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The Oxford English Dictionary cites a reference to a lower-alcohol "leoht beor" as far back as 1000 A.D. The marketing data for that particular product is not available, but we do know that in America in the late 1960's "light beer" was pushed either as vaguely medicinal (Gablinger's actually had a picture of a doctor on the can) or something for the very diet-conscious, especially women.
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"Prayer is only half the equation," he said, citing a reference to "ambassadors for Christ" in 2 Corinthians.
Ms. Friesen also wrote that Mr. Malike appeared to be working with others, citing a reference to someone in Pakistan who would pay.
To be closer to Neilia and her family, he set off after graduation for Syracuse Law School, where he flunked a class in his first year for failing to properly cite a reference to a law review article.
Among the most often cited, a reference to President Clinton, "So much promise, to no great purpose," and a dig at Vice President Al Gore, "I am not running in borrowed clothes".
He also cited a reference to some related statements I have made on that subject which appear in an alarmist blog link.
One lawmaker is citing a godly reference to justify changes to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program: Rep. Jodey Arrington (R-Tex). recently quoted the New Testament to question the strength of current work requirements.
Later in the day it got a little more specific, citing "a slang reference to his wanting to cut off Obama's testicles".
Because of an editing error, an article last Sunday about David Byrne's art project "Envisioning Emotional Epistemological Information," based on PowerPoint software, misspelled the name of a Thai city cited in a reference to PowerPoint's global adaptability.
He cited a Schoenberg reference to vibrato as "goat bleating," called the heavily vibrating French woodwind sections of the 1920s "earthquake zones" and referred to the practice as "acoustic central heating".
Brigadier General Mark Martins, the military commissions' chief prosecutor, responded that "systematic terrorism" is indeed an international war crime, citing references to "a system of terrorism" condemned in the 1919 Conference of Paris after World War I, and conspiracy claims in the post-World War II trial of Nazi judges, U.S. v. Altstoetter.
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