These 300-pounders are trying to compete with the faster and stronger defensive linemen of today's National Football League. |
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Students compete for grades, they compete for awards, they compete for a place on the team. |
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Carlow's young guns will travel to Belfast in November to compete at the next inter-club event. |
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Only 600 establishments have made the grade and only those who surpass the high entry standards are eligible to compete for the national awards. |
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This was the pharmaceutical industry, after all, where swarms of sales reps compete for doctors' attention. |
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Perform five to six reps to the right, then switch sides to compete the set. |
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Enterprises must compete with operators and owners to provide the best quality products and services at reasonable prices. |
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This also embarrasses me because it implies that people like me can't compete in the job market on a level playing field. |
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Instead, aspirants compete for the nomination in a primary election, in which party supporters are responsible for the choice. |
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These advisors help the firms to manage their businesses to compete more effectively in market-driven economies. |
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His supporters feel that their leader was forced into aligning with former foes in order to compete against the Opposition. |
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The unit has the raw talent and experience to compete with anyone and appears to have the best chemistry of any grouping. |
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The furniture is powder-coated sage green, so it will not compete with the garden around it, and the pieces are arranged with ease and grace. |
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You may raise to put pressure on the opponents, to compete for the contract or to sacrifice. |
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Both guys come from families of real lumberjacks and they often compete in lumberjack competitions. |
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Those who were less keen to compete for migrants could resort to convicts as casual labour. |
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India and China are introducing a large pool of skilled and unskilled labour to compete with the labour forces of industrialised countries. |
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They attractively display unusual veggies at a local sidewalk showcase, trying to compete for consumer attention with handcrafted gelatos. |
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Often governments for a variety of reasons decide to regulate the activities of firms that compete against each other. |
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All seeds within a fruit must compete for resources allocated by the maternal plant. |
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Costs, already greatly reduced, must be lowered even further if the airline is to compete in an increasingly cut-throat word. |
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You need to have a strong squad to be able to compete in the top half of the Premiership. |
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It is not known if any of the riders will be able to compete at the top level again. |
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We can compete with sides above us, we've just got to make sure we get our game right. |
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Such flexibility is obviously one of the reasons it can compete so effectively against vigorous competition at home and abroad. |
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He was also chosen to manage an International team that will compete in a quadrangular tournament in Ulster in the summer. |
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Capturing the quality players the club needed to compete in National League One had been difficult, said Moorby. |
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I'm just so jacked up about being with these guys and having the chance to compete again. |
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In dunnocks, females may use song to compete for males, and in the alpine accentor, females attract males by song. |
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There was also a chance for youngsters to compete on the park's features including a jump box, quarter pipe and ground rails. |
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It was issued to compete with acclaimed extended recordings by the leading big bands of the era. |
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International class equestrian and yachting are expensive sports to compete in at the top, and not exactly third world sports. |
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Nevertheless, these queens also compete for reproductive shares within a colony of limited resources. |
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He will become the first javelin thrower from Kenya to compete at an Olympics. |
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There are four houses and they compete at sport, but there's no lacrosse and Lily said there was much less competition than in the Potter books. |
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We're already the cheapest by a long way, so I don't see prices coming down to compete with another high fares airline. |
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But we did compete in sack races, running races, egg-and-spoon races, swimming races, whatever. |
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We can't really compete in the race for the bottom, without our workers losing a lot. |
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For example, African weaver ant colonies compete with each other for territories, with one colony eventually excluding the other. |
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But junior racers compete over an eighth of a mile and their cars have speeds of up to 50 mph. |
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On Friday, the top racer from each of the program tracks will compete in the Race of Champions. |
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The young racers compete year-round in qualifying races in more than 150 cities and communities. |
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Participants then compete in five year-age divisions in all athletic disciplines including the marathon, cross country running and race walking. |
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In very weedy vineyards the weeds may also compete with the vines for light. |
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Both actors compete for public support and governance becomes a contested arena. |
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The 2000 Olympic Games was the first to allow women to compete in the sport of weightlifting. |
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In many social mammals, the desire for friendly relations comes into conflict with the need to compete for resources, including mates. |
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This is a friendly but very competitive event where members compete with each other in Clay Shooting, Horseshoe Throwing, Pool and Darts. |
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In contrast, other devices available in the market cannot compete with the simplicity and total control that these joysticks have to offer. |
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As often as once a week, teams of relay runners compete in a long race that may begin far out on the plain, ending with a dash into the village. |
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I have seen some of our juniors compete because we've gone on a few trips and things. |
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Now 18, though still young enough to compete as a junior, Sorrell has broken through. |
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I could possibly get fit enough to compete in Paris but I just would not be able to do myself justice. |
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Some ranchers believe the larger animals compete with cattle for rangeland and attract predators, but that's a matter of opinion. |
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We also need to reintroduce the spirit of competition because, like it or lump it, Scotland has to compete in the global world. |
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As a student in 1936 Andrew went to Berlin to compete at athletics with German medical students. |
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The Zambia team will compete in several events among them volleyball netball, table tennis and swimming. |
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Ms Kapwepwe aims high when she talks about changing the out-look of airports to compete equally in the region to boost the tourism industry. |
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The pair along with Donald Ideson, who shoots air pistols, are due to compete in the Yorkshire County Championships at Bradford in December. |
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A kick-boxing instructor is appealing for help to raise cash so talented youngsters can compete in a European contest. |
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Except for two small species of bats, there are no native mammals here to prey on or compete with introduced animal pests. |
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An athlete testing positive at a major event can continue to compete until a B-sample confirms the finding. |
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To collect her winnings, Mutola must compete in the World Athletics Final in Monaco from 13 to 14 September. |
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A global race is under way as no less than four separate research teams compete to make archaeological history. |
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Steward claims she would not have been able to compete in the marathon without the crystal to awaken her dormant mind power. |
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Richardson, who has signed a letter of intent to compete for UCLA next season, said she still hopes to represent Canada internationally. |
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But discovering the wonder of a sprouting seed, or watching how a worm moves underground can still compete with Gameboys and win. |
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This means that renewable energy producers are being asked to compete in a rigged market. |
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She now has a British passport, so qualifies in her own right to compete for Scotland. |
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Withdrawing a day before the start of racing means they will first compete as lightweights for 2004 at Athens. |
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Yet both superpowers thought of it as another territory to compete over in a global game of go. |
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They focus on the process through which firms develop comparative advantages over time so that they can compete effectively with their rivals. |
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It also proposed allowing governments to resume aid to help EU shipbuilders compete with Korean rivals. |
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Investors long hoped the company might do the heavy restructuring needed to revive profits and compete with new rivals. |
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Green Hills Farms developed a powerful customer-loyalty program to help it compete against giant rivals. |
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Present incumbents were required to compete with new applicants for these positions. |
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An injured runner who has overcome a rare lung condition to compete in marathons has turned to aqua jogging to get him back on the road. |
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This will enable rival vendors to develop products that can compete on a level playing field in the work group server operating system market. |
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To compete successfully in these events, runners must train arduously and consistently, be agile and maintain a strategy for the race. |
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Organic markets weren't moving much quantity and she had to compete with low-priced vegetables from California or flooded markets. |
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Midweek matches often have to compete with big TV games and floating fans appear to be choosing the armchair option. |
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There is also a realistic chance of progressing to compete on the big stage. |
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Inside computers artificial life forms have already evolved that can locomote, chase prey, evade predators and compete for limited resources. |
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New Delhi's monuments are worth a brief visit, but they can't compete with the red boldness of historic Old Delhi. |
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If you want to compete at the Boston Marathon you have to be willing to put in the lonely hours of work. |
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He assures me he is far too long in the tooth to compete against the current world title holders, who nowadays are in their teens. |
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Last week's long-awaited victory also served to boost the hope that the Wasps might be able to compete in this game. |
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Yet, the sad fact is that the artisan, no matter how skilled, cannot compete with modern technology. |
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People here are preoccupied with money and resigned to the pressure to compete for their daily bread. |
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Jones, winner of three gold and two bronze medals in Sydney four years ago, is scheduled to compete only in the long jump. |
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Lewis did compete in the long jump this morning but she was lying 18th in the competition and decided to bring an end to her brave battle. |
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You need to have good horses to compete on the Flat and the ones I get are not up to that standard. |
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Both of the airlines compete on a large number of routes into and out of Australia, not least on the kangaroo route, but also on routes into Asia. |
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Despite the fact that the two actresses often seem to compete for the role of Hollywood's leading Latin lady, the one positively sought out the other from early on. |
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It also forced banks to consider designing their own Internet money market funds to compete with Yu'E bao. |
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There was no way I was going to compete with that, because I knew he could consume 100 Beers in one sitting. |
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Part of this outlook would be the reportorial role that Bayle assumes, of giving unimpeded voice to all views, even those that compete with his own. |
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The kapa haka which compete at the Festival are the winners of regional competitions that have been held around Aotearoa and Australia in the year prior to the Festival. |
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The only problem is as these corporations get bigger then even more smaller businesses go under, unable to compete with lower prices and special offers. |
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Hicks and Gillett discovered they could not compete with that kind of extravagant largesse. |
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In the jump-off, riders compete against the clock, as well as the course. |
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Get immigration done and the party will be able to compete again on bread-and-butter issues with most of the electorate. |
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Good, caring teachers recognized his talent and challenged him to work hard to compete at the highest levels. |
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Harry, met about 25 wounded soldiers hoping to compete in the wheelchair rugby, cycling and indoor rowing events. |
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Throughout the long night, the Clipper flew onward with wing tip navigation lights flashing red and green to compete with the mass of twinkling stars. |
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They will also continue to compete in historic road rallies. |
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A less anthropocentric view, however, might be that no life form alive today could survive if it were forced to compete head-to-head with all the microbes it meets. |
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Unable to compete with the industry Goliaths in the areas of promotion, advertising, sales force, and recoverable losses, he had to rely on sharp-wittedness and timing. |
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In the Middle Ages many Alsace wines were fortified or spiced in order to compete with the fuller bodied Mediterranean wines such as sack and malmsey. |
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Family and friends race each other and compete out on the water. |
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Sunbird asities are aggressive and compete with other species for food. |
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The opportunity law students get to compete in oral advocacy and presentation of cases in the most ratiocinative way still keeps the spirit of moot courts burning. |
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A friendly sibling rivalry that drives them to work a little bit harder and compete a little longer can only serve as a benefit to both the sisters and the team. |
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How can stevia ever fairly compete with artificial sweeteners, such as aspartame and saccharin, when the latter two are allowed to be called sweeteners? |
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University presses still compete for many monographs, including revised dissertations, and, contrary to this belief, they pay advances for a significant number of them. |
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After a moment, he knocked louder, trying to compete with the noise. |
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The wealthier and more influential Sephardim spoke Italian and Ladino, while the Yiddish of the Ashkenazim had to compete with the more prestigious English. |
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In September, they'll compete in a more rigorous series of tests before receiving the go ahead to race from California through Nevada within 10 hours. |
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How can the apogee of 19th century technology compete with silicon? |
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Europe's top racers will compete in this jaw-dropping demonstration race. |
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Mrs Dobson said the task of the trust has become more difficult over the years as property prices escalated and they had to compete with developers hoping to make fat profits. |
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Maybe more people would be honest and not cheat to compete outside their class, but think how fun boxing could be or even speed skating if a few players could be jacked up. |
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In CFA ragdolls compete in provisional classes, but they could become eligible for championship competition and full acceptance as a pedigreed breed as early as next year. |
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It was too much to expect Buffalo to compete with New York or Green Bay to compete with Chicago. |
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The bursary received will afford the elite sports person the opportunity to compete at the highest level while pursuing a course of academic study at the Institute. |
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The difference is that racers compete using inline skates instead of skis. |
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There was no way to compete with low-priced foreign competitors. |
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You've covered rugby I have been involved in for a long time. I've always had to compete for my position, but I've never been sour or whinged about it. |
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After decades of trying to compete with cheap knock-offs of the original 1933 design, Anglepoise has decided to appeal to the design cognoscenti by going seriously upmarket. |
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Many are opposed to bilingual education, a position grounded in their awareness of the need to assimilate linguistically in order to compete in an English-speaking society. |
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Afterward, the company became timid and slow, almost afraid to compete for fear of arousing more scrutiny. |
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This puts them at odds with the countless polytheistic religions, where many gods compete for prominence. |
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How can students be expected to compete in the international marketplace when they don't even know the accepted standard for romanizing their own language? |
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A notably large Irish contingent took part in the infamous draft riots because they did not want to compete for jobs with blacks. |
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This allowed women to enter rodeo contests on an ad-hoc basis and to compete in a limited number of traditional events, such as calf roping and cutting. |
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Thousands of horses compete at racetracks and at showjumping, eventing, dressage, carriage driving, long distance riding, pony and leisure events. |
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Republicans definitely have work to do at ensuring they can compete with female voters. |
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So this is what it looks like when both parties compete to politicize an issue? |
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With these launches, AMD will at last have the armoury to compete with Intel in all sectors of the market, from mobile PCs, all the way up to corporate servers. |
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For vibrant colour outdoors in January few trees can compete with diospyros kaki, the persimmon tree, laden with fruit resembling bright orange apples. |
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Where their ranges meet, the two canids compete due to near identical diets. |
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They compete in the annual Six Nations Championship with France, Ireland, Scotland, Italy, and Wales. |
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We have spoken to our FDR clubs, and if they want to compete we will support them. |
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Great Britain continued to compete as a test playing nation both home and away. |
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Therefore, they are likely to prey on and compete for food with a wide range of Australian terrestrial and freshwater species. |
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Against this backdrop, the ability of South America's xenarthrans to compete effectively against the northerners represents a special case. |
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Great Britain did not compete in the 1975 World Cup as the UK was represented by teams from England and Wales for the first time in a World Cup. |
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Females release their eggs in batches, and males compete to fertilize them. |
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Sea lions rely on fish, like pollock, as a food source and have to compete with fishermen for it. |
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Australia won that tournament and in 1977 it was decided that Great Britain should once more compete as a single entity. |
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It was not until the 1880s that rival machinery and works could compete with the MacDonald works. |
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Before harbour boards were established, pilots known as hobblers would compete with one another. |
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With this acquisition Adidas also acquired the Taylormade Golf company and Maxfli, which allowed them to compete with Nike Golf. |
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The acquisition of Reebok would also allow Adidas to compete with Nike worldwide as the number two athletic shoemaker in the world. |
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This was seen as part of a wider move towards popularisation, to compete with Classic FM and to increase ratings. |
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The line was not able to compete with the Portsmouth corporation tram services. |
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Canadian and Welsh clubs that also compete in the Rugby Football League can also qualify. |
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Some runners compete to run the same marathons for the most consecutive years. |
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The island is home to the Wightlink Warriors speedway team, who compete in the sport's third division, the National League. |
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Riders wishing to compete must submit their entries at least four weeks before the first meeting of the competition. |
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Islands marked in grey are no longer members of the IIGA and so cannot compete at the Island Games. |
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He also decided not to compete in the 2012 Open, instead joining the BBC Sport commentary team for the event. |
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In 2012 Oscar Pistorius became the first double amputee sprinter to compete at the Olympic Games in London. |
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Male reindeer used their antlers to compete with other males during the mating season. |
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Rome became able to compete with other major European cities of the time in terms of wealth, grandeur, the arts, learning and architecture. |
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Dunnarts in turn compete with smaller native mammals, such as ningauis and planigales. |
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In 2004 Davies was the first woman to compete in the men's European Tour, entering the ANZ Championship in Sydney, Australia. |
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As important as these improvements were, they could not compete with the impact of the railway. |
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Less educated workers, who were more likely to compete with immigrants and workers in developing countries, tended to be opponents. |
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Normally, giraffes can coexist with livestock, since they do not directly compete with them. |
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It was common at this time for a small number of professionals to travel to compete in each other's national championship. |
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Oman has competed repeatedly for a position in the FIFA World Cup, but have yet qualified to compete in the tournament. |
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Fourteen clubs from across the country compete in the Sierra Leone Premier League. |
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A SHOW jumper, who hoped to compete in the Olympics, has been jailed after 11 years on the run. |
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The Philippines has participated in the Summer Olympic Games since 1924 and was the first country in Southeast Asia to compete and win a medal. |
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The Philippines is also the first tropical nation to compete at the Winter Olympic Games debuting in the 1972 edition. |
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Prize money was first awarded in 1968, the year that professional players were allowed to compete in the Championships for the first time. |
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Second, he hoped to establish an English presence in the Southern Hemisphere that could compete with that of the Spanish. |
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The exception is in endurance riding, where the minimum age to compete is based on the animal's actual calendar age. |
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Weeds compete with the crop for moisture and nutrients, making them undesirable. |
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However, many farmers in developing countries receive a low price for their produce, or find it difficult to compete with developed countries. |
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Its objective is the integration of ASEAN stock exchanges so as to compete with international exchanges. |
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They had to compete with the Shunga Empire and then the Kanva dynasty of Magadha to establish their rule. |
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Fred Perry joined professional tennis in 1937 and was unable to compete in the Grand Slams tournaments. |
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The 16 best national teams are assigned to the World Group and compete annually for the Davis Cup. |
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In the early days of the Reagan Administration, steel firms won substantial tax breaks in order to compete with imported goods. |
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Teams and individuals from both greens compete in local, regional and national competitions. |
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The results of Cumbria's championships guide selection of the county teams to compete in the English Schools Athletic Association Championships. |
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The latter compete with land grown to feed people while mined materials do not. |
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Fleetwood Cricket Club, based at Broadwater, are affiliated with the Lancashire Cricket Board and compete in the Northern League. |
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In America, the repertory system has also found a base to compete with commercial theatre. |
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Miss Potter was released on 29 December 2006 so that the film could compete for the 2007 Academy Awards. |
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He was to compete at the 1957 British Grand Prix at Aintree, but he was killed in the Mille Miglia. |
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This bride-gift, a kind of reverse dowry, indicates that grooms had to compete for relatively few brides. |
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It became more difficult for Lancashire to compete with the more easily worked mines in Yorkshire and Derbyshire. |
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Leeds is home to a number of field hockey clubs that compete in the North Hockey League, Yorkshire Hockey Association League and BUCS leagues. |
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The club was founded in 2008 and only compete in National and International Competition. |
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As a result, colonies and dependencies are permitted to compete at Olympic Games. |
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A keen golfer, Mansell revealed a desire to compete in the British Open Golf Championship and briefly participated in the 1988 Australian Open. |
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The two kings now began to compete for control of Berry, a prosperous region of value to both kings. |
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I figured I'd never be able to compete with what I considered the most perfect wedding in existence, so I concentrated on making mine superfun. |
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They came up with a compromise where he could compete in a special swim-off two months later. |
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Top riders travel the world to compete in the annual FIM World Championship series. |
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It was unable to compete in the 500cc category, the FIM deeming it was not classified as a production machine as it had two overhead camshafts. |
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Woof Justice from Newcastle compete with the Beach Bums from Torquay in the Scrapheap Challenge grand final. |
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Pigs will wear costumes, do tricks and compete for which has the waggliest tail. |
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An empty black cell indicates that the class did not compete at that particular championship round. |
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Players who had reached the finals of each organisations major tournaments for the previous two years were invited to compete in the Grand Slam. |
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Although I am aerobically fit, I will not have enough time to do the necessary speed work to compete at the top level in Melbourne. |
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Ryan might be the flava o' the month, but his zillions of cah-razy fans can't compete with the girl who doesn't sweat it. |
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A STUDENT is preparing to climb atop his broomstick to compete at an international quidditch tournament in Canada. |
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Gauthier was scheduled to compete in the Canadian Racquetball Championships from May 19 to 23 in Burnaby, British Columbia. |
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Al Qaeda and its Iraqi offspring ISIS compete for recruits and territory. |
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That same team was dominated by archrivals Valencia and Saugus, the heavy favorites to compete for the league title this season. |
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They've definitely become our archrivals,'' said List, who didn't compete in the March3 match because of a commitment to play in an SCTA event. |
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The European Championship is a tournament that allows the top players in Europe to compete against the top players in the PDC Order of Merit. |
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Instead what you once glean is the semblance of a jazz song distorted by recurring arhythmical beats and sounds that compete with each other. |
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In 1664, the French East India Company was established to compete for trade in the east. |
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A good practice management tool, such as Redbrick Practice Management, is essential for firms who want to compete in the current market. |
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A more flexible and portable model would ease exit from and reentrance into the profession and enable it to more effectively compete for talent. |
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Wanderers compete in the Surrey South Eastern Combination after being re-formed three years ago. |
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Scottish aristocrats and other place seekers made their way to London, to compete for high positions in government. |
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Dylan Bright died too young to compete in the decathlon of Flourishing. |
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Started in 2008, the Championship League Darts offered the players outside the top 8 in the PDC Order of Merit to compete for the championship. |
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This meant Ireland were able to compete in the ICC Trophy for the first time in 1994 and they finished seventh in the tournament. |
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Allow the graduates of all our law schools to take every state's bar examination and compete in the marketplace. |
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The iPad Air will compete with Surface Pro, not some rinky-dink Android tablet. |
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Darts was denied a great rivalry as the two best players were unable to compete against each other regularly due to the split in the game. |
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Eight international invites and eight UK B-boys and B-girls will compete against each other. |
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But after realising black eyes and broken nails were not compatible with beauty pageants, Lara does not compete any more. |
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A GWYNEDD-based roller hockey club could compete for the North Wales crown at a competition being staged on Deeside. |
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No longer will the dunkers compete against each other as individuals. |
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Even so, their size will never compete with some other mixes like the Grolar bear and the Beefalo. |
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Canal companies were unable to compete against the speed of the new railways, and in order to survive, they had to slash their prices. |
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Dion Jones is one of 18 young cooks vying for e Roux Scholarship and will compete in one of two nals being held next week. |
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She will travel to Ottawa to compete in the national SABC competition May 5 to be judged by a panel of experts at the National Research Council. |
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Sailboat racing is one of the few sports in which people of all ages and genders can regularly compete with and against each other. |
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Named the FAI Gliding Match Racing, six elite pilots will compete in two identical high-performance Discus 18 meter sailplanes. |
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In golf, if you're up against a real big hitter, the last thing you do is try to compete with him. |
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As with learning to compete in a sport, heart rate variability biofeedback needs extended time and practice to achieve the best results. |
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He also claimed maximum points in each of the five races he needed to compete in to discard his probationary black plate. |
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At high light levels, eastern redbud and bladdernut were the only native species able to compete with buckthorn. |
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Some mainlanders have brought with them invasive species, such as goats, which compete for food with indigenous fauna. |
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The Flow Tour Competition participants compete in one bodyboard and one stand up division, including junior, female, male and expert divisions. |
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They compete fearlessly for resources with each other and with the slightly smaller mottled sculpins. |
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In January 2014, it was announced that Ainslie would compete in the 2014 Extreme Sailing Series as part of his preparation for the America's Cup. |
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The Faroe Islands are a full member of FINA and compete under their own flag at World Championships, European Championships and World Cup events. |
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Individuals compete for fallen leaves and drag them back to their burrows where they are left to senesce for the removal of unpalatable tannins. |
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We have to be innovative if we are to compete against the Bristols and the Manchesters and the Londons of this world. |
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Londo also will compete in the saddle bronc competition tonight, as will former Columbia River Circuit champion Ryan MacKenzie. |
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The Faroe Islands compete in the Paralympics and have won several gold, silver and bronze medals there. |
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The canal companies, unable or unwilling to upgrade their facilities to compete with railways, used political power to try to stop them. |
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To compete at the European and World Championships Welsh fencers represent Great Britain, if selected. |
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Internationally, Welsh players compete at the Olympic games as part of the Great Britain team. |
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Other countries that compete at the ENT are Belarus, Czech Republic, Ireland, Italy, Russia, Scotland and Switzerland. |
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Wales compete in the European Bowl, European Championships, and have qualified for the World Championship in the past. |
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International competitions in which Wales compete include the European Championships, the Commonwealth Games and the Netball World Championships. |
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The senior teams each play in annual European competitions, and the professional side compete in the World Cup every 4 years. |
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Great Britain was one of four nations to compete in the debut of Olympic polo. |
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He had raised funds in counties Tipperary and Waterford to travel independently and compete for Ireland. |
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Some athletes born in what had become the Republic continued to compete for the British team. |
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If he or she had competed for another country previously, we might allow him or her to compete for Ireland. |
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The team was then rushed back to England to compete in the 1922 RAC Tourist Trophy. |
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Rugby league team Derby City RLFC were formed in 1990 and compete in the Midlands Premier Division of the National Rugby League Conference. |
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Before 1791, British sugar had to be protected to compete against cheaper French sugar. |
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Murray had for some time had ambitions to establish a new morning paper to compete with The Times. |
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This also increased its influence in the Indian Ocean to compete against the Portuguese with its close ally the Ajuran Empire. |
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Through privatization by direct asset sale or stock market, bidders compete to offer higher prices, generating more revenue for the state. |
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The islands are represented by the Shetland football team who regularly compete in the Island Games. |
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Glasgow hosts Scotland's only professional basketball team, the Glasgow Rocks, who compete in the British Basketball League. |
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The home club, Glasgow Tigers, compete in the British Premier League, the second tier of motorcycle speedway in Britain. |
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The students compete in the South West Counties League as Newport County's youth team. |
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Alternatively, all candidates above a certain threshold in the first round may compete in the second round. |
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They were expected to compete with one another, and they do, although not in all respects. |
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A blue is an award given to those who compete at the university team level in certain sports. |
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Public hospitals in Singapore have autonomy in their management decisions, and compete for patients. |
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These cooperative enterprises would compete with each other in the same way private companies compete with each other in a capitalist market. |
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These cooperative firms would compete with each other in a market for both capital goods and for selling consumer goods. |
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As well as that, the company often produced several cars to compete in the same market sector. |
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As of the 2015 season, the Bears will compete in the Kingstone Press League 1, as a fully professional team in the third tier of Rugby League. |
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Lower 48 Onshore to compete in the burgeoning shale gas industry dominated by smaller companies. |
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It was a move largely driven by the need to compete globally with Standard Oil. |
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The Coventry Storm, an offshoot of the senior team, currently compete in the National League. |
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The Union runs 18 sports clubs, 11 of which compete in either University of London Union or BUCS leagues. |
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Typically men and women compete in separate crews although mixed crews and mixed team events also take place. |
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They compete in the Erhardt Conference and play their matches at the SkyDome Arena. |
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For the 1984 Summer Olympics, professional footballers were allowed to compete at the Olympics for the first time. |
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The NIHL Coventry Blaze, an offshoot of the senior team and official affiliate of the Blaze, currently compete in the National Ice Hockey League. |
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Each year the event becomes more and more popular with contestants coming from all across the world to compete or even simply to watch. |
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England, Ireland, Scotland, and Wales who compete within the larger Six Nations Championship. |
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There are currently The Irish rugby league team compete in the European Cup and the Rugby League World Cup. |
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Men, Women and Junior National Teams regularly compete in international competition including the European Small Nations Championship. |
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The Forme of Cury may have been written partly to compete with Le Viandier of Taillevent, a French cookbook created around the same time. |
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Irish orienteers compete at all levels, often reaching the finals at the World Orienteering. |
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Golden or summer ales were developed in the late 20th century by breweries to compete with the pale lager market. |
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Scotland competed in the qualifiers in the United Arab Emirates, to compete for a place in the 2010 ICC World Twenty20 in the West Indies. |
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In order to reduce the costs to compete in the championship, the organisers introduced new regulations for the 2001 season. |
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They compete in the Rugby League European Nations Cup and the Rugby League World Cup. |
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Clubs may come together in districts for the County Championship or compete on their own. |
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The 'Future of Shinty' Report published in 1981 led to a compete restructuring of the way in which shinty was organised and managed. |
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