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261 Sentences With "rationed"

How to use rationed in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "rationed" and check conjugation/comparative form for "rationed". Mastering all the usages of "rationed" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Vouchers for private school tuition are blocked or severely rationed, charter schools are blocked or severely rationed, testing and other assessments for teachers and curricula are attacked and gutted.
So how is the limited capacity rationed out between airlines?
Silk was also rationed at the time, Ms. Kiser said.
THE NATIONAL HEALTH SERVICE is free, so it is also rationed.
One in four people with T1D have rationed insulin in America.
Even diapers were rationed, so there would be enough for everyone.
Here are some of the products being rationed across the globe.
In Italy, hospitals are so overwhelmed that ventilators are being rationed.
This week petrol has been rationed to four gallons per vehicle.
Others report punishment for having hoarded, rationed or bartered for menstrual products.
As recently as 2000, gas stations rationed diesel fuel as shortage hit.
During WWII seafood wasn't rationed, and many discovered lobster as a delicacy.
Gone are the days when food and clothing were rationed, he said.
Dollars are rationed through weekly auctions imports of essential goods get priority.
Gestures and movements are severely rationed, so that each one reads incisively.
"We knew that a lot of things in Cuba were rationed," Zulk says.
Like a secret weapon, the PJs are rationed, reserved only for dire scenarios.
Over time, we sort of rationed back their food so they were hungry.
A full bottle could last him a couple months, if he rationed them.
Mr. Powers was self-effacing and carefully rationed his responses to reporters' questions.
Sinosphere Sunlight is so scarce that it is rationed based on economic class.
Note, though, that this credit is rationed out to just $22 per month.
Most of the time I spend in bed is heavily rationed into tasks.
Dollars are rationed through weekly auctions and imports of essential goods get priority.
Dollars are rationed through weekly auctions, giving priority for imports of essential goods.
Iron lungs were rationed during the polio epidemics of the 1940s and 1950s.
Higher taxes, new charges and more rationed services: these are bitter pills for politicians.
Water was carefully rationed, even for foreign dignitaries, with California gripped by perpetual drought.
The market is protected by the government, prices are guaranteed and imports are rationed.
China rationed a lot of goods including food, fuel, and bicycles until the 1990s.
Expect more information to be rationed out the next few days of the summit.
Leave days rationed out by the computer, hoarded for a vain flicker of freedom.
Popper struggled to get his book published (it was long and paper was still rationed).
When access to them is rationed by dear housing, some workers and employers lose out.
Local volunteers ensure it is rationed fairly—typically 30 litres a day for each household.
All Americans would find that at some level their access to better care was rationed.
During World War II, after all, such items were often rationed or just not available.
During World War II, limited supplies of the lifesaving antibiotic penicillin had to be rationed.
The central bank has rationed dollars, giving priority to the import of essential goods over luxuries.
Some residents get their rationed quota of water daily, while others get it once a week.
With supplies strictly rationed, many wealthier families have taken to relying on expensive private water tankers.
In Kalasa the only source of power is private generators that run on rationed diesel fuel.
The simple answer is that some of those rights need to be prioritized and even rationed.
So, if that contact is rationed because of phone company profiteering, the result is more recidivism.
Store employees allowed customers in, one by one, for rationed shopping trips of 15 minutes each.
And other products that are even more in demand, such as masks, haven't been rationed either.
Electricity is rationed, with large parts of the city in the dark on any given night.
Americans participated in voluntary black outs, paid higher taxes, rationed meat, sugar, gas, and other goods.
In the inevitable fight over the distribution of grossly inadequate resources, services would be severely rationed.
What remained was rationed, and a single injection cost at least $40 (about $600 in today's prices).
Army units have their weapons locked up at night and their fuel rationed, says the American official.
Food and water were rationed in the outposts, and wounded men sometimes died awaiting helicopter evacuation flights.
Despite this, Woolworths rationed the amount of toilet paper customers could buy while it boosts stock levels.
Mr. Cao went into smuggling with his father, using bicycles to transport rationed tobacco for illegal resale.
And, of course, it's not just during flu season that the British people suffer from rationed care.
But many states have limited aid budgets that are rationed on a first-come-first-served basis.
Republicans have bashed those ideas as "socialized medicine" that will lead to runaway taxes and rationed care.
Keeping reading to see how Andy and Nicole rationed $8,000 a month while paying off their mortgage.
Further, such abuse of patent property rights would act like government price controls or government-rationed health care.
Bolivia's armed forces are helping to transport water by truck to major cities where water has been rationed.
The leftover money was rationed out to buy a small car and for a deposit on an apartment.
When, as a result, foreign currency ran short, he rationed it and slashed imports by more than half.
Some 2,300 petrol stations—a fifth of the total—either ran dry, or rationed sales at the pump.
My mother came home with precious cartons of subsidized milk and soap, which were sold in rationed quantities.
Carson, who spent the meat-rationed war instructing housewives in how to cook little-known fish, grew restless.
The central bank rationed supplies via weekly auctions, earmarking the little it had for essential items like medicine.
I was happy it was over mostly, even though a few things were still rationed at that point.
Wine isn't rationed here because in 1928, wine was drunk by the mine owners rather than the workers.
With resources rationed and fertility tightly controlled, a depressed young woman finds an unlikely friend — a domestic robot.
They were given carefully rationed meals — generally only one meal, a combination of lunch and dinner — per day.
Electricity and water are being rationed, and huge areas of the country have spent months with little of either.
Food was rationed without rioting, and car plants all but stopped producing automobiles in favor of tanks and fuselages.
Food was rationed without rioting, and car plants all but stopped producing automobiles in favor of tanks and fuselages.
"It wasn't easy to become obese" in England in the 1940s, Gordon writes, when milk and butter were rationed.
In the face of overwhelming demand and limited resources, health care would need to be rationed, with agonizing decisions.
And during World War II, Jell-O salads became a creative way to put meals together with rationed goods.
Yet the city suffered no supply disruptions, unlike Shanxi province to the west (see map), where local governments rationed water.
Residents will then have to go to roughly 222 collection points scattered across the city to collect strictly rationed water.
Signs announced that those products were being rationed, along with face masks and thermometers — which were also out of stock.
During World War II, the government rationed gasoline, set the country's speed limit at 35 mph, and banned automobile racing.
"Kaletra and losartan are being rationed, meaning we are only allowed to order limited quantities at a time," he said.
Gasoline was rationed, curfews were obeyed, especially in coastal towns amid fears the Germans or Japanese could attack those cities.
"Kaletra and losartan are being rationed, meaning we are only allowed to order limited quantities at a time," he said.
Under rationing, the diets of pets and owners blended; cuts of the same horse or whale were rationed for all.
"I grew up in Iran and at a time where content was rationed … it was three TV channels," Rafati told Cramer.
Then, during World War II, almost everything road trip-related was rationed, with tires, gasoline, and leisure time at a premium.
Space on the Mainline is often rationed, contributing to price volatility in marketing hubs in Alberta, Canada's main crude-producing province.
"For too many years, we've seen the impact of rationed U.C. access for California students," Mr. McCarty said in a statement.
As part of the repairs, water service in the area would be rationed, but Enrique and Emma didn't know that yet.
Another anonymous worker from the Staten Island warehouse told CNBC that gloves were being rationed to only two pairs per week.
The Delhi government ordered schools closed on Monday and rationed water supplies to make sure that hospitals and emergency services had enough.
Anyone who can't afford those deliveries is forced to find, and wait with buckets, for their rationed amount from state water trucks.
And if the trade balance looked favourable, it was only because the government banned many imports and rationed access to foreign exchange.
Some fliers will recoil at these endurance tests—at least those in cattle-class cabins where knees are squished and booze rationed.
But in some parts of the country, including St Austell on the Cornish coast, access to the rationers is itself now rationed.
"The production of aluminum is still incredibly carbon-intensive, so it's going to need to be rationed in some way," he said.
A study from researchers at Yale University found that one in four patients have rationed their insulin because of its high costs.
Known as "Black Tot Day," July 31, 1970 was the last day that the Royal Navy were rationed a tot of rum.
As of last week, eggs, chicken and pork are being rationed, as the country struggles to cope with shortages of staple foods.
Volkswagen was found to have rationed doses of the solution because the company did not want to inconvenience customers with frequent refills.
Instead, Mr Maduro kept the wildly overvalued official exchange rate and rationed imports by tightening the government's control over access to hard currency.
Americans paid high income taxes, rationed their food, worked in government-funded industries and sent their sons to die overseas to defend freedom.
The city government ordered schools to shut on Monday and rationed provision to residents to ensure that hospitals and emergency services have enough.
"I don't think there's one person who's not afraid of the future," said Dimitra, the pensioner, clutching her plastic bag of rationed goods.
Sugar, gas, meat and butter ration cards became the norm, as every commodity needed for the war effort became a rationed critical item.
"Afterland" works its wonders with an intentionally rationed vocabulary, its counters combined and recombined in poem after poem: stars, water, hair, bones, fire.
Janet rationed off parts of herself, seamlessly switching between full-length tracks and interludes, creating a rhythm that allowed breathing room when necessary.
Six miles away, Carver Middle School has rationed paper and there are not enough parts to go around in robotics class, students said.
The material's popularity in toy-making skyrocketed after World War II, since materials like wood, metal, and rubber were rationed for wartime efforts.
Teixeria said she was unable to get a Covid-19 test because they were being tightly rationed for high-risk and hospitalized patients.
In Coonabarabran, where water is strictly rationed, some residents have moved their washing machines outside so that the run-off can hose their gardens.
Numerous studies have found people delayed treatment, split pills, or rationed medication because of the extreme costs that we experience in the United States.
Shoppers waited for nearly an hour to get inside, even as the store rationed essential items like bread and milk to one per customer.
I went to Walmart and bought a 90-pack of Tostino's pizza rolls for $7 and an extra-large water, and rationed them out.
Since oil and gas are exhaustible and not available everywhere, they have often been rationed, to the benefit of an oligopolistic group of producers.
The Delhi government ordered schools to shut on Monday and rationed water supply to residents to ensure that hospitals and emergency services have enough.
Since the late 1990s, the VA has alternately rationed and increased care as it sought to do right by veterans while holding down costs.
"I grew up in Iran and at a time where content was rationed … it was three TV channels," Rafati told "Mad Money " host Jim Cramer.
I had spoken with Klimt alone one morning over cereal and rationed jugs of liquid shot through with vitamins against every known oddity out there.
The US Mint at the time was pressing coins made of zinc-plated steel instead of copper because copper was being rationed for wartime materials.
Roughly half the time, individual doctors or treatment teams made decisions on their own about how to allocate drugs being rationed, the study also found.
Who do you think will be at the back of the line for health care in such a rationed system that does not prioritize seniors?
We did see signs that sanctions are biting, for businessmen complained about China cracking down on trade; gas prices have doubled; and electricity is rationed.
Protein powder is so expensive that it must be rationed to the point where it's no longer effective and must be bought with shady GNC memberships.
After the United States entered World War II, government austerity measures rationed red meat in 1942 but chicken was still fair game for the eating public.
In his speech, Xi enumerated the accomplishments of China's development since it moved away from a planned economy, when basic goods were rationed and often scarce.
These visas are currently rationed to a fixed number per country of origin, regardless of the number and skill set/occupational mix of that country's applicants.
In the second-floor apartment of 83 Bowery, where Shu Qing Wang, 42, lives with her husband and their two sons, space is rationed with precision.
Food, clothing and fuel, paper, books and other necessities of life were rationed, but there wasn't enough of anything to meet the needs of the people.
So for two agonizing days in February, the family carefully rationed one remaining gallon of bottled water as Ms. Rodriguez, 21994, searched frantically for her keys.
One mother with Type 2 diabetes rationed insulin while pregnant, endangering her baby's health, just so she'd have medicine left over when her Medicaid ran out.
First up, food is going to be rationed and they're going to eat it in the cafeteria, and everyone's going to be assigned a job to do.
Instead of letting Nigeria's currency slide, which would have stoked inflation, policymakers rationed dollars to maintain the naira's long-standing and artificially high peg to the dollar.
Blackouts are now constant, in many areas water is severely rationed, and public sector employees work just two days a week in an effort to save energy.
Day Zero, under which residents would have been rationed to 22000 litres a day, would have been triggered when overall dam levels fell to 210 per cent.
The United States has a highly limited supply of ventilators and I.C.U. beds (not to mention medical staff); if cases surge, care will have to be rationed.
At some facilities, workers say essential supplies like hand sanitizer and disinfectant wipes are rationed or there's none available, putting them at risk of catching the virus.
Where physicians earn a preset salary — for example, in Kaiser Permanente plans or in the British National Health Service — patients frequently complain about rationed or delayed care.
On this day, residents will be further rationed to just 25 liters (6.6 gallons), which they will be able to collect only from one of 200 stations.
A December study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association revealed that 1 in 4 people with diabetes have rationed their insulin because of high costs.
Municipal networks of driverless cars might prove less efficient than private ones, particularly if cars are rationed on a first-come-first-served basis rather than by price.
Corned beef, a salt-cured product widely used during both world wars when fresh meat was rationed, remains popular in Britain where it is commonly used in sandwiches.
Bringing up "rationing" healthcare is also a common tactic from the right, though in the US care is currently effectively rationed based on who can afford what treatment.
As the currency peg drained its foreign reserves, the central bank introduced capital controls and rationed dollars, forcing importers to turn to the black market for their needs.
In socialized medicine supply does not meet demand and resources are rationed – predominately affecting the elderly and those with serious medical conditions which require more resources to treat.
Can you imagine a state being rationed, when you have millions and millions and millions of gallons being poured out into the Pacific Ocean that you could have?
The Neediest Cases Fund A tumbledown home with a tin roof high in the mountains of Guatemala had no electricity or beds, only tattered clothing and rationed food.
Volkswagen and Audi have admitted in court documents that rather than inconvenience owners, they rationed the fluid and allowed the cars to spew more nitrogen oxides than allowed.
This implies distressed assets of more than $3 trillion, which, if credit is indeed rationed better, will have to be written off or marked down to more realistic prices.
Licences for new banks are no longer rationed in the manner of the "licence raj"; they are instead awarded to all those who show they are fit and proper.
The state gives them more rationed rice than they can eat, so when the price is right, Mr. Ortiz sells it on a Cuban version of Craigslist called Revolico.com.
In high school, he recounted, the Gaza Strip often rationed electricity use, which meant that each neighborhood would get only an hour or two of lamp light each night.
They point out that the disabled and people with chronic illnesses are at great risk of despair, abuse, and discrimination in our increasingly rationed and managed health care system.
Alcohol is still rationed on the islands, and before June last year, making your own was also forbidden—something Johansen has campaigned for the last five years to overturn.
Check out the private spa's slimming machines and the lavish mosaics surrounding the indoor swimming pool, and remember the population that struggled to survive on rationed food and fuel.
The secret police found evidence that Georg Berger was illegally hoarding butter, eggs, soap and other scarce items that were strictly rationed at the time, according to Gestapo documents.
Many were living in misery at the end of the war—jobs were few, and food remained rationed (two slices of bread were allowed per person per day until 1948).
BACK STORY A style called the "New Look" arrived in 1947, just two years after the end of World War II, when fabric was considered a luxury that was rationed.
Unlike many other foods, lobster wasn't rationed in the United States during World War II, and the lack of other meat options led many more people to discover this delicacy.
Medicare already is rationed — many doctors won't accept Medicare patients — and it will get worse as the feds reduce payments to doctors to control costs and there are fewer doctors.
Until July 31, 1970, bracingly strong overproof rum was a vital part of the fabric of the British Navy—rationed, used as a currency, and a veritable way of life.
It was a significant change in a country where cars are rationed and buying one requires not only purchasing the vehicle, but also buying at auction the permission to own it.
"We had it all planned out," said Jessica Jordan, describing a rationed meal plan of chicken noodle soup, spaghetti, and grilled cheese sandwiches that her family had planned for the hurricane.
We'll wait and see, but until then, beer is being rationed and will soon run out, and people wait in line for hours in the hopes of securing much needed food.
"The probability of transmission of potentially pathogenic organisms is increased by crowding, delays in medical evaluation and treatment, rationed access to soap, water, and clean laundry" among other factors, Bick wrote.
"We rationed our food, drank water through a LifeStraw, and kept as warm as possible," Desplinter told reporters after the rescue, detailing how he and Wallace got lost, according to KABC.
Recent research suggests that cancer patients may be delaying use of lifesaving drugs, while there are reports that prisoners are rationed access to hepatitis C treatments — all because of high prices.
Both railways last month rationed the volume of traffic around Vancouver by restricting movement of some commodities, such as peas, lentils, pulp and paper, according to shipper notices seen by Reuters.
The cause is a peculiar shortage of the carbon dioxide used to add gas to all manner of fizzy drinks, which means manufacturers are cutting production and retailers are being rationed.
There are no gloves or masks available at her facility and sanitizer is being rationed to "one dime-sized portion," and they can only use it if their job requires it.
Deprived of much freedom and many comforts (they have one afternoon off per week and hot baths are a rationed luxury), they turn on one another, fanning trifling grievances, exaggerating minor slights.
Following the war, with cardboard no longer rationed, Christian-themed Advent calendars made their way stateside thanks to the boom in production and the GIs who sent them home to their families.
Rather than make snow with expensive (and sometimes rationed) tap water, Paolo Rigoni, the manager, started to use treated municipal sewage in 2010, an idea for which he received a presidential prize.
From then on they lived in darkness, surviving off rationed supplies of stale bread and canned meat for ten days, before the water level dropped and they were able to free themselves.
While there are dozens of male rappers whose music stays in rotation during any given period of time, mainstream woman rappers appear to be rationed out one or two at a time.
The ways technology-as-object operates within the story (rationed out in nursing homes, final registration as a fiddly part of hospice paperwork) suggests a cautious oddness without undercutting the human drama.
Managers at a hedge fund in Manhattan spent hundreds of dollars on hand sanitizer, and plan to keep a log of what is rationed out to employees — and the rest locked up.
When access to sofosbuvir (for hepatitis C) was rationed by the NHS, patients turned to a buyers club in Australia, which in turn bought from India, where the manufacturer had waived its patent.
Since Monday, when officials began distributing emergency supplies at fire stations, thousands of people have streamed in, and aid workers have rationed lead testing kits, one per person, for fear of running out.
The pound is now worth half as much on the black market as it is in the banks, where the official rate remains fixed at 8.8 but where dollar supplies are strictly rationed.
During World War II, while items like sugar and tires were being rationed, the use of makeup persisted, as it was considered a morale booster for women while their husbands were off fighting.
Will citizens have any faith in the government when there is a deadly infectious disease spreading across the country like wildfire, but vaccines are being rationed and distributed as the government sees fit?
If the public is to prepare for the grim prospect of rationed care, then officials should speak in immediate personal terms, and give things to do that increase safety and reduce helplessness: e.g.
With its bleak futuristic setting, dark color palette (electricity in the Montauk of the future is being rationed), and disconnect from the world of the Solloways, it feels designed to stymie neat summaries.
Southern Africa has been affected by a severe drought that has prompted water restrictions by various municipalities, which have warned that water could be rationed if consumers do not heed calls to cut consumption.
A black market for dollars has sucked up liquidity from the banking system as the central bank kept the pound artificially strong and rationed dollars through weekly auctions, putting a strain on foreign reserves.
Perhaps he is saving rationed paper and ink, but he also seems to be tying a rope bridge of words to carry him from prison to the home where his wife and children await.
What little food Ms. Klaben and Mr. Flores had brought on board — a few cans of sardines, tuna fish, fruit salad and a box of Saltine crackers — was rationed and gone within 10 days.
To survive over the next several days, Desplinter said he and Wallace tried their best to keep warm, rationed their food and drank water through a LifeStraw -- a straw-like tube that purifies water.
The black market for dollars has sucked up liquidity from the banking system while the central bank kept the pound artificially strong and rationed dollars through its weekly auctions, putting a strain on foreign reserves.
Surely our parents found the rationed power supply inconvenient: driving to the fish market every day, cooking rice over an open flame, taking the clothes off the line so they wouldn't reek of lighter fluid.
On Saturday, the Wal-Mart owned supermarket grocery Asda became the latest big name to admit the effects on its business when it rationed the amount of some soda drinks that online customers can buy.
He fled across the African country's border to Ethiopia and made his way to a refugee camp, braving horrific conditions and rationed food and water for a chance to eventually get to the United States.
One of the few goods not rationed during the war was paper, and books quickly became popular gifts to give during the winter holidays, according to the campaign, which aims to keep the tradition alive.
Civilians have been displaced in greater numbers in recent days, as the fighting in and around IS's last strongholds in Mosul rages in residential neighborhoods where water, food and power have been rationed for months.
The probability of spreading the virus is high in prison given the already high illness rate, crowding, delays in medical evaluation and treatment, as well as rationed access to soap, water, and clean laundry in prisons.
After years of skirmishes with government troops, long mountain treks and rationed food, Diaz escaped and turned herself in to the army in 230, after finding a leaflet dropped by army helicopters urging rebels to surrender.
With its buttoned bodice, tiny waist and full skirt, it epitomized the designer's famous New Look silhouette, which launched in 1947 and was a controversial style post-World War II when fabric was still rationed in Britain.
So they're kind of stepping out of British post-war culture and into something different in a make-do and mend society, where everything [was] handed down to them, because clothing was rationed as well as food.
When "Rock Around The Clock" came out in 1955, and the BBC didn't really play it, you could argue that the BBC kind of rationed rock 'n' roll, which was too much to bear for these kids.
Brasília, the capital of Brazil, with a population of 2.6 million, has already declared a state of emergency due to long-term drought, but is only one of 800 municipalities across Brazil where water is being rationed.
The International Labour Organisation (ILO) said in a report in October that the quality of jobs in Portugal remained low while the labor market is heavily segmented, with stable and secure jobs rationed, especially for the young.
We did have to switch to almond for one weekend when we were rationed [laughs], and we try to develop a backstock of Oatly, asking our suppliers to give us as much at once as they can.
"Glitch" is an entirely different kind of series, a large-ensemble drama predicated on big fuzzy ideas about life, death and destiny in which the separate back stories of multiple characters are rationed out in frequent flashbacks.
"There were no airlines; the phones didn't call out of the country; the garbage was piled sky high; the gasoline was basically being rationed," Richey, now 75, said by phone from her home in San Angelo, Tex.
So if you wanted to buy cocaine, you could, but you'd have to go and do a half day course, get a swipe card, and then you could use that to buy a rationed amount of powder.
Related: Venezuela's Falling Apart and the President Is Sending Troops to 'Protect' the People In many areas water is severely rationed, and public sector employees work just two days a week in an effort to save energy.
ARC Energy Research Institute analyst Jackie Forrest said the 10% of the Mainline left open for spot shipping would likely be heavily rationed, resulting in more barrels getting stranded in Alberta each month and being sold off cheaply.
"There is an extreme shortage of foreign exchange, which is making it increasingly difficult to import goods and, on top of that, you have rationed access to goods," which has led to the creation of a black market.
To save his nation, or at least his government, Castro inaugurated the catastrophic Special Period in Peacetime, in which food, oil, electricity, and even clothing were rationed, and urban workers were sent into the countryside to grow crops.
Opposite a petrol station near Kalaseh, where 80 cars were lined two-deep along the road waiting for rationed fuel, men sat on the curb, their tools lying on upturned concrete blocks to advertise their services as laborers.
Kathy Sego, who made a 7-hour trip from Indiana with her son, Hunter, who requires insulin and has rationed his intake, became emotional as she described choosing between paying a power bill or for the teen's medicine.
But the big question is the nature and timing of exchange rate reforms in a country that has kept artificially strong and rationed dollars since the 2011 uprising drove away tourists and investors, depriving it of hard currency.
And while single-payer opponents continue to evoke rationed care, long lines and wait times, and other problems that supposedly plague England or Canada, the public seems well aware that the reality for many Americans is far worse.
I think he saw it as a symbol of wealth, a uniquely American indulgence he happily participated in, perhaps to prove to himself that food no longer had to be rationed but could be enjoyed with careless abandon.
Between the three-day weeks of 1974, when a miners' strike led to electricity being rationed, and the "winter of discontent" in 1979, when a range of public services were paralysed by industrial action, Butskellism passed over the horizon.
Even with this "incredibly lucky" arrangement with her pharmacist, Sumner said she has rationed in the past for financial reasons and is currently rationing so that she can go to her job without feeling sick from her new insulin.
The final sticking point stands in the way of resolving a years-long dispute over Mexican access to the highly regulated U.S. sugar market, which is protected by a complex web of subsidies and rationed quotas for foreign producers.
In June, T1International published a survey that found that more than a quarter of people with type 20183 diabetes in the US rationed their insulin last year, the highest percentage of insulin rationing of any high-income country surveyed.
The WI's jam-making was encouraged by Lord Woolton, the Minister of Food, and WI groups around Britain were supplied with extra sugar (which was heavily rationed) in order to make their jams which would be sold around the country.
This new trailer hints that their amnesia will be short-lived, but that the magic that they previously used was being rationed, controlled by an extra-dimensional Library that the characters have visited over the course of the prior seasons.
But the big question is the nature and timing of exchange rate reforms in a country that has kept its currency artificially strong and rationed dollars since the 2011 uprising drove away tourists and investors, depriving it of hard currency.
In those times, they will say, Britons emerging from the gloom of postwar austerity discovered a land of pungent cigarettes and fine cuisine, vin ordinaire and menus du jour that titillated palates grown stale on bland and rationed British fare.
Foreign correspondent banks to Nigerian lenders have been worried this year about a risk of default on their trade lines due to dollar shortages in Nigeria and as the central bank rationed its own hard currency to save its dwindling reserves.
Farmers have been left stranded as traders have no cash to pay for their produce, while millions of Indians lined up outside banks and post offices for the ninth day to exchange old banknotes or withdraw rationed money from their accounts.
The cycle of waking up every day, taking the single transit token rationed out alongside breakfast at programs like OOTC, heading to the next shelter, sleeping (most of the times in the streets), and doing it all over again becomes routine.
Across the country, health care workers on the frontlines of the escalating fight against Covid-653, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus, describe a grim scene of rationed personal protective equipment -- widely known as PPE -- and lack of testing.
MELBOURNE, Australia — The previous hour had been a blur for Angelique Kerber, who was digesting a lot on Thursday: the first Grand Slam semifinal victory of her 14-year professional career, a postmatch meal and sound bites rationed to the news media.
Because of the cuts implied by the per capita cap and block grant provisions, AASA, a group representing school superintendents, is warning that school services for disabled children could be cut back or rationed as a result of the federal Medicaid cuts.
In his book he also describes growing up poor — "I hid bread in my underwear because food was rationed in our house" — and how he went from a fit athlete in high school to an overweight college student thanks to late-night pizza.
The effort, led by Dr. Unguru, the Baltimore oncologist, recommended that the drugs be rationed based on the ability to save lives or years of life, including curability of a child's cancer and the importance of the drug in improving the chances.
Democrats pushing single-payer have no intention of having to deal with the problems that come with all government-run single-payer systems: waiting lines, rationed care and limited access to the newest (and sometimes the most expensive) prescription drugs and medical devices.
In effect, he banned the import of a huge range of goods, from tinned fish to toothpicks; arbitrarily rationed the supply of dollars from the central bank to importers; and threatened to clamp down on people trading dollars on the black market.
In a season spent almost entirely on the preparations for an interplanetary voyage (the two-and-a-half-year round trip will be covered in future seasons, if they come), science, engineering, politics and adventure are rationed to make room for soap opera.
And there were other instructions, too: Buy only your rationed share of sugar, don't spend extra money at the butcher to get a thicker cut of meat above your government-allotted allowance, make a peanut butter loaf instead of a meat loaf.
During the communist takeover, the southern communists and the N.V.A. forces organized so-called liberated zones, conducted indoctrination sessions, rationed food, conscripted youth for labor and combat, and identified enemies, and sometimes their family members, in the local population for denunciation and death.
"I was perpetuating a system that was increasingly expensive and dysfunctional and unfair and rationed care on your ability to pay," said Potter, who left his job as the health giant's vice president of corporate communications after experiencing an "awakening" in 2008.
Our 225 hours with rationed water was set up to represent "Day Zero," the day when Cape Town's taps are expected to shut off, not because they chose to -- like us -- but because there will be no more water in the reservoir.
Almost 26% of people with Type 1 diabetes in the U.S. rationed their insulin in the past year, a rate that's 4 times higher than others who live with the disease in other affluent countries, a survey from nonprofit diabetes advocacy group T1 International shows.
But the Golden State was the home of many of the companies, grocery outlets and restaurants that helped push it into the mainstream, promoting it as a significant part of a healthy diet and not something you'd just eat when red meat was being rationed.
I have been known to pour my milk before my cereal, in a (futile) attempt to limit the amount of Special K Red Berries that I consume in one sitting to the amount of bowls it takes to finish off the pre-rationed milk.
"I was perpetuating a system that was increasingly expensive and dysfunctional and unfair and rationed care on your ability to pay," said Potter, who left his job as the health giant's vice president of corporate communications after experiencing an "awakening" in 2008 (The Hill).
Eating while distracted felt disrespectful to my food, and the person who made my food, whether it was the good people in my Seamless delivery area, or my mom who made and rationed enough Korean food in the freezer to last six months from when she visited.
This problem was shown when a cure for hepatitis C hit the market in 2014 and many Medicaid plans delayed access to the drug or rationed its use because they couldn't absorb the one-time cost of rolling out the therapy and curing their population straightaway.
The Egyptian pound has come under pressure as foreign currency reserves have dropped but the central bank is reluctant to devalue for fear of further fuelling inflation and has rationed dollars available for non-essential imports to give priority instead to food, fuel, medicines and manufacturing components.
NEW YORK, Jan 11 (Reuters) - The U.S. Mint said on Monday it set the first weekly allocation of 2016 for American Eagle silver coin sales at 4 million ounces, roughly four times the amount rationed in the last five months of 2015, after a surge in demand.
At Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), we see each and every day the human suffering caused in the places we work and many countries outside the U.S. by treatments being rationed or people being denied essential medical care due to high drug and vaccines prices.
Related: Calculate how period poverty would impact you Krengel rationed her menstrual products, wearing a single sanitary pad for up to 210 hours (instead of the recommended three or four), inserting a contraceptive diaphragm to catch the blood or simply free bleeding (using nothing at all).
We had just come out of wartime experience of shared sacrifice in which men of all types served with each other on the battlefield, and women of all types had worked side by side in factories and offices, and many essential goods were rationed equally to each household.
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the supreme leader who has the last word on all state matters, called the demonstrators "thugs" and endorsed the government's decision to raise prices it sets for rationed gasoline by 50 percent as of Friday and by 300 percent for gasoline that exceeds ration limits.
Almost 26% of people with Type 1 diabetes in the U.S. rationed their insulin in the past year, a rate that is 4 times higher than other people who have the disease and live in other affluent countries, according to a survey from the nonprofit diabetes advocacy group T1 International.
The food situation is something most travelers learn about fast, and though I was lucky enough to be provided a quality breakfast each day at my Air BnB, I quickly noticed that I was being served the same rationed meal of eggs, fruit, coffee, guava juice, and bread every day.
The wedding was broadcast by BBC radio to a country, continent and world still reeling from the atrocities of World War II. Food and clothes were still being rationed in Britain, and the United States was discussing sending billions of dollars in aid to western parts of a divided Europe for postwar reconstruction.
Some economists have mused to me that the closest comparison to the economy we're creating now is the economy of World War II: The government was spending huge amounts of money on the war effort, but wages were suppressed, goods were rationed, the public was pressured into buying bonds, and social norms discouraged excessive consumption.
If made into law, states could use federal grant funds to provide students with free menstrual products in school, people who are incarcerated and detained on the federal, state, and local level would have access to a free and non-rationed supply of period products, and Medicaid would pay for menstrual products for Medicaid recipients.
Whereas the former is provided by hospitals and primary-care organisations (such as doctors and dentists), run centrally by the NHS and free at the point of use, social care (which includes old folks' homes and social workers) is run and paid for by local government, which funds a heavily rationed service partly through user charges.
It would be a retail model, but it'd be a strictly regulated one with a trained medical professional as the gatekeeper, who'd have to abide by a set of rules in terms of age controls, not selling to people who are intoxicated, and selling in rationed quantities so you couldn't just buy a kilo of cocaine.
Johnson: In World War II when you had many more women mobilized in the workforce and people were looking for something easy, it was probably much easier to just make some Jell-O and stick it in the fridge for the next day than to try and bake a cake or make a pie when fat was rationed.
Young people complaining about the quality of the bread in the rationed food market; dissidents recording the violent arrests; passengers annoyed by the poor state of public transport posting about being stuck on broken-down buses; Facebook comments objecting to what deputies of the National Assembly say — all part of the phenomenon we have been witnessing since the mobile internet rollout.
The problems seem to have been threefold — the Centers for Disease Control did not move quickly enough to manufacture test kits at scale (either because of lack of funding or political will) nor did it open up testing options to other institutions that could have worked to develop tests — and because of the limited availability of tests, the CDC rationed how many tests were performed.
According to George Solt's "The Untold History of Ramen" (2014), the dish is said to have first appeared in 1910 in Tokyo, under the name shina soba (Chinese noodles); almost vanished during World War II, when flour was strictly rationed and street vendors were banned; and revived with imports of wheat under the midcentury U.S. occupation — when Americans hoped to keep the population sated and therefore invulnerable to the promises of communism — to eventually flourish postwar as a hearty and cheap lunch.

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