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Earlier this year, amid great fanfare marking the start of the program, Al Amoudi personally presented the first shipment from the farm to King Abdullah in Riyadh.
He did not want anyone fussing over his health, and he would've abhorred any great fanfare marking his death.
Similar(56)
The cast, title and general lack of fanfare mark this out as a crime-gone-wrong thriller gone wrong.
The Dorothy Chandler Pavilion opened to great fanfare 50 years ago, marking a new era in the cultural life of Los Angeles.
Ryanair is bringing in a welter of changes, including less draconian baggage rules, lower penalties for lost boarding cards, more tolerance of booking errors and getting rid of the inflight fanfare that marks every punctual journey.
Jack Johnson, released to little fanfare in 1971, marked that turning point.
But just two weeks ago, Obama eschewed public fanfare as he marked the 10-year anniversary of U.S. military presence in Afghanistan with no more than a somber written statement.
In 2014, by contrast, musical organisations are marking what would have been his 150th birthday with fanfare.
Last year, with much fanfare and celebration, Germany marked the 20th anniversary of the wall's demise.
Perhaps it is because of what followed that 9/11 -- above all, the colossal expenditure of blood and treasure in Afghanistan and Iraq and now the crisis eating at the economy and the environment -- that the United States seems little inclined to mark with fanfare the fall of the Wall.
In Scotland, Olympic heroes Allan Wells, David Wilkie and Liz McColgan were present for the Sporting Fanfare concert, which to mark the London Games featured a series of sporting themes.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com