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So showings like the one to the Mystery Writers of America, a group to which Ms. Pusateri had a serendipitous connection, are carefully called previews and private screenings.
As for "Of Pandas and People", he pronounced that the book was "inaccurate and downright false in every section".The plaintiffs have carefully called expert witnesses who believe not only in the separation of church and state but also in God.
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This obviously has something to do with bilingual education (or "transitional bilingual education," as the platform carefully calls it).
A July 2013 coup by the country's strongman army chief, now president, Abdel Fatah al-Sisi, brought what he carefully calls "the second kind of government".
She carefully calls this process intervention as opposed to invention, while stressing the need to breathe living stage appeal into what might otherwise be museum pieces.
In fact, there's a case to be made that bachata megastar Romeo Santos shattered multiple sales records in part because he has never bothered pandering to what the music industry carefully calls "mainstream" audiences.
Instead it should be persuading the Kosovars that even autonomy talks would be in their interest.With such a slippery interlocutor, NATO must formulate its ultimatum carefully, calling for a troop withdrawal so clear and complete that it precludes the possibility of further repression.
"I have no idea what caused it," she said… Fleming has long thought about recording a jazz album, and Christopher Roberts at Universal Classics has agreed to what he carefully calls a "jazz-influenced" album of popular songs… Mentions a brief encounter with Plácido Domingo in which he complimented her and offered her criticism on a role….
Developed nations, and most especially the United States, have long been frustrated at their poor ability to do what diplomats and politicos carefully call winning hearts and minds.
The guard, who watched him carefully, had called the police on previous occasions when Mr. Escobar, a labor organizer, had crossed the street onto company property.
Among the opening scenes in "Step Up to the Plate," an 89-minute documentary by Paul Lacoste about the Michelin three-star restaurant Bras Michel et Sébastien, is a display of Mr. Bras and his son, Sébastien, arranging dozens of herbs and pieces of vegetables in a dish, seemingly random but ever so carefully composed, called gargouillou (pronounced gar-goo-YOU).
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com