He rhapsodizes sadly about the immigrants turned away by the Ellis Island gatekeepers. |
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In combination, shutter speed and aperture are the gatekeepers that regulate the amount of light that gets to the film. |
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Giving her appearance a final check-over she strode up to the gate, eyes narrowed when the gatekeepers slid out of their posts to meet her. |
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Proponents argue that poorly educated, trained, and paid workers are inadequate gatekeepers for airline security. |
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Pulmonary endothelial cells serve as gatekeepers to trafficking inflammatory and immune cells. |
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They offer an apparently irresistible temptation to the bureaucrats and accountants who have become gatekeepers to our dreams. |
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Because the Internet operates without traditional media gatekeepers controlling what is said, freedom of speech is often the snarly sort. |
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All these stories involve media gatekeepers expressing anxiety about losing control of the gate. |
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It provides a way for good bands to reach big audiences directly, bypassing the gatekeepers and their straightjacketed radio playlists. |
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The gatekeepers of information and judgment will instinctively and defensively protect their turf, rather than question their own legitimacy. |
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Some might say that gatekeepers such as editors guarantee a certain level of quality among print publications that is lacking on the web. |
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ReprintsMr Yar'Adua's wife, Turai, is said to head a clutch of gatekeepers and aides who keep the president off-limits. |
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As gatekeepers, general practitioners are accustomed to husbanding the scarce resources of the NHS, and this might look like a logical extension of their role. |
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Its gatekeepers have all the high cards, and need to use their power with circumspection. |
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Why would we not be involved in allowing them to have the same responsibilities as other gatekeepers? |
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This open standard gives free access to content creation and delivery, making gatekeepers obsolete. |
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Public authorities could be potential gatekeepers when funding collective redress, refusing to allocate resources to unmeritorious claims. |
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They are responsible for acting as gatekeepers and intervening when discussions get off track. |
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We are first the agents of our provinces and not simply gatekeepers but guardians of the founding mission. |
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Opinion Search often uses client-approved introductory letters to work with the gatekeepers to book appointments with the executive respondents. |
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Second is the imposition of reasonable scheduling requirements on private broadcasters and other cultural gatekeepers. |
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Police are the gatekeepers to pre-trial detention in the youth justice system. |
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I identified that GP consultations were one of the gatekeepers to the hospital referral. |
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As well, crime victims may serve as de facto gatekeepers by refusing to participate in sessions with certain types of offenders. |
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Although the conference may generate some publicity, laying the groundwork for a solid relationship with media gatekeepers is our primary focus. |
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They are the liars-in-chief, the gatekeepers of vaults of dirty big secrets which wait for the deployment of journalistic diligence and courage to be uncovered. |
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Western gatekeepers thus controlled the axis of appropriation. |
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Although physicians are gatekeepers to almost all medical resources, their role in managing referral to specialists has been the most controversial aspect of gatekeeping. |
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The skills are there, the drive is there, the ability is there, but the gatekeepers are too dissociated from their own clients' actual needs to ever let me past. |
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Ali, however, was on good terms, both with the gatekeepers and the guards, both of whom hailed and harangued him in a friendly manner as he stopped briefly to speak with them. |
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For this reason, family physicians are often referred to as gatekeepers to Canada's health care system. |
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In that book, Hoving made many claims that rattled the gatekeepers of the art world. |
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Radio is springing free of the regulated gatekeepers who've managed what you can hear since radio was invented. |
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Ideally, this new structure would be backstopped by a strengthened system of group practices, enhancing general practitioners' roles as gatekeepers to the acute system. |
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Not only are women and other marginalized groups excluded in the recruitment processes, those who manage to gain access to the system have to be significantly more qualified to earn the confidence of the party gatekeepers. |
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Swift's story is often framed as an underdog saga, the triumph of a nice girl over mean ones, and of teen-age pluckiness over industry gatekeepers. |
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Russian and foreign energy companies such as TNK-BP and Italy's Eni and Enel took part to ingratiate themselves with Rosneft and Gazprom, the gatekeepers of Russian resources. |
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As gatekeepers of household food security and health, Rai and Sherpa women are further burdened when these wild plants are lost due to the degradation of natural resources. |
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But we can't be hamstrung in our own country by having these gatekeepers effectively holding that money up in an environment where, frankly, there's a real constraint on shelf space. |
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Control over gatekeepers and tastemakers also helps, as does selling in packages, dividing markets and imposing price discrimination to maximize revenue. |
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As for the listserv run by Children's National: the gatekeepers there require an extensive interview with parents who want to join the listserv, to keep out trollers. |
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Direct mail has given insurgent candidates a way to evade gatekeepers in both the mainstream media and the regular party organizations. |
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Social change often starts with a few dedicated individuals who have competencies in the roles of boundary spanners, salespersons, gatekeepers and sociometric stars. |
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Nutritional gatekeepers are not only able to regulate the flow of food from their pantries, but they have the ability to shape behaviours and attitudes toward food. |
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Public service broadcasters have been the staunchest proponents of DTT because, among other things, it is a way into the digital future free from cable and satellite gatekeepers. |
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Again, it's more egalitarian: there are fewer gatekeepers between you and the people who you might want to impress, or who might want to impress you. |
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Communities perceived as economically marginal will also be culturally marginal, because the cultural gatekeepers largely react to the landscape shaped by commerce. |
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That gives us an idea of just who we are talking about as the gatekeepers. |
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Young people need to understand that the Internet has no gatekeepers and they need to be able to distinguish between such biased prejudicial material, and fair and accurate information. |
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Eddleston describes CCIA as the gatekeepers of the traceability system. |
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They are the gatekeepers tasked with the responsibility of guarding against any dangerous or even illegal activity that might damage the well being of our society, and that of our trading partners. |
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Adults in the community often act as gatekeepers, with the power either to reduce or to increase young people's access to reproductive health information and care. |
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Corporate America went astray largely because the power of managers went virtually unchecked by our gatekeepers for far too long. |
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They shouted and scuffled as the half-breed gatekeepers shoved them aside. |
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Kids are often thought of as pesterers and parents as gatekeepers working to resist the pester. |
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Under such a liberal, nearly unreviewable view of admissibility, experts may receive too much leeway as judges attempt to be flexible gatekeepers. |
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Lotte Motz theorized that the Germanic dwarfs, particularly as smiths and gatekeepers, constituted a reminiscence of the Megalithic culture in Northern Europe. |
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