Jay Lambe of HCA said the agency was trying to encourage "a new wealth of industry" and enhance the area, but "have reference to what was here before".
People know enough about the world of it and have more reference to it that it's way more accessible now.
Well, an economist of Prof McWilliam's calibre ought to have noticed that reference to "Third World" countries was so last century.
Mr. Ungar should have made reference to the fact that the democrat in charge of the canvass saw no issue with certifying the final results.
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It may have been a reference to the simple fact that the Salt Lake City games were on U.S. soil.
He said the public are already convinced journalists, the police and politicians have something to hide - a reference to to the ongoing Leveson inquiry.
Or it may have been a reference to the style of coverage, which accelerated the trend of focusing on U.S. winners (of medals and endorsement contracts) while ignoring anonymous foreigners with hard-to-pronounce names.
The most basic gesture and action is to archive a message that you have read or realize that you do not have to read but want to retain for reference.
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It will provide an opportunity for students not only have access to the comprehensive reference information of the website, but also contribute to the development of that section of the website, which concerns their region.
Detailed terms of reference and membership have still to be finalised.
The eventual goal was to have everyone's fingerprints on file for instant reference to any police officer anywhere.
One fundamental flaw I've always noted in the 'science' of human resources management is, is any applicant going to give as a reference someone who's going to have anything bad to say about them?
Different organizations, ranging from the Bowles-Simpson Fiscal Commission to the House Budget Committee, have considered this current policy baseline to be the appropriate reference point, since it measures changes relative to the status quo, rather than the mix of expiring provisions and policy changes that would likely never be implemented.
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He also said that "producers of 'Panorama' seem not to have learned any lessons from recent BBC scandals, " an apparent reference to the BBC's handling of abuses police say were carried out on the corporation's premises by the late TV presenter and radio host Jimmy Savile.
The effect is pervasive: Many internal personnel, exposed to vendor solutions for so long, may have highly risk-averse frames of reference, and will continue to recommend the same vendor solutions.
Currently, all loose goods sold with reference to units of quantity have to be weighed and sold using the metric system.
In order to sign in to the HMRC site, you will need to have your Unique Taxpayer Reference (UTR), which you will have received in previous correspondence.
The four-hour event ended with everyone holding hands and singing a song with the lyrics "You have to go through a thunderstorm to see a rainbow"--a reference to the dot-com bust and the dark days of the SARS virus scare as Taobao launched in mid-2003.
Officials have been asked to draw up terms of reference by the end of the month, she said.
He also cited a reference to some related statements I have made on that subject which appear in an alarmist blog link.
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Every private economist I have spoken to agrees. (For reference, that 4% of GDP budget tightening would be three times more than the UK government is planning for next year).
Mr Obama is, at least, bang up to date with his reference to the iPad, which now joins the illustrious list of technologies to have been denounced by politicians, and with his grumbling about the crazy theories circulated by the combination of blogs and talk radio.
The plan noted, for example, that payments to farmers in some countries - a reference primarily to the European Union's subsidies - can have distorting effects on developing countries.
"We shouldn't have to omit our education from our CV or be too wary to use the odd academic reference, " it continues.
More than a few observers have dubbed this meeting Bretton Woods II, a reference to the 1944 international conference that established the post-World War II monetary system.
Worsley, who came on as a second-half replacement at Twickenham, joked that Lewsey "may have had altitude sickness or something" - a reference to his training for Everest.
The pictures come from the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS) satellite, and have been referred to as "The Black Marble" in reference to the famous "Blue Marble" daylight pictures.
In a reference to the sour faces he was said to have made during the previous debate, Bush responded to one of Kerry's statements by saying, ""That answer made me almost want to scowl.
The line was a reference to the five Super Bowl rings the Steelers now have.
Since 1988, teams leading after eight innings have won at a .951 clip, according to Baseball-Reference.com and STATS Inc.
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