hardly the case. |
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African radio stations have been important patrons of music and, in some countries, of poetry and oral literature. |
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The bartender dropped down our drinks and then went off to help the other bar patrons. |
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There is a balance of power between Poro and Sandogo, the chief patrons of the arts in Senufo communities. |
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When the emphasis is on patrons and court culture, a limited reading of Hindustani music is inevitable. |
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The patrons came more on zippy two wheelers, wearing dungarees, talking a combination of Kannada, Hinglish, and English. |
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As an aristocratic Florentine order, the Servites naturally appealed to the wealthy patrons of the city. |
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Second, the staff enforces a laissez-faire attitude among the other patrons so that the place isn't overrun by autograph-seekers. |
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A large table of patrons was raising glasses and bellowing at each other gleefully. |
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The dance floor is full and patrons are once again swaying to the sounds of swing. |
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She has a special feel for swing and Latin dance rhythms and enjoys seeing patrons get up and dance while she is playing solo. |
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It's up to us to be the patrons, the advocates, the cheerleaders, the enthusiasts. |
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It also suggested his parity with the region's affluent summer cottagers, many of them from Boston, who were his patrons. |
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Proceeds from this fundraiser will go towards the purchase of tables and chairs for the new centre as well as providing a sun lounge for patrons. |
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Most will permit patrons to bring their own wine upon payment of a corkage fee, if the request is made in appropriate fashion. |
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To get by, many cash-strapped mistresses go back to work as nightclub hostesses or juggle several patrons at one time to earn extra income. |
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Yes, well, missy, you and your little friends here were disturbing the other patrons. |
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The chronological periodisation is defined by different thematic concerns as well as by the presence of different patrons and markets. |
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Offered to patrons during the chefs' two-week residency, the fusion cuisine was meant to highlight food as an agent of cultural exchange. |
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He says most of his neighbours are behind him and he's received a large amount of fan mail from his demographically diverse patrons. |
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We're also connecting new patrons and emerging philanthropists with emerging artists and arts groups. |
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John Murrell swaps his normal comic role for a more serious part this year but patrons need not fear, there will be plenty to laugh at. |
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In the 15th century, a new generation of artists grew up who found that their patrons were humanistic. |
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During the 15th century, developing humanistic attitudes among patrons increasingly esteemed the creative contribution of the individual artist. |
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My family's legacy as the most important patrons of Ukrainian culture must be preserved for the people. |
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Artists began to claim the right to suggest their own subject matter, unshackled by scholars or patrons. |
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Tell me how can an illegal gambling syndicate operate and flourish with police as patrons? |
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The hapless bird fluttered and flapped around the astonished patrons whilst desperately trying to gain its freedom. |
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The bouncer let the political thriller in without a second glance whilst other patrons were halted at the door and interrogated. |
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They and their patrons reinvented the art of promotion and hype in part by attacking good taste and the stuffy elitism of the art world. |
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This would not have been possible without the continued support of all our patrons. |
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He also thanked the press and all their patrons and sponsors, without whose financial support, the show would not go on. |
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Thanks to all the loyal patrons who have supported fund-raising ventures over the years. |
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The club deeply appreciates the ongoing support of its patrons and the community. |
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But the festival enjoys great support from some 20 local organisations, friends, patrons and the district council. |
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Taking a discreet glance around, he saw the few other patrons of the restaurant heartily consuming their own lunch, so he tried to follow suit. |
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She returned the embrace gratefully, not caring about any of the other restaurant patrons. |
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Half of the restaurant's patrons are also hotel guests, while the remainder come off the street. |
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He glanced around the room and took notice of the other patrons in the shop. |
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The aim was to make the area more attractive to business and more welcoming to regular patrons and visitors. |
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He spends his send-off correcting the grammar of the patter song his patrons have written for him. |
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Total funds owed to members included member payables and other liabilities owed to patrons. |
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By the late 16th century, most fashionable patrons favoured fantastical Mannerist pieces for their displays. |
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Here, then, Alberti is speaking to would-be patrons and laying the groundwork for enlightened and responsible artistic commissions. |
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The affluence of its patrons gave it a de facto respectability that eluded less opulent sly-groggeries. |
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Fashionable hipsters and art patrons mingled in the boxy gallery tucked in New York's chic Chelsea district. |
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To this end, he focused on a genre that was rapidly growing in popularity amongst the patrons of such libraries, that of escapist romance. |
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To avoid disorientation, a signage designer has inserted clues on all kinds of surfaces to keep patrons from getting lost. |
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His chief patrons were the Sidney family, the earl of Pembroke, the countess of Bedford, and the duke and duchess of Newcastle. |
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Best of these is Bibis, where the buffed, bronzed patrons mirror the local sports stars whose images adorn the walls. |
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It had a lively artistic community and its wealthy burghers, together with the Church and the court at Brussels, provided patrons. |
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Handicraftsmen lost their patrons who used to give them material help and encouragement. |
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But those stinkpots just happened to belong to very powerful political patrons. |
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Such complexity of meanings appealed marvelously to learned patrons and artists of the cinquecento. |
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But hustling dollars is now a challenge faced by all museums, and patrons have always demanded a return on their investments. |
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The organisers are deeply grateful for the support of patrons over the past months. |
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The patrons chose whom to support and greatly influenced the products of that support. |
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The committee would like to thank their patrons without whose support the cost of publishing the annual magazine would be prohibitive. |
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These achievements should be shared with our sponsors, patrons and supporters. |
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Many thanks is extended to the loyal patrons who support the committee every week. |
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Of course, restaurant patrons could go elsewhere, though they should not have to. |
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However, such an explanation does not account for the evidence that there were few patrons in the shop. |
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Their dinner was marked by loud hysterics, which earned them more than one unfriendly stare from the older patrons of the restaurant. |
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Someone called the local press, and the dining patrons emptied from the restaurant to watch the rescue attempt. |
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Many books have colophons at the end giving the name of one or more scribes, and sometimes giving the names of patrons. |
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The patrons responded favorably, and I was glad to see some repeat customers for our performance. |
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Several of the more inebriated patrons were dancing, whether it was on the tables, chairs or floor. |
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This is timely and convenient for patrons, and it saves a great deal of staff time and attention. |
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As I waited at the counter for my takeout order, the numerous countermen were busy filling orders for the restaurant patrons. |
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When the patrons at his restaurant would like to indulge in a decadent potation, they will have to choose between Dom Perignon and Krug. |
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Also, the coolness factor is high, so few patrons are willing to break their surface pouts. |
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In return patrons receive two complimentary tickets for the gala performance on February 4 and are invited to the pre-gala reception. |
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Then there has been all this pre-meeting prettification of York for the benefit of those posh patrons of Ascot. |
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Among the patrons in theater lobbies each summer, the prevailing accent is American. |
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Indeed it seemed so unfamiliar to would-be patrons that the menu came with an explanatory glossary of unfamiliar ingredients. |
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Their exhibitions were intended to promote a distinct American Impressionism and to wean American patrons from European art. |
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Clearly this is an impracticality not only for patrons, but for librarians as well. |
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By publicly borrowing library books, patrons forfeit any constitutional protections they may have had in their reading habits. |
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Not only have the prices gone up but also some patrons believe they were ushered out at an unreasonable hour. |
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MacDonald played and sang any requests that the patrons dolled out, provided they were in line with his theme of upbeat folkish music. |
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Qianlong, who reigned from 1736 to 1795 and died in 1799, was one of the greatest patrons and collectors of Chinese rock crystal carvings ever. |
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Festival patrons can put on an EEG helmet, which will reproduce their brainwaves in light and sound. |
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What is certain about Andersen is that he was an inveterate social climber, and managed to latch on to some useful patrons. |
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Taking away days and weeks worth of effort in a single stroke is a lousy rotten thing to do to your patrons. |
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At the fete, patrons were treated to live performances from three bands and a number of guest artistes. |
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There were no patrons, no public art museums or private collections of consequence, and no art schools. |
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If you're looking for a fun atmosphere, this chain brings patrons back the bygone days of soda jerks and jukeboxes. |
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The dinner featured a guest speaker, a souvenir program with financial ads and patrons, and much joyous singing and praise to God. |
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The restaurant allowed patrons who ordered a non-alcoholic drink to have one free refill per order, if they wished it. |
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A man was sitting there speaking to the innkeeper, other patrons carried on at their tables. |
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The duo bum-rushed the shocked staff and gallery patrons with as much grace and style as a stick-up man at a corner liquor store. |
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He tilts his head back, sucks on his wad of tobacco, and grins at the handful of patrons shooting pool and shooting the breeze with him. |
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It's a weekday morning and the elderly patrons are hard at work on dim sum and sponge cake. |
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These will be bought by patrons and the chefs will cook it according to specifications. |
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Notable Parisian couturiers became patrons and she soon possessed a magnificent wardrobe comprised of gifts from her new clients. |
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Calamity promises the patrons of the Garter that she will personally bring Miss Adams back from Chicago to South Dakota. |
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The Arts and Crafts Festival will bring to its patrons the traditional Indian crafts with a heritage going back to the dawn of civilisation. |
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After unsuccessfully campaigning against daylight saving time, drive-ins began losing patrons due to late starting times in summer. |
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It appears that Bancroft was modeling his collection on those assembled by the English patrons of the Pre-Raphaelites. |
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It seems to me he was too self-consciously imitative of his patrons in the Georgian poetry movement. |
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Some of the greatest of the fine arts were produced for princely or noble patrons. |
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The city's hazardous material team had to set up a decontamination tent for patrons and workers. |
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A restaurant cannot limit seating of disabled patrons to one area, for instance. |
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Sincere thanks to the organising committee, patrons and friends who gave prizes. |
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Even so, the real driving force behind such travel was not the railway but increased prize money or stakes which still came largely from the subscriptions of rich patrons. |
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Inside, patrons can sip on bespoke whisky and coffee while getting that buffed and polished look. |
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The cost of operas in the past was borne largely by wealthy patrons, using the money which they extracted from the common people to fund their lifestyle. |
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What kinds of promotion do performance arts patrons appreciate most? |
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There is talk about jazz and classical musicians serenading patrons on the patio Friday and Saturday nights and crafting another menu with area vintners providing the wine. |
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Once your patrons eat it, it will be broken up about as much as anything organic can be, and then burned up in the metabolic process and released energetically. |
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They could throw their venues open as car parks and offer patrons the use of their clubhouses and bars for snacks, lunches and liquid refreshment. |
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I stayed at her side as we threaded our way through the room, accompanied by the sound of furniture scraping on the floor as patrons shied away from me. |
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There is no shortage of boasting in Autobiography, but Cellini is careful to attribute the praise to his patrons. |
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To his credit, Huckabee is conscious of the fact that he will need a cluster of deep-pocketed patrons and bundlers. |
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She could barely pay the rent off of the measly tips that the patrons were giving, and her wages were too low to provide her with any material comfort. |
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At the end of the concert, patrons expressed immense satisfaction of the production, with most voicing the opinion that this gospel show should be held more regularly. |
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He boldly tugs the barkeep's jacket to get served, but immediately gets bullied by one of the patrons for no reason other than that he's a new face and an easy mark. |
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Although Canova made his name in the 1780s with heroic sculptures, it was the pathos and sentiment of his later pieces that so endeared him to a new generation of patrons. |
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The patrons of the Academie are a roll call of the great and good, including Michel David-Weill, of Lazards Bank, and Sir Peter Ustinov, the polyglot actor and raconteur. |
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The voter would leave the poll to the jeers and threats of those who disapproved of his answer, but fortified by thoughts of the feast to come from his grateful patrons. |
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With that, he took a huff off a morning joint and moved into the throng of jovial patrons. |
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The festival will also have food demonstrations and he explained that a custom-built kitchen would be on spot for patrons to try their hand at cooking. |
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Encouraged by success, he went to Rome, collected rich patrons, and with fulsome flattery won, but failed to keep, the favour of the tyrant Domitian. |
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Because access to resources depended upon being inside the state apparatus, patrons rewarded supporters with sinecures in the government and nationalized industries. |
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This again is so discourteous to your fellow patrons, and the performers, who are all quite distracted by your shuffling and stumbling in the dark. |
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The interview was so toothless, it felt more like eavesdropping on two patrons having lunch at the sizzler. |
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Inside resided the matron, her two patrons, two daughters, and two sons. |
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In the medieval times, most patronage came from the Church but the ruling classes, the kings, princes and nobles, made up a second group of patrons. |
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He worked throughout this period, painting for collectors, for patrons who protected him, and as propitiatory offerings to those who were punishing him. |
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Support from patrons and parents would be greatly appreciated. |
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Its open plan layout allows patrons to watch their meals being prepared. |
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Coffee house patrons from all ends of the political spectrum rebelled and eleven days later the coffee houses were reopened and their numbers continued to increase. |
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She got a particularly strong ovation, especially from female patrons, when she rendered a ditty about making delinquent fathers support their children. |
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Most of his customers are regular patrons, many of whom are foreigners. |
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Ebsco Online's pay-per-view service now includes a ghost card feature that permits invoicing at the organizational level for articles purchased by library patrons. |
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Theater patrons can also expect a stunning view, as the new facility's lobby will project out to near the edge of the bluffs in a bridge-like cantilever over the park. |
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After ordering a drink, I move in the same direction as most of the other patrons, toward a foldout table with an empty chair. |
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These days the restaurant's patrons are more likely to be talking about multimedia money than to be philosophically puffing Gauloise smoke into the air. |
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They do not enter into the dinner conversations of restaurant patrons. |
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Now, after three nights of music, the reaction from patrons has been superb and the music is attracting the attention of music lovers from all over. |
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Once again it's final time and after some marvellous competitive action in the opening rounds patrons can look forward to a real humdinger of a decider. |
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But the flaws and peccadilloes of Renaissance artists like Michelangelo pale beside the misdeeds of patrons and pontiffs. |
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The club would also like to thank all its patrons who kindly bought tickets for their raffles and who supported all the events that were organised through-out the season. |
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Sincere thanks to the patrons who so generously supported the draw. |
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It has been shown in a survey conducted by the National Gallery that its patrons spend an average of six to seven seconds looking at each painting. |
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Many libraries have little if any control over their patrons. |
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He moved the vehicle forward a few inches, reversed a little and then remained stationary for a few more minutes as more patrons left in their vehicles. |
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He also points out the tendency of drug dealers to create populist political movements and to play the role of traditional patrons with local clienteles. |
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Club officials will be giving patrons dressed in beach wear an entry form to complete which will be put into a barrel for the cash draw after the fourth race. |
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A soldier later explained to patrons that one of the thieves had got away, and said no one was allowed to leave until a thorough sweep of the area had been done. |
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Are the fellow employees or regular patrons off limits to me? |
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The Venetian government and the confraternities were the most significant patrons, and their commissions to Venetian artists created a Venetian stylistic tradition. |
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There, especially after his voice broke and shattered his hopes of a singing career, he knocked on every door he could find in a bid to get powerful patrons. |
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Often these residences were donated to the Order by kings or wealthy patrons, and in due course they evolved into permanent institutions known as viharas or monasteries. |
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Enterprise, whose growth has mostly come from 3,600 off-airport lots, has touted its vehicles as replacements for patrons whose ride is in the shop. |
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Its conservatism led patrons of modern art to look for alternatives. |
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And if anyone wanted a little extra excitement then the Tralee Chamber had an inflatable bungee, twister and jousting games for the patrons to enjoy. |
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For highbrow patrons who are more familiar with Tolstoy than Ivan Drago, head to the Russian Tea Room. |
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Although native-born artists, chief among them the sculptor Michel Colombe, did work in the new idiom, rich 16th-century patrons at first preferred Italians. |
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She scanned the patrons for the man she was looking for and found him at a table off to the side, drinking what she was supposed to be a mint julep. |
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Judging by the well-dressed canine and feline patrons at the convention center, it looks like Golden is not alone. |
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More than half of the patrons at the bar are holding glasses full of Casa Bruja's malted barley red ale. |
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It has become known as a lively venue, particularly in the evenings and at weekends and offers a mixture of friendliness and familiarity to its many patrons. |
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In the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists she was a member of council, a vice president, a member of the court of patrons, and an honorary fellow. |
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These days savvy operators are using creative appetizers, innovative drink menus and electronic entertainment to draw patrons during hours when business is traditionally slow. |
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Both serious wine connoisseurs, Graf and Rydman collaborated with the chairs and bistro moderne chef Philippe Schmidt on a symphony of food and wine that had patrons swooning. |
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Police cited examples of criminal behaviour exhibited by bar patrons over the past two years, ranging from impaired driving to shootings in the parking lot. |
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The hope is that reconnecting the production and consumption of food will inspire patrons to eat more healthfully. |
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But Rubens was merely trying to appeal to wealthy art patrons, who liked their models with thick legs and dimpled derrieres. |
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I felt as if I had known all the patrons for donkey's years. |
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In Imbolc, a sunken circle is paved with an abstract, carved stone representation of Brigit as three sisters, the three patrons of poetry, the crafts and midwifery. |
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The inference that Mr. O'Brien's character as a gentleman was less open to dispute than that of its customary patrons is an egregious attempt to bumfuzzle the people. |
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She also provides a critique of why Olmec and Maya art have been so readily accepted by Western collectors an d art patrons while Teotihuacan leaves them cold. |
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The patrons repaid the mob by buying cheap liquor at premium prices, along with bootleg cigarettes and sometimes drugs. |
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Lee makes a convincing case that the loveliness of much Renaissance art is inversely related to the moral ugliness of its patrons. |
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True, no one's swapping straight-backed seats for velvet chaises so movie patrons can prop themselves in the grape-peeling poses of the ancient Romans. |
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It shows patrons and a waitress around a table, which converges onto a singer in the centre of the middle ground, who is visible in the preparatory drawing. |
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Inside, dried hops hang from the beams and pump beer signs stuck among tankards on the ceiling let punters know what favourable ales have been drunk by previous patrons. |
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The restaurant seats 155 patrons and employs a staff of 18 chefs. |
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Unfortunately, the underground tunnels that were used to transport booze and, if necessary, escaping patrons, are off-limits. |
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Until the twentieth century, the primary patrons of churches and monasteries were the aristocracy, the only group in society who possessed the means to sponsor such projects. |
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Also during the showing of the film, the theater operators oversold the capacity of the theater and packed patrons on folding chairs in the aisle. |
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Ives totally mistrusted the cosmopolitan musical circles with their classic-worshipping conductors, snobbish patrons, and pontifical music critics. |
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He does so, hands in his star and rides on, leaving his bailiwick in the condition his patrons wanted. |
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He noticed the curious stares of the regular patrons of the inn. |
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The club is deeply grateful for the ongoing support of its patrons. |
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The anecdote is a perfect parable for the power and ignorance of artistic patrons. |
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Football matches between Mohun Bagan and East Bengal, dubbed as the Kolkata derby, witness large audience attendance and rivalry between patrons. |
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The affluence of the merchant class allowed extensive patronage of the arts, and foremost among the patrons were the Medici. |
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Also important were the many patrons who ruled states and used the artistry of the Renaissance as a sign of their power. |
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He arrived in Rome before 395, and made his mark with a eulogy of his two young patrons, Probinus and Olybrius, thereby becoming court poet. |
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They wrote about the history of Jesus Christ, that of the Church and that of their patrons, the dynastic history of the local rulers. |
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Readers of the Historia Francorum must decide whether this is a royal history and whether Gregory was writing to please his patrons. |
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Deities first worshipped as the patrons of cities or places came to be collected together as empires extended over larger territories. |
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Bantu slaves toiled under the control of and separately from their Somali patrons. |
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In short order the upper echelons of patrons and priests in the society lived off the work of the lower classes. |
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Everywhere from the grottiest cafe to the most expensive five-star hotel seems to offer their patrons shishathese days. |
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Church musicians were probably influenced by order from their ecclesiastical patrons. |
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The Vakatakas are noted for having been patrons of the arts, architecture and literature. |
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A key feature of the app is a GPS enabled interactive map, providing Show patrons with an easy way to navigate around the Melbourne Showgrounds. |
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Dinner patrons receive warm pita bread with complimentary salad offerings, usually beet and carrot, while deciding what to order. |
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Oliver was born with Down's syndrome and Hill and Georgie are both patrons of the Down's Syndrome Association. |
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However the courts generally upheld the rights of lay patrons, and thus the issue became one of Church and State. |
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Both Jon Snow and Barbara Windsor are patrons for the charity, and ambassadors include Keira Chaplin and Mica Paris. |
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Many patrons were probably getting bored with some of Olive Garden's other appetizers, like Fried Zucchini, Fried Mozzarella, and Calamari. |
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The St. Louis club is the only nine in the league which gives its patrons the right to see a full game or no pay. |
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Gildas was written by Caradoc of Llancarfan, a friend of Geoffrey of Monmouth and his Norman patrons. |
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Leaders of Wuyue were noted patrons of the arts, particularly of Buddhist temple architecture and artwork. |
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He had, during many years, earned his daily bread by pandaring to the vicious taste of the pit, and by grossly flattering rich and noble patrons. |
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San Lorenzo was not only filled with patrons from El Salvador, but from many other Central and South American communities. |
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Proceeds from the concert went to Diana's charities as well as to charities of which her sons Princes William and Harry are patrons. |
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Would average bank patrons be able to grasp the impact of their bank's privacy policy on their rights? |
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And with this, and a profound bow to his patrons, the Manager retires, and the curtain rises. |
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However, his conversion also acquainted him with new patrons and employers. |
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Owlerton uses the Tavern as a special party area that can also be adapted to cater for Six-Pack patrons, and that is something Gilburn envies. |
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Thus, according to their own records, the societies included bawdy-house patrons among their targets of reform. |
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Front-row patrons are advised to wear somber, washable clothes in defense against spewn milk and flying stage blood. |
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Fine embroidery, especially gold threadwork, was of course a specialised skill, done for rich patrons, not the stitchcraft of hovels. |
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Any one wish to see it? No? Then we will take it as read. I know that in such a matter, my patrons, my word is enough for you. |
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As the Manics are patrons to Velindre, I felt it was fitting to do something for Velindre through my tribute band. |
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