Everts needed only eight pitches to retire the side, striking out one on a very impressive curve. |
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His plan had always been to retire from the track after Athens to concentrate on half-marathons and marathons. |
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He concluded his presentation to the members by informing them he was tendering his notice to retire from his position. |
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The tenant farmer who currently occupies the farm is due to retire later this year. |
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Trainer Carlos Laffon-Parias said that the four-year-old gray colt has had a fetlock problem that led to the decision to retire him. |
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It's only when you retire to the loos and find a whole crowd smoking there that you realise that the flight has been delayed two hours. |
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Multi-lingual, he liked to retire with a book, was well-polished in letters and enjoyed scholarly debate. |
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In one corner there is an Ottoman style couch, where diners may retire to drink Turkish coffee after the meal. |
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He plays an ageing thief whose plans to retire are postponed by a young whipper-snapper who blackmails him into one last blag. |
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The worst thing you can do is retire and then just sit around and twiddle your thumbs. |
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Or better yet, retire the pledge as an exercise in groupthink unbefitting a free people. |
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Taswegians were able to retire their carrier pigeons at long last when the Apple Isle was connected to the rest of the nation by telephone. |
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Another permutation could be to cut spending and taxes and retire the national debt. |
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The upshot of this is that when people come to retire they find they may have a number of pension plans that are each worth only a small sum. |
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I propose that each batsman face only 90 balls and has to retire at the end of it if he is unbeaten. |
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Will you have a sufficient pension to retire with a reasonable standard of living? |
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He had initially planned to retire at the end of the 2001-2002 season but then changed his mind after talking things through with his family. |
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Once you know the target amount you will need in order to retire comfortably, your financial advisor will be able to help you work out a plan. |
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Major League Baseball required all teams to retire the number in 1997, but players who were already wearing 42 at the time were grandfathered. |
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She has no plans to retire and dismisses the idea that writers have conventional careers. |
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At Dorcan School, the headteacher announced his plans to retire at the end of the summer term. |
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But shortly after conceding defeat, a disheartened Landry announced plans to retire from politics. |
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Although this expat will celebrate his 60th birthday this year, he has no plans to retire any time soon. |
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I am now in my early fifties and fear that shares may crash in the year when I retire. Any suggestions? |
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By 1840 they had earned enough money to retire and became gentlemen farmers in North Carolina. |
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On the whole women earn less, take longer career breaks, retire earlier and live longer than men. |
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I threw myself on the bed, quite spent with the pursuit of pleasure, and glad to retire to filence and requiescence. |
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This is to inform you of my decision to retire from my position as an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. |
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It would have been easy to retire and fade back and let the new lions take charge, but this never crossed Al's mind. |
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But there is a time, with apologies to Jose Limon and Ecclesiastes, to pursue a column, and there is a time to retire a column. |
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Should popes, who rule for life, retire if they become ill instead of dying in office? |
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Ross the cat is looking for a new home before Christmas where he can retire and live out the rest of his nine lives. |
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Friesen, 65, said Tuesday it seemed like the right time to retire and spend more time on leisure activities as well as some charity work. |
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After the war ended in 1816, these taxes were repealed and instead a high tariff was passed to retire the accumulated war debt. |
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The music started to die down, and the king announced for everyone to retire for the night. |
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Even the old washer-woman, though her features be hooded and in weathered high-relief, has to retire to her humble quarters and stop laundering. |
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Dennis, be careful from now on, I must retire back to my retreat, but it'll be a long time before you do. |
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What's more, she preferred her own bedroom to any other area of the house and would often retire there when visitors arrived. |
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The game turned out to be his last professional outing, as unnecessary injury problems forced yet another player to retire early. |
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Freddy made a face that was full of sorrow, as if he was being asked to retire from the major leagues. |
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Yet so disillusioned was he with the direction of the side under John Hart that he announced his intention to retire at the end of the season. |
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Two well-known shopkeepers in Kirkby Lonsdale have announced their intention to retire from their traditional village shop. |
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Should he resign his seat and retire from politics until his name is cleared? |
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The Royal College of Nursing's research shows that one in four of registered nurses are set to retire in the next five years. |
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But I think it's outrageous that he has been forced to retire from refereeing. |
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He was knighted for this work in 1911, but was forced to retire from foreign service due to adverse affects of the tropics on his health. |
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Being overambitious increases the risk of falling short of generating enough wonga to retire on. |
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But you will only qualify for any pension increases after you retire if you go to live in a country with which we have a reciprocal agreement. |
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In many cultures, men and occasionally women retire each evening to the nakamal to prepare and drink kava, an infusion of the pepper plant. |
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I took it as a sign that he was ready to retire from his career in journalism. |
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When your clients are running late on their payments, it is unlikely that they will be able to retire the entire balance in one payment. |
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You have a small general accounting practice and you plan to retire in the next ten years. |
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Employees who didn't resign or retire were moved to other stores selling office machines such as photocopiers, he said. |
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A key part of the plan is to build no new coal-fired power stations and to retire existing ones as they reach their use-by dates. |
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Robin leaves the School in the autumn after sixteen years to retire in South West France, with his wife, Verna. |
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I take another drink but it makes me slightly dizzy, forcing me to retire to my bedroom. |
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After three days of courtroom arguments, the 12 men of the jury retire to decide if the boy is guilty beyond reasonable doubt. |
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The jury then retire to consider the evidence before returning to announce their all important verdict. |
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Instead, Congress cranked up the printing press and called on the states to levy taxes to retire the bills. |
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If they feel it is advantageous for them to retire their current bonds and secure a lower rate by issuing new bonds, they may call their bonds. |
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But many students are unable to retire their credit card balances before they enter the working world. |
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So taking equity out of the house when you retire and downsizing your lifestyle is a problem. |
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He has pastored churches in Northern California and Oregon but we moved back to retire here, our home. |
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The progressive nature of Huntington's disease will eventually force patients to retire from employment. |
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Later in the night many would retire to Deros for tea and sandwiches to give them sustenance for the long cycle to some outlying parish. |
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His charge to the jury now is on Monday, after which it will retire to consider verdicts. |
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He said he would abide by the decision of the ANC with regard to whether he was allowed to retire or not. |
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We want to retire with the largest possible pot of assets and the least amount of liabilities. |
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He consistently is around the plate and can retire batters with strikeouts or by forcing them to hit the ball on the ground. |
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What private accounts can do, but the pay-as-you-go system can't, is grow the pot of money available for people to retire on. |
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The Group remains in a negative cashflow position as it used its available cash to finance capital expenditure and retire debt. |
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Phil hinted to it during the postgame, saying that his kids wanna hear him retire. |
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He himself will retire from the company next year when his second five-year term expires. |
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If you'd like to live the dream too, why not chat to others who are planning to retire abroad? |
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In your case, the personal issues are clear, with your wish to retire and with no family succession. |
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Trade unions are demanding a guarantee of the right to retire at 50 without conditions. |
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I doubt I can actually retire either, but that's another question, one facing many artists and creative people, especially women. |
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Since I couldn't disco or drink the rest of the night away, it was time to retire, which we did. |
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We had tried and tried and tried to get more support, but it wasn't to be so I will have to retire gracefully. |
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Some of my friends worked for the federal government and were able to retire by the time they were my age. |
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It seems that he suddenly appreciates that to retire from professional rugby is no longer to be compelled to have a one-track mind. |
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I was ready to retire to an island resort with my winning lottery ticket and a harem of attentive lovers. |
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Then Tom Cronin had to retire hurt and this was to prove another fatal blow as a Crotta team without a Cronin is like Hamlet without the Prince. |
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The policy allows pilots to give notice on the last day of the month and retire the following day. |
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Should they not sit back and retire and let the young guns do the business, enjoying the fruits of their labours and play golf for fun again? |
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These figures are the most valid argument yet that they should cease and desist and retire from the field immediately. |
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So because of that and the time of year, we elected to just retire her to stud rather than take the splint bone out and try again. |
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The long-term financial responsibility of starting a new family at the age most Westerners retire can be awesome and burdensome. |
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Possibly the global criminal infrastructure would collapse and they would retire to puddling around in their gardens looking after their azaleas. |
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If we can persuade a few more to stay on rather then retire if they are fit and able to do the job, then that is a good thing. |
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He is due to retire at the end of this year, and all parties bar Labour are courting him. |
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Many of my correspondents wrote to tell me they could retire now if they made that much per house. |
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She said it was the right time to make a clean break and retire after the 1996 games. |
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The drug dealer, identified simply as XXXX, is ready to retire with the fortune he made peddling cocaine. |
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When I retire in a few years, I think that I will move to Wyoming, Montana or even to upstate Idaho. |
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When the crop begins to grow and prosper, he can retire, become a gentleman farmer, and let a new, by now wiser, younger man, take over. |
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He continued his attack, but on 85 he gloved the ball into his face and had to retire hurt. |
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I am due to retire next year and will be able to offer my services to the many groups that are in need of volunteers. |
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Great leaders are willing to retire unloved and unpopular as the price for great exertion. |
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David had to retire from the race with seven laps to go due to a loss of pneumatic pressure. |
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Employees commonly receive four weeks of paid vacation and retire between the ages of fifty-three and sixty. |
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It is a resting-place to which at close of day the weary retire to gather new strength for the battle and toils of tomorrow. |
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Ellen has no plans to retire and hopes to be one of the happy band raising money to support Sue Ryder homes for many years to come. |
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Although he has no plans to retire in the immediate future, he is looking forward to running the place in due course. |
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The only man to retire from the punishing demands of the heavyweight category unbowed by defeat in any fight was Rocky Marciano. |
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A midwife who has delivered hundreds of babies for mothers in the Maldon district is set to retire. |
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His hopes of springing a surprise were dealt a severe blow before the break when the Captain was forced to retire due to concussion. |
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The twelve of us must wait until tomorrow before we can retire to the jury room, discuss all that we have heard and finally reach a verdict. |
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So if things are so bad, she need only retire and in a few years the kiddies will have grown up and we'll all have moved on. |
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He has gaveled to rest the rumors that he will retire from the U.S. Supreme Court. |
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When my dad decided to retire from the New York Police Department, we moved down to Florida. |
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A Leyland magistrate is being forced to retire from the bench against his will because he is too old! |
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Timpson said he wanted to retire back to his beloved Norfolk to write about the county and Country he loved so much. |
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When the honeymooners retire to the bedroom, his wife runs out screaming about the hugeness of his member. |
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However, I plan to retire long before then with a tidy income from company and private pensions, ISAs, property and so on. |
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I understand that at the end of the party when the young couple retire to bed it is not yet time to assume their conjugal rights. |
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People usually start working at the age of fifteen and retire at age sixty. |
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Fierce gales damaged many yachts in the Fastnet race and forced 100 to retire. |
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The woman who successfully masterminded Bolton's dream of university status is to retire next year. |
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Indeed, his scholarship has shown that decrepitude has been a problem with the last 10 directors to retire. |
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They wanted to retire but feared that their club would fold if they bowed out. |
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An employee in his early thirties may well expect to retire at an earlier age than employees in their late fifties. |
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This duty of secrecy shall continue to apply if the members retire from office. |
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Returns ask whether returning migrants are sparkplugs for development or persons who rest and retire in their areas of origin. |
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In addition, it would be a most fitting tribute to Serge as he prepares to retire at the end of June 2004 after 48 years of public service. |
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Injuries began to set in, thus affecting other aspects of my life, and in the early months of 2008 it was time to retire from completive play. |
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He retired from the Provincial Government of NB some years ago, and he now feels it is indeed time to retire fully. |
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The loser will hand over the kingdom to the winner and, laying aside all warlike intentions, he will have to retire the forest with his party forever. |
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The fence will look truly stark and bare when it's gone, so I shall plant three or four vigorous climbing jasmines along it, water, and retire to a safe distance. |
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Now think out 18 or 24 months after you retire and imagine what your business card might say then. |
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But you can't just do the job for a few years and then retire in a lap of luxury. |
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Car Heaven makes it easier for Canadians to retire their older gas guzzlers. |
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I'd like to retire and live in Scotland near the sea, with David and the dogs, never answer another email, and sort of pootle around. |
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I decided to retire from my lifeguard career and pursue a graduate degree at the University of Ottawa. |
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Musashimaru, the most successful foreign-born wrestler in sumo, decided to retire Saturday after suffering his fourth loss at the ongoing Kyushu Grand Sumo Tournament. |
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The Conservatives want seniors to retire in the uniform of a Wal-Mart greeter. |
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There they lay for an hour and at last the order was given to retire to the trenches? |
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However, to think that seniors are going to retire gracefully to Florida is poppycock. |
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Employees who have ten or more years of pensionable service may retire at age sixty and receive an immediate unreduced pension. |
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For employees that retire before age 65 but meet other age-plus-service requirements, either a reduced or unreduced pension may be payable. |
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The chart assumes retirement at age 61, the earliest age at which an executive officer can retire with an unreduced pension. |
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But it is expensive: DFB's members are paying in 1p a litre, returnable only if they retire or quit, to finance its expansion. |
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After a game, the players would retire to a hearty meal at the Fréchette Restaurant on Côte de la Montagne or at the Imperial Hotel. |
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After their meal they retire to their caves and cells for the rest of the day, emerging only to sing lauds, vespers and compline at the appointed times. |
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Mrs Merkel recently rehashed the idea of making workers retire early to make way for the young unemployed. |
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Aside from the salary he receives from the foundation, Carlinhos has a pet shop and a farm close to the city where he wants to retire to raise rheas and capybaras. |
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Several of the Army's senior commanders are also taking up new appointments, as some members are promoted to new positions and others retire to civilian life. |
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Maybe you want to buy a car, take a trip or even retire comfortably someday. |
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The situation will become even more critical because Air Canada plans to retire some of its aging turboprop aircraft in the next few years. |
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He had loads of lolly and could retire comfortably if things went wrong. |
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Prior to the amendments to the Act in 1998, a judge who reached the age of retirement could either retire or elect supernumerary status. |
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Family members get new jobs, buy houses, have children, care for and eventually deal with the death of parents, retire and grow old themselves. |
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For example, if you retire and return to teach in the same school year, the days you worked before you retired do not count toward the limit. |
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He further states that he was discriminated against and forced to retire from the army due to his religion. |
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The outfielder catches the fly ball and throws the ball to 1st in an attempt to retire R1 who had left 1st early. |
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Answer: You can quite happily drink beer before you retire to bed provided you drink no more than one or two glasses. |
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I was going to retire at 65, and I was ticking along as a delivery driver, but now I will have to work at least another five years on top of that. |
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She should have been allowed to retire with dignity and pride. |
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I will retire from working soon, but I will never retire from participating. |
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In G-369, the Grievor, who had been serving at an isolated post, was about to retire from the Force. |
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I have chosen to retire from the Canadian Forces and end my tenure as your Chief of the Defence Staff in July of this year. |
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Now only fifty miles or so from the Azores, Roland Jourdain informed the Race Directors of his decision to stop and retire from the race. |
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This is still the age that many individuals retire from the paid workforce and as such face a transformation of their lifestyle. |
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Michel Desjoyeaux was forced to retire from the race following a collision with a whale. |
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You can't just sit back and get what the SP is returning, because that's not nearly enough to retire on! |
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Still, I was unprepared for the outpouring of support upon my announcement to retire temporarily. |
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The master would then retire to his cabin, one flight of stairs below the wheelhouse, while the first officer was in charge of the navigation. |
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If we mean it when we say that seniors deserve to retire with dignity and respect, we have to start showing it. |
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There's plenty of sand to walk, a couple of beach bars to retire to and, of course, superb, swimmable sea. |
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Many union and employment contracts require workers to retire at a set age. |
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These changes will apply equally to colleagues who have already retired and to those who retire in the next few years. |
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At one stage fire crews had to retire to a safe distance and it was nine hours before the last of the three coachloads of residents was able to return home. |
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These decrees forced companies to rehire or retire all those workers who had been sacked as a result of strikes or industrial action in the railway industry. |
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The importance of this document, beyond a snapshot of glam rock at its live peak, is that the singer was to announce his shock decision to retire from public life. |
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I hear artists who can sing like birds, others who would need to retire if Auto-Tune disappeared. |
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Which will, in turn, mean they retire with less wealth, and bequeath less wealth to their children. |
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I actually predicted before the England v France match kicked off that Beckham would retire from International football at the end of the Championship. |
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I retire to the toilet for a moment's reflection and a good cry. |
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It was customary for the hostess and ladies to retire to the adjoining drawing room at the end of the meal leaving the men to their own discussions and to drink and smoke. |
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Even the ladies of the night, when they retire from the profession, return to the way of behaving that they learned from their mothers, and grandmothers before them. |
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He decided to retire from the ministry for more remunerative work. |
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The question here is whether a transfer of property that extinguishes the trust by merging the beneficial and legal interest can in any sense be said to retire a trustee. |
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A pity Shane had to retire through injury for the last quarter. |
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All competitors please retire with me to the castle, that is all. |
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Age is one of many factors, but it will play a larger role in the conversation as Baby Boomers retire and longevity is extended. |
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What if he had tried to come back, only to play a couple middling seasons and then grudgingly retire or, worse, become a backup? |
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I wish she would retire from the public eye, be elusive, continue to cultivate the mad as a box of frogs image by all means, but stop talking and concentrate on the singing. |
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To retire without attempting the crime of the century would leave a criminal genius with a maddening irritation, not unlike the phantom itch of an amputated leg. |
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In those regal days, it is said, the king and the queen, after taking a round about trip by boat, would retire to the central mandapam for a bit of rest. |
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The owners are selling up to a property developer and will retire rich. |
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But those numbers assume no dramatic change in the increasing ability of seniors to retire later and otherwise continue to earn income that is taxable. |
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Holyfield, who has said he will not retire until he reclaims the IBF, WBC and WBA title belts, hopes the bout will move him closer to a championship bout. |
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Instead, I shall bask in all this glory and hope it brings me new found arrogance, snobbery and untold riches so I can retire to Pismo Beach and be a happy miser. |
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Most of us, he claims, do it surreptitiously at our desks, although some retire to their cars or, if they're really desperate for a bit of shut-eye, the toilet cubicle. |
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Older people retire and younger people have jobs to step into. Simples. |
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Their reward was to be paid highly and then retire gracefully and anonymously, with a state honour or two, to a place in the country, secrets kept and views unrecorded. |
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All of these individual restaurants have their own toilets and washrooms, and if one so desires, one can even retire to a rest room for a snooze after a hearty meal. |
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Hot chocolate warms me before I retire to my room for a pre-dinner nap and a good long soak in the bath to pre-empt any aches and pains from the day's exercise. |
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It's an opportune moment for her to retire as a polemicist and start a third act in public life. |
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The smallest housemate's pouf is about as iconic as her orange skin, though she's decided to retire the former. |
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Quashing rumors that the White House had pushed her out, Powell told the press that she'd been planning to retire for months. |
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As Raimondo tells it, most public sector workers in the state were able to retire at age 55 with 80 percent of their pay. |
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There are bookmakers already taking odds that Mr. Lewis, like Muhammad Ali in 1979, will soon retire from this retirement and be back in the ring. |
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The way that you retire the risks is to have some pathfinder projects. |
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He said he had no idea what he would be working on next but denied he had any plans to retire, despite the fact he is not a huge fan of being in front of the camera. |
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After the crushing blow on Monday, a medal would have been fitting reward for the two-times Olympic veteran, who is to retire at the end of this season. |
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The rundown colonial port buildings house tailors, coppersmiths and fishermen, who rise with the dawn and retire with the sun, for there's little electricity here. |
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If you're planning on doing anything more exciting than eating baked beans in a freezing fleapit when you retire, you'll need to start saving a lot. |
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As it happened, the collision forced Dempsey to retire with a dead leg. |
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His career was as good as dead, but he was about to retire anyway. |
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As you turn 40 and then 50 and eventually retire, the funds will gradually and automatically dial down the risk in your portfolio by buying more bonds. |
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These include members of the National Guard and career soldiers eligible to retire after 20 years of service as well as enlistees who've completed their eight-year commitment. |
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It was time to retire, so he began to divest himself of his businesses. |
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But when the central bank's CAR was higher than 8 percent of its monetary liabilities, the excess would be used to retire some of the perpetual notes. |
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The company plans to retire its bucketwheels and draglines soon. |
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One of the benefits is a reduced incentive to retire early and an increased incentive to stay in the workforce longer. |
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They may not have a sustainable pension to retire early and live out their dreams. |
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At what age could you stop working and what penalties would you pay if you were to retire early? |
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In particular, the investigation showed that since 1996 and up to 2004, OTE allowed 8 173 employees to retire early. |
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You were very good at your job, but kept a promise to yourself to retire early and enjoy life. |
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Or their spouse may be adamant that they both work until they can both retire. |
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Under current projections, Social Security will become insolvent by 2037, as more baby boomers retire. |
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The artist was forced to retire from printmaking due to a severe illness. |
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This underlines a more general truth: doctors don't retire, they hang up their stethoscopes. |
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Rather than being a haven, the average 2010 fund — aimed at people expecting to retire around 2010 — fell 24.6 percent in the downslide. |
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Act two begins when a trumpet call announces the tercio de banderillas, whereupon the picadors and matadors retire from the arena. |
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Not enough to retire instantly to somewhere warm and beachy, but a pleasant increment to my nest egg. |
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Due to retire in June 1939, Dowding was asked to stay on until March 1940 because of the tense international situation. |
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I am very thankful now that the time to retire has arrived. |
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An engine failure forced him to retire from that race and his second, however an accident at his third event at Imola meant he failed to qualify. |
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A tough 1990 followed with Ferrari, in which his car suffered more reliability problems, forcing him to retire from seven races. |
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Both cars were forced to retire and Hamilton was given a 10 position grid penalty for the next race, the French Grand Prix. |
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On lap 49 Ricciardo had to retire due to a technical failure while Vettel went on to finish third and earn his first podium finish of the season. |
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Should a married priest die, it is normal that his wife will retire to a monastery once their children are out of the house. |
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He announced in June 2007 that he would retire as artistic director of the Stephen Joseph Theatre after the 2008 season. |
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In 2007, he announced he would retire temporarily from the screen to tour around the world. |
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Governor Abou Baker ordered the Egyptian garrison at Sagallo to retire to Zeila. |
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In 1981, president Urho Kekkonen's failing health forced him to retire after holding office for 25 years. |
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He originally intended to retire at the end of 1882, the fiftieth anniversary of his entry into politics, but in the event did not do so. |
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Eventually, these people would retire back to secure community provided by the monastery and stay until their death. |
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Ken Clarke, the Father of the House of Commons, had said he would retire in 2020, but opted to stand again in the 2017 election. |
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In 2016, the band announced that it would retire from studio recording after the release of its 14th studio album, The Story. |
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The next month he defended his title against Harry Carroll in Cardiff forcing him to retire after six rounds. |
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Further defeats followed and Steve Robinson had decided to retire after his sixth loss in a row. |
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Determined to win and retire with his title intact, Louis signed on for a rematch. |
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He told reporters in New York City that he would retire Figaro from his repertoire. |
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This threatened to cut off German troops in western and central France, and most began to retire toward Germany. |
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On 16 May 2013, Beckham announced that he would retire from professional football at the end of that year's French football season. |
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Despite this, Beckham said that he has no plans to retire from international football and wanted to continue playing for the national team. |
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In 746, however, the Frankish armies were still, as Carloman was preparing to retire from politics and enter the monastery of Mount Soratte. |
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He was now probably about sixty years old and ready to retire from his strenuous and successful career in the service of his country. |
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Due to its natural beauty and clean air, Tasmania is a popular location for Australians to retire to. |
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From 1607 until 1610, Xu was forced to retire from public office and returned to his home in Shanghai. |
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Where more than twelve jurors are present, twelve will be chosen by lot to retire and consider the verdict. |
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He decided that the time was coming for him to retire as leader, with Heath as his preferred successor. |
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The reigning world heavyweight champion said he'd defend his title once more and then retire even if he won. |
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And he wrote in the letter, saying, Set ye Uriah in the forefront of the hottest battle, and retire ye from him, that he may be smitten, and die. |
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Then came the time to retire to the Verona C. A. A. where he died on 4 January 2007, the first confrere to return to the house of the Father this year. |
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The whole novel is presented as if it were the autobiography he wrote between being forced to retire from the ministry and his eventual death. |
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Although doctors advised Haye to retire from boxing, he never officially announced his retirement. |
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And, when it comes time to retire from competition, Canada's top athletes can also receive a modest financial award to assist in the transition while they begin the next stage of their life. |
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The fight was agreed to less than three months after Mayweather had said he planned to retire following a victory over Oscar De La Hoya. |
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The 2010 season would also see legendary hooker and captain Keiron Cunningham retire from the game after 17 years with his one and only club. |
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The board of chief investors expected Handel to retire when his contract ended, but Handel immediately looked for another theatre. |
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Here in Canada, the real force of this demographic trend will hit when the big baby boomer generation begins to retire around 2010-a little over five years from now. |
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And think not slightly of this advertisement, but retire yourself into your country where you may expect the event in safety. |
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Some people you would want to retire at 45 but if you are fit and able and keen to carry on then whyever shouldn't you? |
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The ethical obligation to keep our patients records when we retire is very difficult not only for those in solo practice, but also for many physicians in group practice. |
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Alton Towers' rollercoaster designer John Wardley is about to retire as his latest creation The Smiler opens. |
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Regulations required a major unit in the field to retire to a properly constructed camp every day. |
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These students were then allowed to leave and live within the community, and were welcomed back in their old age to retire in peace. |
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He used the money to buy Round Wood Farm near Ipswich, and intended to retire there with Fanny. |
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This rate is reduced if you decide to retire early. |
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He reported to Francis Egerton that Bradshaw was no longer fit to be Superintendent, and then persuaded Bradshaw to retire on his full salary. |
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Around 40 per cent of parish clergy are due to retire over the next decade or so. |
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In going public, all hope of tempting Catherine to retire to a nunnery or otherwise stay quiet were lost. |
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Luckily enough, Louis fell ill and had to retire from the conflict while Henry's defences held against his enemies. |
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Surprisingly, Henry instead turned to King Stephen, who paid the outstanding wages and thereby allowed Henry to retire gracefully. |
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Early in 894 or 895, lack of food obliged the Danes to retire once more to Essex. |
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He could retire to the idyllic with the knowledge that he had not been wanting when Romance called. |
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The free movement of persons means that EU citizens can move freely between member states to live, work, study or retire in another country. |
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And maybe we can also retire the nuclear weapons that fluorides made possible. |
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Ultimately, Gabe was allowed to retire and was adopted by shuck. |
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Sisel, who plans to retire at the end of the year but will serve as a consultant to the company. |
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I know it's sad to retire aircraft like the delta wing Vulcan, which last saw active duty during the Falklands War. |
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Delta said that its year-round carbon offset program allows customers to purchase and retire carbon offsets on delta. |
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A DECISION on whether or not to retire 2001 Grand National runnerup Smarty is likely to be made next week. |
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Some people will be able to retire early and live comfortably. |
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All members have the right to retire at any time from the association. |
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Ensuring that you'll have enough funds to retire is a threshold issue, as is making sure your successor can afford to finance his or her ownership. |
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In this way, if a member wishes to retire after a year of employment where the return on the fund would have been poor, their pension would not be adversely affected. |
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Special efforts need to be made to support members who are due to retire or who have already retired, in particular through the organisation of social gatherings. |
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Do not forget to retire the contact lenses in case the victim had them. |
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The Navy will also retire two mine sweeper auxiliaries. |
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We've lit the touchpaper, after that, all we can do is retire and hope they buzz. |
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Having decided to retire from public office, Mandela addressed the General Assembly of the United Nations on 21 September 1998 for the final time. |
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During this stage, individuals prepare to retire from the organization. |
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But at 62, after an operation for colonic cancer, he must be wondering whether he took the right decision to continue as an MP or whether he should retire to enjoy the good things of life. |
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In addition, at least two directors have to retire from office each year. |
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The OSPs urged that staff should be allowed to retire from the age of 58 onwards, on a voluntary basis, with accrued rights, and no reduction in benefits. |
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