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The articles, which did not cite sources for celebrity gossip and referred extensively to phone calls, also are not available on The Sun's Web site.
Appearing at a rally in New Hampshire on Saturday night, he referred extensively to his written notes and restricted his barbs to the media and Hillary Clinton, whom he described as "a dangerous liar".
The Washington Post and other newspapers reported on it, and the White House Council of Economic Advisers referred extensively to the study in its own "progress report" on poverty.
She had been stopped and questioned last month at Gatwick airport after returning from a holiday in Croatia, with MI5 said to have referred extensively to her personal life.
Appearing at a rally in New Hampshire on Saturday night, he referred extensively to his written notes and restricted his barbs to the media and Hillary Clinton, whom he described as "a dangerous liar". He didn't bait any fellow Republicans, query the security guarantees that underpin NATO, or disparage the families of fallen U.S. servicemen.
And in the following hours, according to excerpts of chat logs provided to The Washington Post and Wired.com by Lamo, Manning referred extensively to what he said he found in the networks, including the quarter-million State Department cables — most of them unclassified — and the Baghdad video, "i want the material out there," he said.
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The documents submitted on Thursday refer extensively to "public interest privilege," which has also been described as executive privilege.
Yes, the care act refers extensively to the role that home-based interventions can play in health.
He was among the first to refer extensively to small-town customs, parish-pump traditions, squibs and broadsheets, semi-literate letters and diaries, and faded, repressed pamphlets, even to cite the evidence of popular ditties or quote from the ink-stained minutes of working men's clubs.
In the Ninth Circuit, a defendant can seek to treat a document as incorporated into the complaint "if the plaintiff refers extensively to the document or the document forms the basis of the plaintiff's claim". United States v. Ritchie, 342 F.3d 907, 907 (9th Cir. 2003).
But at least two things can be said for him before he is dismissed as yet another here-today, gone-tomorrow face in some G8 summit's photo: he has a healthy sense of crisis, and a nicely self-deprecating sense of humour.In mid-August, he wrote a blog post (sorry, Japanese only), referring extensively to our cover story of July 30th, "Turning Japanese", which is about debt and politics in the West.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com