Kindly allow me the prejudice of summing up my own generation: We think the Earth orbits around us.
Did Anthony feel that prejudice of her day was preventing an accurate reflection of the work of women in the past and present?
In its July 1 motion for dismissal without prejudice of the suit at issue, Yum said that Nike had rejected two of its settlement proposals and had yet to respond to a third.
It is a vivid and, at times, moving story of one woman's lonely and dogged fight against the painfully limited expectations of her own gender embodied by her own mother, the unquestioning prejudice of most men of her age and the suffocating instinct to patronise of those who have inherited their positions rather than earned them.
Is that a form of prejudice in and of itself, or is it just part of the political debate?
There is a deep level of prejudice with the use of this word genius yet the genius level is the level that sets scientists apart from their peers.
And we must be a source of hope to the poor, the sick, the marginalized, the victims of prejudice -- not out of mere charity, but because peace in our time requires the constant advance of those principles that our common creed describes: tolerance and opportunity, human dignity and justice.
And at the end of her lesson she told the girls about the importance of rejecting prejudice as the legacy of the Anne Frank story.
Professor John Henry, a consultant in toxicology at St Mary's said the testing could be done anonymously for the purposes of research, and would not prejudice the treatment of any patient.
Indeed, almost the only vestige of the old prejudice is the tradition of burning an effigy of Guy Fawkes on November 5th.
Through conflict and tumult, through the morass of hatred and prejudice, through periods of division and discord we have endured and grown stronger and fairer and freer.
WHITEHOUSE: President Obama Commemorates Enactment of Hate Crimes Prevention Act | The White House
Along with pieces of Pride and Prejudice, there were slices of Sense and Sensibility along with dollops of Persuasion and hints of Emma.
The new government argues that it is better to make policy on the merits of the individual case than to be overly constrained by ideology, whether the ideology is a Thatcherite prejudice in favour of the market or an Old Labourish aversion to it.
No doubt, the position of the international community, as is stated in the consecutive statements of the Quartet, in particular, in its latest August 20th statement, paid due respect to relevant international resolutions and supported the outline of final settlements using different formulation without prejudice to the outcome of negotiations.
People living with HIV and AIDS have to endure prejudice born out of ignorance and fear.
We've forgotten the depth of prejudice and outright hatred faced by Italian immigrants in America.
Her dithering has been more than just a prejudice in favour of due process.
He also said he was not attempting to prejudice the outcome of the public inquiry in April.
As believers, we draw from our prayer, the strength that is needed to overcome all traces of prejudice.
It takes on many shapes, but its face is always that of prejudice.
The reason for the income gap may thus be the opposite of prejudice.
The ambitions of some Americans are limited by failing schools and hidden prejudice and the circumstances of their birth.
However, a judge at the High Court in London rejected his application, saying there was no "real risk" of prejudice.
They are making connections across old borders, breaking down traditional barriers, crossing ancient divides and smashing long-established walls of prejudice.
"We've got to break these barriers of prejudice and discrimination wherever they are, and that includes our own party, " he said.
But the Vatican still kept its distance so as not to prejudice its advocacy of the Palestinians' rights to sovereignty and independence.
We enjoy the fruits of prejudice and bigotry being lifted -- slowly, sometimes in fits and starts, but irrevocably -- from human hearts.
No other 'illness' in the world comes with such a risk of prejudice attached - though thankfully this is less now than ever before.
More recently, people have argued that the paucity of contemporary works by women in concert performance is a form of prejudice amounting to censorship.
The British government put pressure on both broadcasters not to transmit their programmes, citing concerns that they could prejudice the outcome of an inquiry into the deaths.
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