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It is a study in discreet grays, with leather-backed chairs, padding on the walls and stylish photographs of models.
WSJ: Bruce Palling on Food: French Cooking 101: Back to the Basics
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The Tachyon helmet mount can only be used on the right side of a helmet, and features no padding on the inside.
ENGADGET: Tachyon XC HD helmet camera review
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Though he needs to spend much more on infrastructure, Lula has squandered a chunk of record tax revenues on padding the public payroll.
ECONOMIST: Brazil
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When Morocco insisted on padding the electoral roll with 100, 000 suspect names, Polisario withdrew from the registration process altogether, putting the whole peace plan in jeopardy.
ECONOMIST: Western Sahara
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People have been burnishing their online reputations for years, padding their resumes on professional networking site LinkedIn and trying to affect the search results that appear when someone Googles their names.
WSJ: Wannabe Cool Kids Aim to Game the Web's New Social Scorekeepers
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"My first thought was they are padding to make their on-time ratings better, " he said.
WSJ: Flight Times Grow As Airlines Pad Schedules
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Deadspin.com got their hands on financial statements that showed that the owners of the Pittsburgh Pirates and the Florida Marlins where putting terrible products on the field while padding their own wallets.
FORBES: Why is Dan Snyder So Reviled?
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Like most denizens of the legal profession, we were somehow both completely shocked and at the same time not at all shocked by the recent reporting on alleged bill-padding at the global law firm DLA Piper.
FORBES: Law Firms and Overcharging: The System Itself Is Rotten
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It featured, on the jacket, minimal shoulder padding, dual vents, and a graceful, three-rolled-to-two-button stance (his current favorite lapel style), and, on the pants, singlereverse pleats and one-and-a-quarter-inch-cuffed trouser legs.
NEWYORKER: Another Manhattan
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The eating and physical padding can both sooth and protect so she can function on the job.
FORBES: Eating Disorders And The Executive Woman
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It frets about cross-subsidies, saying that the burden of fees for exceeding credit limits falls on the young and the poor, who are in effect padding the accounts of the rich (and, although it does not say so, the careful).
ECONOMIST: Consumer banking