His greatest contribution to his whole epoch was his determined struggle to build a vanguard party capable of leading the workers in revolution. |
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Michael's headlong flight meant he and Kieran were going to clip off the vanguard of the right horn of the crescent. |
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When the army advances on the enemy, these men by custom form the vanguard and on their return the rearguard. |
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He is ready to give offense to both the vanguard and the rearguard of the modem Roman Church-and to many in the middle. |
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They would act like any revolutionary vanguard, as Lenin or indeed the French revolutionaries had imagined. |
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He was in the vanguard of the generation of postwar Arab intellectuals who sought to steer the region toward a rationalist secular liberalism. |
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French label Burning Emptiness stand alone at the vanguard of anything and everything lo-fi, avant-garde, techno, or just plain and simple noise. |
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And like any self-respecting vanguard, this one started under very lowly circumstances. |
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These creative young people are part of the vanguard of new talent blossoming in our midst. |
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The vanguard sector in this struggle is the well-organized Aymara peasants, who have descended en masse from the altiplano, above the capital. |
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He had been a member of the vanguard, was captured by armed civilians and taken through Oradour, which was full of Maquisards. |
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In the vanguard of the movement is a consortium of new free-market think tanks. |
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These people are badly miscast in the role of the vanguard of the world revolution. |
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The role of the artist is to act as the vanguard of humanity's search for meaning. |
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They are the vanguard of a social revolution and will have a huge influence on the shape of society in the next two decades. |
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Social realism became the vanguard in the African American struggle for equality and racial justice in Depression-era America. |
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If the vanguard gets too far ahead of the supply train, it will run short of food, fuel and ammunition. |
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Moreover, this state was controlled by a party that considered itself a vanguard in a backward society, mobilizing and transforming its citizens. |
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For over a decade now, bhangra music has been the vanguard for Asian culture's crossover into the mainstream. |
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Student activists abandoned conservative blue collar politics and proclaimed themselves the vanguard of social change. |
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The political groups aspiring to power today emerged in the late 1980s and formed a vanguard of the independence movement. |
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It must regain its original role as the vanguard of the working class in its struggle for true emancipation. |
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Women were no less prominent than men in resistance, and they may even have been in the vanguard, particularly in cultural resistance. |
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They sounds like a band having fun again, no longer feeling the pressure of being at the vanguard of popular rock. |
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Even though the Bay Area was not in the vanguard of developing a distinct hip-hop style, audiences and dancers have embraced it with a vengeance. |
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He pointed out that track cycling was in the vanguard of Scottish international sport. |
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I'm just not sure that being on the vanguard of this particular social movement will be much help. |
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His carefully negotiated product loyalties place him in the vanguard of a powerful new industry. |
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The medical profession has been in the vanguard of the struggle against smoking for 50 years. |
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We want Australians to be in the vanguard of the worldwide knowledge revolution. |
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Today it is people with two degrees who may be expected to be in the vanguard of the struggle. |
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They are at the vanguard of the technical revolution, cramming their homes with more and more of the latest gadgets. |
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Nelson's tactics slicing the enemy line ensured the vanguard played a negligible role in the battle which followed. |
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The vanguard of the army began crossing the river in late afternoon on 6 April. |
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Long at the vanguard of twenty-something folk angst, Scottish octet Belle and Sebastian have been keeping it quiet for the last year. |
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She was also, as a fleet oiler, at the vanguard of the fleet that launched the assault on Pearl Harbour. |
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The Australian market is in many respects at the vanguard of meeting the needs of the new dissaver. |
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Over the years the economic ebb and flow dictated political change, with the educated middle classes typically at the vanguard of reform movements. |
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In that case, some of the core countries, led by France and Germany, would almost certainly try to go ahead on their own, in a self-styled vanguard group. |
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His pioneering artistic signature has placed him at the vanguard of the burgeoning digital art revolution, with galleries nationwide exhibiting his work. |
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The vanguard is there already in the monolithic casino that dominates the harbour area, where the ferries from Hong Kong disgorge their passengers. |
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On the 40-minute journey across the bleak landscape of the Fens the coach was preceded by a vanguard of police motorcycles with blue lights flashing. |
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The fashion vanguard will have to develop new strategies to resist the taunts of the uncultured, or even to exploit them in the service of greater hipness. |
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Stasio was just one member of a vast hacking enterprise, the vanguard of a new cyber war. |
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He was on the vanguard of domestic policy and created a tremendous amount of legislation that we enjoy today. |
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At its peak, the group drew 100 members to its weekly meetings and was a vanguard for LGBT advocacy. |
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Two hundred and four warriors formed the vanguard of the army. |
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Miller has long been a regular contributor on anti-Semitic and white supremacist Internet forum vanguard News Network. |
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She's been touted as an inspiring, persevering all-star by leader Jack Layton and his orange vanguard, and is regularly fawned and slobbered over by the media. |
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It shows that we are moving in the right direction and we are at the vanguard nationally of integrating our children's and family services with education. |
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Deeply antagonistic to reformist compromises with bourgeois democracy, syndicalists also disputed the Leninist strategy of organizing revolution via a vanguard party. |
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She said her main characters, a zoo-keeper and a clothes maker, represented the urban everywoman rather than the artsy vanguard stereotypically associated with gay lifestyles. |
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It does not require conspiracy-theorist paranoia to wonder if this is in fact a vanguard action to assess how a ban might work in England and Wales. |
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Through the late '70s and into the early '80s, it honed its take on the appropriationist methods that characterized the vanguard art of the period. |
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At the vanguard of the protests has been the galvanizing effect of social media. |
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College graduates are the vanguard of a cultural shift away from divorce. |
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Unsurprisingly, our oleaginous Prime Minister, after striving to weaken protection for British workers on his last Euro-adventure, is in the vanguard of this movement. |
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In other words, the noble landlords and magnates, whose values were decidedly not those of Puritan asceticism, were in the vanguard of capitalism. |
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Alpine is a small but rapidly growing town in the foothills near the edge of the Cleveland National Forest, a vanguard settlement of one of San Diego's many suburban tendrils. |
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The dog represented an extension, even a vanguard, of man's savagery. |
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When the stalwart vanguard reached the perimeter, their ranks broke in confusion. |
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In Thailand, young women who sell beauty products are perceived as a vanguard of modernity whose independent income repositions them in relation to family and kin. |
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This is quite a makeover for the country that once claimed to be the vanguard of worldwide communist revolution. |
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However, according to contemporary English reports, Thomas Howard marched on foot leading the English vanguard to the foot of the hill. |
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In the ensuing carnage of the Battle of Stirling Bridge, Surrey's isolated vanguard was hacked to pieces. |
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The French vanguard attacked a unit of English archers who had been placed to block the road. |
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At 11 o'clock, Thomas, Lord Howard's vanguard and artillery crossed the Twizel Bridge. |
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In Western political terms, we might think of them as a Leninist vanguard. |
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Once Scots formed the vanguard of the movement of Europeans across the continent. |
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A city invented by Bugsy Siegel and the Tinsel-Town vanguard, Las Vegas may be Hollywood's metaphor for Hollywood. |
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In this way, he and his followers stood in the vanguard of resistance to political absolutism and furthered the cause of democracy. |
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In a running battle, Hipper successfully drew the British vanguard into the path of the High Seas Fleet. |
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Hiding his main body of troops in a wood, he stationed as bait a smaller vanguard in open ground before the wood. |
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As a demisexual plantkin I can't stand how white privileged transgendered people are acting as if they're the vanguard of the trans movement. |
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On 26 July 1572, the horde crossed the River Oka near Serpukhov, destroyed the Russian vanguard of 200 noblemen and advanced towards Moscow. |
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Richard's vanguard, commanded by Norfolk, attacked but struggled against Oxford's men, and some of Norfolk's troops fled the field. |
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The windmill lay between the core battlefield and Richard's camp on Ambion Hill and the rout of Norfolk's vanguard was in this direction. |
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The triers and the ejectors were intended to be at the vanguard of Cromwell's reform of parish worship. |
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In the United Kingdom, Colin Urquhart, Michael Harper, David Watson and others were in the vanguard of similar developments. |
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Considered one of the UK's first psychedelic music groups, Pink Floyd began their career at the vanguard of London's underground music scene. |
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The Police are typically regarded as in both the vanguard of the Second British Invasion, and the new wave movement. |
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The Police have been called the vanguard of the Second British Invasion, and also representative of the new wave movement. |
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Fiery Fred, along with Trevor Bailey and Tom Graveney, was in the vanguard of summarisers when cricket commentary first hit the Boot Room airwaves. |
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A version of Howard's declaration to James IV that he would lead the vanguard and take no prisoners was included in later English chronicle accounts of the battle. |
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But in this decade, Nonesuch seems to be expanding in all directions, on the vanguard of a broader attitude about art music written for and listened to by the public. |
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Gloucester had argued with the Earl of Hereford over who should lead the vanguard into battle, and argued with the king that the battle should be postponed. |
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