Eight years on, Elinor is still ravaged by the debilitating skin condition. |
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John tells Elinor that they are thinking of matching Miss Morton with Robert, now that Edward is marrying Lucy. |
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In 1736 Calderwood married Elinor Streeter, widow of the jeweller and lapidary William Streeter. |
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John calls on Mrs. Jennings, and after his visit, he goes on a walk with Elinor. |
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Elinor has her full complement of sensibility, though her capacity and her cause for suffering is late to be borne in on her inattentive family. |
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Suspecting no connection between Edward and Lucy, she treats Lucy wonderfully, while she coolly ignores Elinor. |
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But while Elinor Carucci snaps the harsh realities of life with twins, she also finds beauty. |
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Elinor quiets herself, and determines to act cheerful and normal. |
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It was sometimes Andy himself, as when he poked fun at Elinor Donohue after she vowed to run for office. |
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He is a man of honour who behaves with reserve and circumspection towards Elinor while he is bound to Lucy Steele by an engagement that only she can honourably break. |
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Elinor Gadon, the author of that excellent collation of art materials and texts called The Once and Future Goddess, was speaking at the launch of the project. |
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Elinor Cook's Image of an Unknown Young Woman is about a woman in a yellow dress who becomes an icon of resistance is at the Gate, Notting Hill. |
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Very much as Elinor Glynn's husband hired a swimming pool so he could watch her swim naked with her long red hair trailing behind her. |
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Research by the late Elinor Ostrom, a Nobel laureate, suggests an alternative. |
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For Elinor Carucci, becoming a mother meant declaring war on the photographer in her. |
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Ms. Elinor Caplan: I have one very short question on which I would really like a yes or a no from those on the panel. |
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Ms. Elinor Caplan: So you don't believe that anyone should go into a herbal store and buy anything unless they've had a consultation. |
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Ms. Elinor Caplan: It actually was on the different process or alternative process as opposed to just third category under the existing regime. |
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Ms. Elinor Caplan: Would this also be the case for the safety of the product and, in other words, that what the product says it is, that's so? |
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Ms. Elinor Caplan: The next question I have is where you say to take into account costs associated with the proposed system. |
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Ms. Elinor Caplan: But they cannot make health claims. It is illegal for those products to make health claims. |
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Ms. Elinor Caplan: The point I would make is that the federal government has no responsibility or authority to define the prescriptor. |
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Ms. Elinor Caplan: One company told us it has someone inspect the product at the country of origin. |
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Ms. Elinor Caplan: You're not suggesting that we need to have the kind of research we have for drug products? |
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Ms. Elinor Caplan: Is it fair to say that the keys to your success are the following? |
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Ms. Elinor Caplan: The question I have is this: is there any risk involved with your product? |
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Elinor Caplan, Minister of Immigration and Citizenship at the time, proudly stated that the new Act was tough. |
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American political scientist Elinor Ostrom shared the 2009 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences for her research on managing collective resources. |
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Ms. Elinor Caplan: Even if it does work for me, I may stop taking it. |
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Ms. Elinor Caplan: The only thing I'd ask that you consider is this. |
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I was very tempted to introduce Virginia Woolf, simply because what Elinor feels about the war is very close to what Virginia Woolf says in 'Three Guineas,' but Elinor can't articulate it. |
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Ms. Elinor Caplan: But what about the use of a therapeutic product, as opposed to food, if it's a therapeutic product or a natural therapeutic product? |
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Chocolate-Covered Brownie Ice-Cream Cone Cupcakes by Elinor Klivans. |
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In 2009, one of its members, Elinor Ostrom, professor at the University of Michigan, was awarded the Nobel Prize in Economics for her work on the management of common goods. |
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Ms. Elinor Caplan: So what you are proposing is to take the items that are presently in schedule A and test them in the new risk or safety assessment paradigm. |
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Ms. Elinor Caplan: Paul, if we're drawing the line on the basis of risk of harm, is the place where it's very risky, very harmful, the place where we should draw the line, or is it at low risk? |
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Elinor then ventured to doubt the propriety of her receiving such a present from a man so little, or at least so lately known to her. |
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Elinor Ostrom of Indiana University and Oliver Williamson of the University of California at Berkeley, the winners of this year's Nobel prize for economics, have both been honoured for recognising this complexity. |
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Ms. Elinor Caplan: They have recommended a cascading approach on the basis of risk management, with more strict regulation for high-risk products. |
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Ms. Elinor Caplan: Would you agree that when you get out of the low or even moderate risk into high risk, that's where the assessment or the appropriate standard might be that we now consider it a drug? |
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By Elinor Wylie The New Yorker, November 10, 1928 P. 25 Is it not fine to fling against loaded dice Yet to win View Article By Jia Tolentino By Alan Burdick By John Cassidy By Atul Gawande. |
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Without shutting herself up from her family... or lying awake the whole night to indulge meditation, Elinor found every day afforded her leisure enough to think of Edward. |
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Griffith's father was John Ap Gruffydd and his mother Elinor John. |
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The triple harp is also played by a minority of classical harpists in Wales, including Angharad Evans, Elinor Bennett, Meinir Heulyn and Eleri Darkins. |
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The economist Elinor Ostrom, who is on our list this year, has written about the tragedy of the commons, which is the idea that self-interest can undermine the common good. |
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Mezzo soprano Kathryn Rudge, a rich voice which has considerable character, was well placed in the rather drunken opening ballad, The Tunning of Elinor Rumming. |
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