In the aftermath the Scots trooped in one by one to tell us how much they were hurting and you felt their pain, physical and mental. |
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In the immediate aftermath of the events, the public may not have thought of libraries as a source to tap for relevant information. |
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To be fair, Howe promulgated the idea of a Mother's Day in the aftermath of the American Civil War as, she intended, a contribution to peace. |
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This was in the aftermath of the arrival of proper University extension classes established by the 1902 Education Act. |
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Furthermore, its response in the aftermath of the tragedy has been to gag or discredit the reputation of those who have attempted to speak out. |
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A fall in capital expenditure in the aftermath of an investment boom is generally not averted by cuts in interest rates. |
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It is undeniable that the aftermath of the remarkable military victory has been disastrously handled. |
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Wallowing in the aftermath of such bereavements, she overweights her plots with aching losses. |
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The viewer is faced with the aftermath of an unspecified disaster, and a countryside filled with wandering loners on the brink of oollapse. |
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And one reason it's not been achieved is the abysmal lack of planning for an aftermath which was violent. |
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Erin McGrath witnessed the aftermath of the crash when she walked past half an hour later. |
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Both films take place in the aftermath of the devastating earthquake that rocked northern Iran in 1990, killing nearly 50,000 people. |
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Here are some of the links and observations from the immediate aftermath of the case, as I blogged them. |
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A bleak account of a nuclear attack on Kent and its aftermath, mixing drama with documentary styles. |
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Cigarette burns are part of the inevitable aftermath of most parties, as is spilt candle wax. |
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Exactly how they would cope in the aftermath of the furore was exhaustively debated. |
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Authorities are anxious to douse this blaze and begin dealing with its aftermath. |
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Martin's plan was given a generally positive welcome in the immediate aftermath of its publication. |
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Caught in a web of feeling and confusion, Joe is drawn into ever deeper wells of irrationality as the aftermath of the incident unfolds. |
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The war's aftermath brought the beginnings of the city's deindustrialization, which hit black sections of the working class most acutely. |
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The section on the 11th September disaster and its aftermath, teases out an sometimes nuanced criticism of US foreign policy. |
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The morality of a war, perhaps tragically so, is usually judged by the way it was waged and its aftermath. |
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He charged out of the room, laughing maniacally without waiting to see the aftermath. |
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All are seeking compensation in the aftermath of Britain's worst train disaster, which was caused because a driver jumped a red light. |
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In the aftermath of her death, he sank into an all-time low as he mourned his lifelong friend. |
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An informal board meeting was convened in the aftermath and when no resolution could be reached, a formal meeting was held yesterday morning. |
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Much of the book is relentlessly polemical and was obviously written in a white heat in the aftermath of the revelations. |
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In the aftermath of the mudslide major excavation works were carried out on the pitch. |
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The ultimate concern, however, is to get a country back on to its feet in the aftermath of conflict. |
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The next blow came in the conflict's immediate aftermath, as looters ran unchecked through Baghdad. |
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It wasn't just the issue of collusion that exploded in the aftermath of the war. |
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In the aftermath of these two events, she went through a period of anorexia and terrible confusion. |
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Conditions remain tough in the white sands resort in the aftermath of the hurricane. |
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European leaders made all the right noises in the aftermath of Tuesday's events. |
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In the aftermath of many storms, the hardest hit areas can have their water mains shut down. |
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It is the common rhetoric in the aftermath of wars that, with the war once won, the peace must not then be lost. |
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Counselling in the aftermath of traumatic events can worsen stress and hinder recovery. |
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He said that mobile communications crashed in the aftermath of the explosions. |
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The mother of a teenager who died following a moped accident is pleading for calm in the aftermath of his death. |
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Somehow, in the aftermath of this shocking event, life has to go on for the couple. |
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The novel follows a farming family's fight for survival in the aftermath of the foot and mouth epidemic. |
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There are reports of two controlled explosions in the aftermath of the bombing. |
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The international laws that served us in the aftermath of the Second World War are overdue for reform. |
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Authorities would have new powers to declare a regional state of emergency in the aftermath of a major terror alert. |
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Those living in the aftermath of a coup d' etat, by contrast, have no expectation of political agency. |
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Shares in London recouped the losses suffered in the aftermath of the attack and oil prices had steadied. |
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The club now hopes to attract new members after many left in the aftermath of the fire. |
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The vast majority of the truants would readily acknowledge in the aftermath that they were only out for a skive following a wind-up on the web. |
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As silage aftermath becomes available it provides an opportunity to turn attention towards the grazing areas. |
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English cricket looks to be on a sticky wicket in the aftermath of the national team's disappointing exit from the World Cup. |
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At least in the immediate aftermath of the election, the editors recognize that that position is political suicide. |
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The aftermath of a terrorist attack is the riskiest time for such slippages. |
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When the media focus our attention on the aftermath of disasters, it is easy to empty our wallets for the agonized sufferers. |
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World War II and its aftermath also launched a period of booming prosperity, population growth, and economic diversification. |
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The ceasefire brokered in the aftermath of the attack is shaky but continues to hold. |
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Beleaguered telecom equipment group Marconi saw over half its value wiped out yesterday in the aftermath of its profit warning. |
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He said the aftermath of the cloud of thick, acrid smoke had forced the fire service to issue public health advice. |
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But although the waters may have receded, the aftermath of one of the world's biggest natural disasters has only just begun. |
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If there is to be a reckoning over this war and its disorderly aftermath, it will come in next year's elections. |
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This week he looks at the aftermath of the Ice Age, which saw the land recolonised by flora and fauna. |
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In the immediate aftermath of a terrifying event, many people report a sense of unreality. |
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He operated on Shannon in the immediate aftermath of the mountain lion attack and is scheduled for another operation with her on Friday. |
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In addition, the Leader of the Opposition has twice been spectacularly wrong-footed over the aftermath of the conflict. |
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In the aftermath, regulators required plant operators to devise evacuation plans in coordination with state and local governments. |
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The State Council has told local governments to deal with the aftermath of the halted and suspended projects. |
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Finding the resources yourself and paying out of pocket can be extremely expensive and difficult in the aftermath of a catastrophe. |
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It became clear to us that we were witnessing the aftermath of a massacre, the cold-blooded butchery of helpless and defenceless civilians. |
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He wandered around the demolished streets with a box camera and still has twenty of the pictures which he took in the aftermath. |
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Slowly rising lava domes may grow for months or for several years in the aftermath of explosive eruptions. |
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In the immediate aftermath of the September 11 attacks, a dozen states passed draconian anti-terrorism laws. |
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A friend of mine takes the moral analogy between the aftermath of the Civil War and the current situation in Iraq one step further. |
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Can it even be reinvented in the aftermath of the departure of two of the anchormen and the inevitable retirement of Peter? |
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First, in the aftermath of Pearl Harbor, the armed forces had to be unified into an integrated system. |
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In the chaotic world of war and its aftermath, it's hard to distinguish between good and bad. |
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In the immediate aftermath of the fall of communism, American soft power was at its height. |
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This shows the aftermath of what activists call a barrel bomb having been dropped on a residential street in that district. |
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There could be a lot more space beyond that and there could even be other Big Bangs apart from the ones of which we are the aftermath. |
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The aftermath of the war also means that the city isn't overrun by tourists and there are few places selling tacky souvenirs at inflated prices. |
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So a family who has been dealing with the aftermath of death all their lives suddenly has to cope with it personally rather than professionally. |
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Blood and carnage are everywhere but this is no battle field scene, result of a U-boat attack or the aftermath of a terrorist car bomb. |
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This originated in the experience of US veterans in the aftermath of Vietnam. |
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Although I was just the youth and reserve coach, I enjoyed the whole build-up and aftermath. |
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Most chief executives never have to deal with the aftermath of death and mayhem. |
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A large raft of players were cut loose in that aftermath due to budget concerns and he has been busy beefing up the squad ever since. |
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London began digging out on Friday, dealing with the aftermath of the attacks. |
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In addition, the aftermath of episodes of bullying may spill over to affect other service users in the ward community. |
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The distrust created in the aftermath of the scandals is still part of the landscape. |
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Jurors were spared much of the gory detail in the case, but the horrific nature of the crime and the grisly aftermath was hard to avoid. |
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It was its aftermath that was most disastrous, largely under American dictation at Versailles. |
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The questionnaires were completed in late September, so the results should reflect the aftermath of the September 11 attacks. |
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After these pranks, the second volume, covering the war years and their aftermath, was rather a let-down. |
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This theme was followed through in the aftermath of that marriage of convenience, as those dumpy princesses found themselves, well, dumped. |
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Once the media caravanserai moves on to the next global flashpoint, we will likely ignore the messy aftermath to the heroic events of last week. |
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Europe's heads of state are continuing their policy of conciliation with the Bush administration in the aftermath of the US invasion of Iraq. |
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A satirical commentary on native genocide and its aftermath, the play tangles characters, notions and story threads into a defiant Gordian knot. |
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The extended coda to that scene and its aftermath was very well played, showing earlier events from a different perspective. |
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Time stops, serenity is shattered and the aftermath is a bruising period of shock and guilt. |
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But the impression created by these sculptures is as much that of the aftermath of a dissipated party as of more serious kinds of devastation. |
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The original Edinburgh International Festival was dreamt up as an antidote to the glum aftermath of the Second World War. |
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He established his unique company five years ago to deal with the aftermath of messy death. |
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The extreme violence takes place off-screen, and very little is shown of the aftermath. |
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Troy is at its best in the climactic fight scene between Hector and Achilles, and its aftermath. |
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But in the aftermath of our victory, the search for evidence of this program has thus far come up dry. |
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Their pastorals, both published in 1651, offered choices to Royalists in the aftermath of the crushing defeat at Worcester. |
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One reason is the aftermath of the 2000-03 bear market in which pension funds and insurance company with-profits funds took a pasting. |
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In the immediate aftermath just the sound of a train left the experienced driver in despair. |
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The directorial debut shows the actress grappling with the aftermath of a crack-up. |
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The novel is a modern day romance novel that takes us through courtship, marriage, and its aftermath. |
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The immediate aftermath of the war was marked by a nostalgic return by many artists to the springs of Mediterranean culture. |
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The pandemonium that erupted around the university track in the aftermath of Bannister's run may have also contributed to undermine the rules. |
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The aftermath of the Cold War produced renewed interservice rivalry over allocation of roles, missions, and budgetary shares. |
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Sure, the men behind the robbery looked pretty clever in the immediate aftermath of the heist. |
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The austerities of the Second World War and its aftermath put an end to whimsical parties. |
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Artery-clogging cholesterol, alcohol and carcinogenic free radicals cause cellular mayhem in the aftermath of too many bibulous feasts. |
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The Kremlin, which local people accuse of tragically mishandling the siege and its aftermath, was also targeted. |
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In the aftermath of a collision cars with full fuel tanks tend to go up in flames killing the occupants who might have survived the collision. |
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In the aftermath of disasters, public health services must address the effects of civil strife, armed conflict, population migration, economic collapse, and famine. |
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This was necessitated by the severe economic problems the country faced in the aftermath of the civil war and the defeat of socialist revolutions in Europe. |
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Firstly, the week began with the aftermath of the train crash, where seven people died, and a debate has ensued into how safe the railways, in particular level crossings, are. |
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These were films made in the aftermath of the apocalyptic experiences of World War I which had a decisive effect on a new generation of artists in Germany. |
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Freeport is just one fishing town of many that have been decimated in the aftermath of Sandy. |
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In the aftermath of the London marathon, many runners may be questioning whether their performance could have been improved by changing their pre-race diet. |
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Given her advanced age and storied career, wouldn't the aftermath of the surgery have been a good time to gracefully bow out? |
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But, in the immediate aftermath of this hellish disaster, I don't know how long the American reporters are going to stay or how long the Arab reporters are going to stay. |
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In the immediate aftermath of the changes, one parent sent her child to school with a lunch box containing three Mars bars, two packets of crisps and a fizzy drink. |
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He was also the observant one, casting a sardonic eye on the absurdities of pop stardom, the Swinging Sixties and the aftermath of that crazy decade. |
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In the aftermath, six million files on East German citizens were discovered in stasi archives. |
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Sometimes the aftermath, which can lead to stigmatization and harassment from peers and leaders, is equally painful for victims. |
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Is the Supreme Court going to invalidate campaign finance laws further in the aftermath of its 2010 decision in Citizens United? |
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From a production standpoint, most of Napa has been lucky and irrepressible in the aftermath. |
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A few stiff drinks have been the order of the day in the aftermath of Celtic's other tilts for the Scottish Cup in the time Petrov has been in this country. |
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His louche take on style calls to mind the aftermath of a night spent clubbing or a pre-dawn, hung-over, walk of shame. |
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There are the teensiest, tiniest glimmers of light in the aftermath of this horror. |
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He had been in a meeting with his chairman all morning, his star player was about to be transfer-listed and then there was the aftermath of the night before. |
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Tournament officials conceded that the event could be cancelled entirely in the aftermath of the shocking atrocities that have sent shock waves across the world. |
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Set in a Glasgow slum 30 years ago during the binmen's strike, Ratcatcher focuses on the aftermath of a drowning in a canal and its effect on a 12-year-old boy. |
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In the aftermath, fellow artists and relatives trooped in to help. |
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And, in the aftermath, those thousands of monarchs passed through, their colors even brighter against the smoke and ash. |
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In the immediate aftermath of the attacks, no stone would be unturned in the search, he vowed. |
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In the aftermath of the Revolution, the Founders had struggled to construct a government that would check the rise of extreme elements, whether religious or secular. |
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Stella undergoes a traumatic experience and must deal with the aftermath. |
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Between them they made all the costumes out of crepe paper, butter muslin and silver paper as material was still expensive and difficult to come by as an aftermath of the war. |
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A coming-of-age romance set during the First World War and its aftermath, it garnered favourable reviews and won the prestigious John Llewelyn Prize. |
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In the immediate aftermath of that victory, he was inconsolable. |
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But those heated emotions also make the immediate aftermath of such sad occasions the wrong time to rush into snap judgments we may later have cause to regret. |
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Annual crops, like brassicas, and crop aftermath can be utilized. |
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The enormous space which had before seemed cathedral-like in its solemn majesty and timelessness, now resembled the aftermath of a hurricane or earthquake. |
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A second reason why this crisis is so dangerous has to do with the political economy of the aftermath of a debt crisis. |
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Brunet says that so far they have spoken to 80 witnesses and are poring over some video of the crash and its aftermath. |
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Dozens were injured in the attack, and blood was splattered on the ground in the temple with the injured wandering around in shock and pain in the aftermath. |
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In the aftermath of departure from Europe on Wednesday night, Ferguson bullishly claimed that his team had been the best in the country since the festive season. |
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The immediate aftermath was a series of violent and damaging strikes. |
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Gingerly prising the door open half-expecting a private party or aftermath of a wedding reception, we were pleasantly surprised to be ushered in and offered drinks. |
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We don't even know how we would get aid in the immediate aftermath. |
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In the aftermath of the Games, the Australian dollar has suffered a free-fall, plunging to record lows against the US dollar and most other currencies. |
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Yet the UN Charter sought to instil some order into world affairs in the aftermath of the Second World War, by codifying international political principles. |
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The demythologizing of the aftermath of the event can be one-consequence of juxtaposing the sources and treating the information they provide in a comparative manner. |
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In the aftermath of the incident, his government will have to take quick and resolute steps with thorough probes and punishments of the delinquent officials concerned. |
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Like all the figures churned out in the aftermath of the tsunami, bewildering in their range and enormity, it can only be an estimate and will remain so for some time. |
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Instead of the gorgeous scenic vistas of the Cascade Mountains favored by many artists at the time, he painted scarred clear-cut areas, the loggers' aftermath. |
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His Bronze Star medal citation for the incident praises his courage under fire in the aftermath of a mine explosion that rocked another swift boat on that day 35 years ago. |
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Opponents of Muslims and immigrants across the continent are claiming vindication in the aftermath of the Charlie Hebdo attack. |
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Meanwhile in the aftermath of the war, the evidence of deception and duplicity that we experienced before and during the war has continued at pace. |
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In 2010 Cuba provided the largest contingent of medical staff during the aftermath of the huge earthquake that shook Haiti. |
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In the aftermath of the American Revolution, George Washington was keen to rebuild his personal finances. |
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Since witnessed the aftermath of the attack near her home, Sara has discussed it many times with many people. |
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Even in the aftermath of the Oklahoma City bombing, they maintain intimate political ties with groups that are led by white supremacists, racists and anti-Semites. |
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Some 7,000 Confederates set sail for Brazil in the aftermath of the American Civil War, settling in a city called Americana. |
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In the immediate aftermath of the oil spill, apoplectic Southerners cast their disdain towards the North. |
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The core of the story is set against the backdrop of the Iraq invasion, the buildup, and the immediate aftermath. |
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In the aftermath of Vatican II, however, the nearly universal grief that followed his death led to proposals that the council canonize him by acclamation. |
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The warning is against allowing the aftermath of instantaneous tragedy to overshadow the various ongoing crises that are ignored because the effects are stretched over time. |
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He argues that other cities have already put the responsibility on the operators of horse drawn carriages to deal with the aftermath of their trade. |
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David Frum on Allen Guelzo's compendious synthesis of new thinking about slavery and its aftermath. |
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Then there is any person who encountered or spoke to the complainant in the aftermath of the supposed liaison. |
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And then, in the aftermath of the stolen elections that year, the contradictions suddenly turned very ugly indeed. |
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Historically, change has happened only in the aftermath of a major crisis. |
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She was devastated and traumatised in the aftermath of the landslide. |
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In early August they commenced the grass harvesting operation on second cut aftermath, with fresh cut grass made available at both milkings to all cows. |
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In some cases, the aftermath of disasters can cripple the very infrastructure that would enable recovery. |
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His team went down to a depressing defeat, but Celtic manager Martin O'Neill should be congratulated for his behaviour in the aftermath of the event. |
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Death and its hideous aftermath can come at the hands and blackened teeth of reanimated corpses or the deranged, power hungry gun muzzle of a fellow survivor. |
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The company announced the cuts on Friday of last week, sparking anger from workers who believe the news was held over until Friday to bury it in the aftermath of the election. |
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Police have now issued a picture of Mr Goldman in a bid to get as many witnesses to the crime or the immediate aftermath to come forward to help them in their investigations. |
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Of course, the hurricane aftermath is still foremost on people's minds, everywhere from Main Street, USA, to the red carpets of Hollywood and New York. |
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If we take it at face value, the whole episode was a terrible accident, but the way the police have handled the aftermath has perhaps done them more harm than good. |
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While fans of snubbed teams will be furious, or dispirited, or both, Wellman will crush in the aftermath of Tourney selection. |
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Ambulance and police stations were forced to resort to mobile phones as their landlines and radio transmissions failed in the aftermath of the cable fire. |
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Certainly now when here are, in the aftermath of The Giver, a number of dystopian novels, which involve a great deal of violence. |
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This returned a healthy profit until it too disappeared in the mid-1990s as the region's railroads reorganised in the aftermath of the sale of Conrail. |
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Here, an excerpt from a new book that details her path to revenge and its unintended aftermath. |
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Originally published in French as Tout bouge autour de moi, this book is his firsthand account of the disaster and its aftermath. |
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They were cutting aftermath on all sides, which gave the neighbourhood, this gusty autumn morning, an untimely smell of hay. |
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In contrast to most projections of the aftermath of nuclear war, in this there is no rioting or looting. |
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Jana Pittman, the new 400m hurdles world champion, had the media eating out of her hand in the aftermath of her victory. |
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A futurefic following Mulder and Scully over twenty years as they deal with a personal tragedy and the aftermath it leaves. |
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But it was in the immediate numinous aftermath of that predawn visit that I first saw the next, final stage of our haplessly greenward collapse. |
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In the aftermath of the Iraq War, the streets of Baghdad were sometimes filled with gunplay. |
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In the aftermath of the war, hundreds of thousands of tons of chemical weapons were disposed of by being dumped in the North Sea. |
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In the aftermath of the famine, an increase in industrial production and a surge in trade brought a succession of construction booms. |
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In the aftermath of Sweden's secession from the Kalmar Union, civil war broke out in Denmark and Norway. |
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He celebrated Christmas at Winchester and dealt with the aftermath of the rebellion. |
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Llywelyn ap Gruffudd enjoyed an advantageous situation in the aftermath of the Barons' War. |
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The Lancastrian King Henry VI and his only son, Edward of Lancaster, died in the aftermath of the Battle of Tewkesbury. |
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In the aftermath of the Rebellion, under the provisions of the Government of India Act 1858, the British Government nationalised the Company. |
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In the aftermath Marshal Soult's army was discovered to be advancing south, threatening to cut Wellesley off from Portugal. |
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The aftermath of the war institutionalised British national commemoration through Remembrance Sunday and the Poppy Appeal. |
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At the same time, there was tremendous social volatility in the aftermath of war, with many whites actively resisting defeat. |
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The aftermath of this battle sent the empire into a protracted period of decline. |
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Prior to the 2000s financial crisis, ongoing sectarian violence and its economic aftermath was another major factor for immigration. |
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Siam was an aftermath of King Rama V's bureaucratic reforms, which aimed to transform the feudal Thai society into a modernized state. |
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In the aftermath of the battle of Edgehill in October, Parliament became concerned that Charles might advance on London. |
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Coke later revealed that the threat of torture was in most cases enough to elicit a confession from those caught up in the aftermath of the plot. |
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Most sculptors who emerged during the height of Moore's fame, and in the aftermath of his death, found themselves cast in his shadow. |
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In the aftermath of this episode, Sidney challenged de Vere to a duel, which Elizabeth forbade. |
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Indie rock has been identified as a reaction against the macho culture that developed in alternative rock in the aftermath of Nirvana's success. |
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The sheep was killed and the car written off, and in the aftermath of this event the informal race became known as the Mutton Grand Prix. |
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A fourth grouping, not listed by Bertrand, is the Crusade cycle, dealing with the First Crusade and its immediate aftermath. |
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In the aftermath of 1848, Polish, Russian, Hungarian, Italian and French political refugees came to Jersey. |
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In the aftermath of the 'Fifteen', the Disarming Act and the Clan Act made some attempts to subdue the Scottish Highlands. |
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In the immediate aftermath of the Second World War, the US Occupation authorities initially encouraged the formation of independent unions. |
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In the aftermath of the second world war, public housing was dramatically expanded to create a large number of council estates. |
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The aftermath of the decisive Battle of Culloden, which effectively ended Jacobite hopes of a Stuart restoration, was widely felt. |
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In the aftermath of the riots May urged the identification of as many as possible of the young criminals involved. |
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In the aftermath of the war, he lent support to the attempt of Adam Price, a Plaid Cymru MP, to impeach Tony Blair over the Iraq issue. |
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In the aftermath of the Peace of Westphalia, France rose to predominance within Europe. |
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In the aftermath of the Second World War, immigration from Ireland slowed to a trickle. |
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The aftermath of this important battle sent the empire into a protracted period of decline. |
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In the aftermath of Verneuil, the road appeared to lay open to take Bourges and thus bring all of France under English rule. |
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In the aftermath of the first Jacobite Rising in 1715, Highlanders had begun emigrating to the Americas in increasing numbers. |
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In the aftermath of World War II, the role of Fighter Command was still to protect the UK from air attack. |
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As of 2009, 73 deaths have been connected with the construction of the bridge and its immediate aftermath. |
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In the aftermath of the revolt, French power extended throughout Poitou, threatening the interests of the Lusignan family. |
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In the aftermath of the siege, Colonel John Carter was appointed governor of the castle and fresh repairs were carried out. |
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The earls of Pembroke and Surrey were embarrassed and angry about Warwick's actions, and shifted their support to Edward in the aftermath. |
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The aftermath of the disaster is described by Charles Dickens in The Uncommercial Traveller. |
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In the aftermath, Edward reinvigorated the building programme and ordered the commencement of work at Beaumaris. |
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In the aftermath of the rebellion, Edward ordered work to recommence on repairing and completing Caernarfon. |
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In the aftermath of its successful attack against the ship, the Hunley also sank, possibly because it was too close to its own exploding torpedo. |
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The battle was widely viewed as indecisive in the immediate aftermath and this view remains influential. |
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In the aftermath, targeted countries initiated a wide variety of policies to contain their future dependency. |
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Transatlantic transit resumed in the aftermath of the war with the British, American and Dutch transatlantic companies. |
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In the initial aftermath of Charles's defeat, Queen Eadgifu and children had fled to England. |
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In the immediate aftermath of the landings, the priority for the Allies at Utah Beach was to link up with the main Allied landings further east. |
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The oldest known Greek literary sources, Homer's epic poems Iliad and Odyssey, focus on the Trojan War and its aftermath. |
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Greek mythology culminates in the Trojan War, fought between Greece and Troy, and its aftermath. |
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In the aftermath, Henry dispossessed the couple of almost all of their lands in Normandy. |
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The name was briefly revived in the Military Training Act 1939, in the aftermath of the Munich Crisis. |
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In their aftermath, the military governor of Pannonia, Marcus Iallius Bassus, initiated negotiations with 11 tribes. |
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The popularity of German identity arose in the aftermath of the French Revolution. |
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In the aftermath of the Great Patriotic War, the country's educational system expanded dramatically. |
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In the aftermath of Massaga and Ora, numerous Assakenians fled to the fortress of Aornos. |
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In the aftermath of Northern Crusades William of Modena as Papal legate solved the disputes between the crusaders in Livonia and Prussia. |
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During the 9th century the Berbers returned to Africa in the aftermath of revolts. |
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In the aftermath, the wares in the Portuguese factory are impounded by the Calicut authorities. |
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In its aftermath, the lack of infrastructure led to one of the worst floodings in the Philippines and creating a significant amount of pollution. |
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Following the aftermath of Typhoon Ketsana, the city began to dredge its rivers and improve its drainage network. |
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In the aftermath, on April 2, 1943, Tydings introduced a bill in Congress calling for independence for Puerto Rico. |
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The aftermath of quarrel is also not certain, but only his brothers received lands in Siberia after this. |
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The aftermath of the rebellion has been the focus of new work using Indian sources and population studies. |
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The Levellers emerged as a political movement in mid 17th Century England in the aftermath of the Protestant Reformation. |
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The war in the American colonies and its aftermath made it impossible to continue for more than a decade. |
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According to the young man, both were dealing with the aftermath. |
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The atonality of the music of Schoenberg and his contemporaries was, in part, a reaction to the horrors of World War I and its aftermath. |
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In the aftermath of last January's freeze, hibiscuses died even while abutilons planted close by survived. |
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The book includes background on the war on the Western Front, and concludes with the story of the aftermath of the War to end all Wars. |
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In the aftermath of the allegations, cain dropped out of the race. |
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Appropriately enough, the missing narrative is titled Gentleman's Relish, a euphe-mism for the aftermath of jouissance. |
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The warning comes in the aftermath of an incident where policemen tried to arrest a lawbreaker with a long rap sheet or criminal record. |
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James Whittall witnessed the aftermath of the crash and reported seeing people being laid out in the recovery position on the carriageway. |
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Here, in the aftermath of the American Civil War, druggist John Pemberton dreamt up a medicinal drink flavoured with coca leaves and kola nuts. |
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This year, however, as in 2013, there will be very few barn owls floating above the aftermath in the evenings, hunting for mice and voles. |
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Luke had been inspired to find out more about SADS in the aftermath of Fabrice Muamba's collapse while playing Premiership football. |
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Springsteen, arguably the most famous New Jerseyan, was highly visible in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy. |
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Dirty War will show the aftermath of terrorists setting off so-called dirty bombs in London to spread radioactivity. |
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Dismemberment, disembowelment and evisceration abound and Ayer delights in the aftermath of ritualistic slaughter. |
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The PFA have set up their hotline in the aftermath of the on-going allegations involving gambling on yellow and red cards. |
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Nearly 3000 more were to perish while being evacuated from the city in train freight cars in the aftermath of the pogroms. |
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Prefabs were a quick solution to the housing crisis in the aftermath of the Second World War. |
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A FORMER prisoner-of-war from North Wales yesterday told how he was caught up in the aftermath of the London bombings. |
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Mark tore two ribs from his spine in the aftermath of the fall and suffered vertigo and hyperventilation. |
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In the aftermath of the accident, House began to rethink his life. |
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In 2010, in the aftermath of the global fallout from the Lehman bankruptcy, the G-20 agreed to basic IMF reform. |
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Wilson's story is told in flashbacks from the fumbled 1961 Bay of Pigs invasion and its finger-pointing aftermath. |
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They are now studying how foreshocks and aftershocks play a role in predicting events and dealing with the aftermath. |
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To say that the aftermath has been messy would be an understatement. |
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An IMF study by economists Valeric Cerra and Sweta Saxena further questions the extent of Sweden's success in limiting the aftermath of the crisis. |
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It is worth noting that in the immediate aftermath of Hitler's victory in Germany, London's ideas were less distant from Comintern orthodoxy than ever before or since. |
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Storm Surge is a powerful account of Sandy's growth, evolution and aftermath, told by an atmospheric scientist who lives in New York City and experienced the storm firsthand. |
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The aftermath of partition is dealt with in the same, easy-going style but with the accuracy, factualness and discipline of a scholar and an historian. |
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The resulting moral panic and its aftermath are neatly dissected in The Video Nasties Moment, the new book by Liverpool journalist and podcaster Christopher Brown. |
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For example, in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, many military and civilian chains of command were disrupted for jurisdictional, infrastructural, or communication reasons. |
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No morchas taken out in protest, and no boycott threats made headlines as it happened in the aftermath of Sourav Ganguly's exclusion sometime ago. |
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The aftermath of glory and the foremath of peace would not blend. |
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After more Jordan sideswipes in the aftermath of the game, David Gold gently mocked the Palace supremo in his speech at the Blues' annual awards dinner. |
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A SHORTHAND typist who helped to record the ratification of the Geneva Conventions in the aftermath of World War II has celebrated her 100th birthday. |
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He joined the family firm during the 1930s, and in the war worked for the Ministry of Works, dealing with the aftermath of air raids, flying bomb and rocket attacks. |
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Political scientists and international observers debated whether the international system had become unipolar or multipolar in the aftermath of bipolarism. |
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Their efforts aim to end the political crisis that erupted in the aftermath of the assassination of the opposition lawmaker Mohamed Brahmi in July. |
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Marvin knows when Nate is involved with his basketball team in a burglary at a local frat house, and he helps Nate figure out what to do in the aftermath. |
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