He suggested April 22, a Wednesday, as an ideal day to hold the teach-in, as a weekday event would mean more students would be involved, according to nelsonearthday.net, a website run by the Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies.
"If Macquarie has managed to secure a partner, as they indicated they aimed to do, then a price of 580 pence might look a bit mean to LSE shareholders as there could be more significant synergies to be shared from the partnership, " an analyst was quoted as saying in The Associated Press.
They all get to talk as a group and it can mean a lot to a person.
When Britain went to war in 1939, he registered as a conscientious objector, which was to mean a two month spell in jail.
She then selected Morningside as a place to send the Mean Girls actress.
Instead of softening Germany's reserved attitude to arms exports, it could mean that Europe as a whole will be forced to take a more cautious attitude.
In a military setting this could mean passing pictures recognised as a convoy of moving vehicles to a person for confirmation before, say, calling down an airstrike.
Khedemat quarterly magazine and Khedmant monthly newsletter, are two publications that mean to serve as a supplementary materials for enhancing literacy skills of neo-literates.
It is the cheap cloth, the cheap cotton and rayon fabric, boots, motorcars, and so on that are the typical achievements of capitalist production, and not as a rule improvements that would mean much to the rich man.
He insisted I join him under his brolly as the rain poured down - no mean feat to get under a brolly with Cyril Smith as I too am not slight in build.
To count as "senior" - the word used in the Diamond memo - that would have to mean a top official such as Sir Nicholas Macpherson, the Permanent Secretary at the Treasury.
"Forking a repo" is a term used by developers to mean using somebody else's project as a starting point for your own.
Mr Putin described the new acting finance minister, the rarely heard of former deputy Anton Siluanov, as a "good, strong specialist", which investors immediately took to mean he would tow the party line and as such be a safe bet for the Russian leaders during the upcoming election season.
Bar Association president, Gerry Considine, said this could mean some people regarded as a danger to the public being freed.
Now, when I say that I am in the habit of going to sea whenever I begin to grow hazy about the eyes, and begin to be over conscious of my lungs, I do not mean to have it inferred that I ever go to sea as a passenger.
The BBKA warned the worst may be yet to come, as a lack of food for bees and wet conditions mean breeding queens have been unable to produce a large enough brood to see colonies through the winter.
These conflicting signals, combined with the ad hoc nature of regulatory relief to date, mean that entrepreneurs still face a great deal of uncertainty as to what will happen next year.
All this could take a while - and with the government reluctant to allocate more debating time, that could mean a few very late nights for peers, as ministers try to keep the bill on schedule.
Accordingly, while returning to earmarks may mean a return to wasteful spending of taxpayer money on projects that bring no benefit to the nation as a whole, it could also mean saving even more money than is wasted by avoiding the financial setbacks that come with endless debt ceiling debacles and fiscal cliff fumbles.
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In a meritocracy the Lords would increasingly come to represent a random sample of the population over the generations, as regression to the mean moves all to the average.
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That may mean using our bankruptcy code as a mechanism to help them restructure quickly and emerge stronger.
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Many local residents are enthusiastic as Lazika would mean jobs for a community that struggles to make a living through agriculture.
Instead it is trying to portray Mr Dewar as a mean-minded back-stabber.
So "quite" was expunged as a qualifier and got co-opted to mean very, and very, you understand, is the least approbation you can give and has to be tacked on to the chorus of terrific, splendid, awesome, supercalifragilisticexpialidocious by which everyday achievements are greeted.
"I'm keen for talks to take place as soon as possible with the new shipping minister to see if a new minister will mean a change of mind over the fate of essential maritime services, " he said.
If not, it could mean a hit to the brand as well as hefty legal liabilities.
And he's been, you know, incredible to me, I mean as a, you know, musically I learned from him.
Stevens once described himself as a "mean, miserable SOB" and is known to don an "Incredible Hulk" tie when he is bruising for a fight.
Major-General Sebastian Roberts, General Officer Commanding for London District, said soldiers would welcome the move to Woolwich as it will mean a better quality of life for them and their families.
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In the case of industrial metals, the data and easing expectations are being viewed as a harbinger of stronger demand to come that will mean tighter market balances than would otherwise occur.
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