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Voluntary participation was mentioned verbally at the moment the printed survey was provided to the anesthesiologists.
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Rotorua was the only region in which school children did not mention production forestry verbally, although drawings included pine trees, logging trucks and piles of logs.
In most of the videos, these mentions were expressed verbally, but a few of the testimonials took the viewer on a virtual tour of the facilities as a method of portraying the cleanliness and availability of high-tech services.
As mentioned in the procedure, staff was informed verbally as well as in writing, a computerized instruction manual was available and much time and effort was spent on reminding.
One unavoidable shortcoming might be due to the impossibility to describe professional knowledge (or perhaps better professional intuition) of the psychiatrist verbally that said without the previously mentioned theoretical biases.
However, even Connelly was unable to verbally tar and feather Ravenholt, the charismatic advocate of voluntary family planning mentioned earlier : Ravenholt's office was virtually alone in its policy of refusing support for programs to create demand for contraception.
The results of the selection process were systematically gathered (date when verbally approached, healthcare clinic, recruiter, date of birth, child gender, willingness to participate, reason for exclusion if mentioned voluntarily).
Congratulations are due to the public editor, who, with an adroit, oblique quasi-nod, apologized for the newspaper's failure to mention the unwashed who had been there first (and to the metro editor, Carolyn Ryan, who was equally verbally adroit).
As it was, he was dropped from all favourable mention or share in the election campaign of 1987 and was verbally assaulted when the Downing Street press secretary, Bernard Ingham, effectively discounted him as "semi-detached".
By Louis Menand The New Yorker, March 14 , 1994P. 74 A CRITIC AT LARGE about the culture of violence in the U.S. Mentions First Amendment implications of Catharine McKinnon's anti-porn theories and Howard Stern's verbally assaultive radio show.
The New Yorker, March 14 , 1994P. 74 A CRITIC AT LARGE about the culture of violence in the U.S. Mentions First Amendment implications of Catharine McKinnon's anti-porn theories and Howard Stern's verbally assaultive radio show.
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