He didn't apologize to Mexicans, writ large, for calling them rapists, writ large.
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I MEAN, AGAIN, HE IS NOT USING THE FED MODELS, YOU KNOW, WRIT LARGE, WRIT SPECIFICALLY.
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And it echoes the story of the economy writ large.
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However, that would require another nation to acknowledge the writ.
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We see our biggest hopes, our deepest fears writ large.
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Candy's issues on "Red Hot" are society's issues writ crudely.
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Company names are an example of the problem, writ small.
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What's important is the anguish writ all over the landscape.
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How long until everyone else makes it writ large, ad infinum?
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This guy is a hands-on, community organizing, writ large activist.
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So they&aposre just going to focus on this writ large.
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We thought we had stability - now we have instability writ large.
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The writ did not specify how much compensation they were seeking.
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It said it did not know the details of the writ.
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Superhero movies are often dismissed as teen adventure flicks writ large.
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It is the story of the Finnmark witchcraft trials writ large.
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From there, Dishonored 2 is like post-election fear writ large.
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It was frustration writ large, exclusives missed and answers left unposted.
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The Baghdad government's writ does not apply in most of Iraq.
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But America's economic success is like our Olympic success, writ large.
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The internet is the technology paradox writ more monstrous than ever.
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Most of all, they are not good for business, writ large.
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He's the country's credulousness in extremis, its ugly bargains writ large.
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Are the moral convictions of white evangelical Protestants writ in stone?
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But ISIS writ large isn't just going after Sufis in Egypt.
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While her stories examine the human condition writ large, they sometimes lack in the sort of crucial details about the human condition writ small — those blazing, passing insights and uncomfortable truths about ourselves and our species.
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The thaw between Russia and Turkey this summer was realpolitik writ large.
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Since taking office, the GNA's writ has scarcely extended beyond the capital.
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"There's such gaslighting in this culture," she said, of Hollywood writ large.
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"Writ large, flunk," she said on the latest episode of Recode Decode.
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Writ large, it's a movie about the way we deal with grief.
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|
The report card for the media writ large has its positive points.
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This development creates some problems for the pro-democracy camp writ large.
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It was Stockton writ larger -- including the threat of a new ban.
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Bloomberg is the X-factor in Texas and Super Tuesday writ large.
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The joys of this book are writ small, but they feel big.
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|
"It's the Oregon Ducks syndrome writ very specific for M.L.B.," Radom said.
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These individual choices, writ large, move markets and drive the business cycle.
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Mr. Miyagi has writ his "Antigone" in water, and made it indelible.
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Moran's impact on jazz — and the arts writ large — continues to grow.
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The military base in Lohheide is the continent's difficult history writ small.
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I must commend the Court for the expeditious handling of our writ.
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In both respects, he's not that different from today's GOP writ large.
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"They're going to have to demonstrate that the public writ large, that consumers writ large, that employees of these companies aren't going to be harmed in some way," said a second lobbyist who requested anonymity to speak freely.
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|
The PSOE's problems are those of all European social-democratic parties, writ large.
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They are based in areas where its writ is minimal or non-existent.
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|
But it's hard to overstate — this was a grilling of Facebook writ large.
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This election has created division within evangelical circles and the church writ large.
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We tend to forget that when we're talking about the media writ large.
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And public confidence in science writ large has remained remarkably stable for decades.
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|
Her speech was at times critical of Republicans writ large, not just Trump.
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|
The convicted child pornographer filed a petition for a writ of habeus corpus.
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|
That's not how I think the public views the issue writ large anymore.
|
|
We need more diversity among our student journalists (and in journalism writ large).
|
|
But Schnabel's markings in the score are intended as suggestions, not Holy Writ.
|
|
This performance was like that scene writ large, captured in a consumable experience.
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|
Maybe, just maybe, that is happening with the United States economy writ large.
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|
No. No. No. I think punditry is, writ large, broken in this country.
|
|
This story can be told as the 2008 global financial crash writ small.
|
|
Small mistakes she made were writ large, and she, too, went on trial.
|
|
Have you seen the encyclopedia of our future ruins being writ before us?
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|
Writ large upon its flag were liberty, equality and human rights for all.
|
|
Instead, we need to understand what's happening in the Western world writ large.
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|
There's little doubt that the internet, writ large, has changed how we live.
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|
The writ was something of a last-ditch effort to appeal the case.
|
|
Is today's fashion system equally an indictment of capitalism and greed writ large?
|
|
President Abraham Lincoln suspended the writ of habeas corpus in the Civil War.
|
|
The Republican Party in South Carolina is a lot like the party writ large.
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|
And ISIS is right there to elevate those resentments and aggressions into holy writ.
|
|
That timing raises questions about where civilian leadership fits into the strategy writ large.
|
|
Gibson Dunn filed for a writ of mandamus to overturn its disqualification last June.
|
|
The end goal is universality, simple emotions writ huge in the sky like planets.
|
|
White women writ large, all white women, have been steadily voting Republican for decades.
|
|
That rational assessment was an example of X's typical post-project dispassion, writ small.
|
|
It has nothing to do with the suspension of the writ of habeas corpus.
|
|
It's the latest attempt by the industry writ large to tackle the workforce shortage.
|
|
But addressing the racial wealth gap does not eliminate addressing structural poverty writ large.
|
|
Military awards and decorations fall under his writ, even at this low a level.
|
|
And do you think, from sort of the Russiagate perspective or just writ large?
|
|
The story of Carver is the story of Michigan's grand educational experiment writ small.
|
|
It asked with unseemly zeal how far in politics the writ of morality ran.
|
|
It is a place where the history of immigration in America is writ large.
|
|
On Wednesday, Noble confirmed it had been served a "writ of summons" by Goldilocks.
|
|
Might we read anything more into this in terms of modern diplomacy writ large?
|
|
They are writ large and high atop the facade, but are featured just once.
|
|
How will an original line like "Assume as muse" ("Writ in Ore") be reassembled?
|
|
It is a federal crime to disobey a lawful writ or order from a court.
|
|
If DNA is writ in stone, natural selection has no variation on which to act.
|
|
This is symptomatic of other pervasive exclusions that are visible in art institutions writ large.
|
|
A judge has delayed Couch's deportation following a writ filed last week by Ben tez.
|
|
Or it could just be an embodiment of the randomness of mass shootings writ large.
|
|
Some even said it was her fault the spoiler was writ large on the box.
|
|
"The writ of mandamus may not be used to enforce a disputed right," Morgan wrote.
|
|
"One is that we need to protect access to the right writ large," she said.
|
|
The ancient writ is obtrusive by nature to protect Americans from arbitrary searches and seizures.
|
|
Boumediene argued that he and other petitioners were unconstitutionally denied the writ of habeas corpus.
|
|
Back then Mr. Marcos had prefaced martial rule by suspending the writ of habeas corpus.
|
|
Your actions feel important, but likely pale in comparison to what's playing out writ large.
|
|
This isn't too different from the insurance exchanges we see now, writ large, for everyone.
|
|
It has both effectively tied minorities to welfare, and tied welfare to government writ large.
|
|
This remains true today of the concept we popularly call "outer space" writ (boundlessly) large.
|
|
It runs the diplomatic corps and sets the tone for Iran's foreign policy writ large.
|
|
Our commitment to accuracy and impartiality is writ large in the Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
|
|
The abortion debate last week reflects the drift of the national Democratic Party writ large.
|
|
But beyond the bag, governments are feeling the financial pinch of plastic waste writ large.
|
|
Many who live in such places would presumably welcome more of the central government's writ.
|
|
There is a sacred writ of intelligence officers never to get involved in creating policy.
|
|
"Superman is the story of an immigrant writ large," said Peter Sanderson, a comics historian.
|
|
It is culture writ very large and one of the greatest discoveries in modern times.
|
|
More expansively, it serves as a portal to both history and the otherworldly writ-large.
|
|
Secondly, that narcissism -- writ large -- is the driving force of the positions of political parties.
|
|
Then Azar came in with his own apparent writ from Trump: bring down drug prices.
|
|
The next Drunken Masters, organized by Writ Large Press, will take place on September 4.
|
|
This person makes decisions not based strictly on legal interpretations but on his values writ large.
|
|
Successes belonged only to the individuals to whom they were attributed, not to society writ large.
|
|
Fogle, 40, this week sought a writ of habeas corpus from the federal court in Denver.
|
|
The second is a Circuit Court civil writ issued by the Circuit Court of Harford County.
|
|
With regards to cybersecurity, the US military "writ large has faced a culture change," Lee explained.
|
|
"You're asking me to not grant the writ because I don't have jurisdiction," Nichols told Letter.
|
|
Per Deadline, Landis has been dropped by managers at Writ Large following the Daily Beast allegations.
|
|
And then I think ... You know, we're seeing the techno culture kind of writ large today.
|
|
Looking at Jefferson's words writ HUGE behind his statue, I kinda stopped with my mouth open.
|
|
It's the old story about the drunk looking under the lamppost for his keys, writ large.
|
|
Their new album, Fed Into The Nihilist Engine, is itself a study in contrasts writ small.
|
|
Additional emphasis on technical skills would benefit students, their future employers, and the economy writ large.
|
|
They also believe American restraint in Syria has not undermined the United States's credibility writ large.
|
|
It's this shallowness in Nigerian society writ large that Korede seems to hate most of all.
|
|
For critics of the policy writ large, the updated order is no better than the first.
|
|
That is more a condemnation of politics writ large than a complimentary statement about the president.
|
|
He says he sold all his financial interests in Boeing and the defense sector writ large.
|
|
The problem is not saving the Earth or life writ large, but saving our cherished civilization.
|
|
In this niche, society writ large reverberates, too, telling us: Be perfect, be beautiful, be feminine.
|
|
Here we were making a movie about the very theme that was playing out writ large.
|
|
One group of immigration lawyers put together a petition for a writ of habeas corpus overnight.
|
|
It may be more than what the Trump administration writ large is 100 percent comfortable with.
|
|
During wartime, Jackson arrested a Federal District Court judge who issued a writ of habeas corpus.
|
|
Bitcoin to many — and cryptocurrency writ large — is associated with the darker recesses of the internet.
|
|
Digital health writ large has also struggled with finding the balance between virtualization and high touch.
|
|
Ultimately, the challenge the Democrats face in their party is the challenge of democracy writ large.
|
|
"The law does not allow me to look at the country conditions writ large," Nielsen said.
|
|
But that same enthusiasm betrayed a lot about the campaign (and the subsequent Administration) writ large.
|
|
"You can see writ in the genome the effects of this intense endogamy," Dr. Reich said.
|
|
If this be error and upon me prov'd, I never writ, nor no man ever lov'd.
|
|
But these are basically longstanding issues that our political system writ large has failed to address.
|
|
It's hard not to read this photograph as a metaphor for the African American experience writ large.
|
|
He vigorously endorsed the death penalty and restrictions on prisoner appeals through a writ of habeas corpus.
|
|
Residents were skeptical of police enforcement, and argued that the numbers writ large just didn't add up.
|
|
Likely Russian hackers have already been on the offensive against the Olympics and sports world writ-large.
|
|
According to this approach, law is best understood as a mechanism for promoting economic efficiency writ large.
|
|
I don't know which party will go nuclear on legislation writ-large, but you can't undo nuclear.
|
|
"When It Rain" is a smart sample dose of the album writ large: Paul White et al.
|
|
However, there is no line which separates your public social media posts from the "media" writ large.
|
|
Most of us assume that Congress works the same way democracy works writ large—that majority rules.
|
|
It is virtue signaling writ large, and further moves the needle in middle America the other way.
|
|
The dairy industry in Wallonia was among those interests that prevailed over European trade policy writ large.
|
|
The power of tech giants to influence entire nations is now writ large in EU domestic politics.
|
|
There's a temptation to isolate Trump from those around him and from the U.S. government writ large.
|
|
But that timelessness shouldn't be taken to mean that Fences is about the human experience writ large.
|
|
It's an unmitigated bright spot not only on On the Rvn, but in Thug's catalog writ large.
|
|
"Princeton's history is American history writ small," said Martha Sandweiss, the history professor who led the project.
|
|
But make no mistake, this is not a good development for the health care system writ large.
|
|
Instead, he was granted an official writ of protection guaranteeing that he could practice his trumpet unharmed.
|
|
"I'm not arguing that too many people work for the federal government writ large," he told me.
|
|
He said you cannot separate medicine from political or social life — politics is just medicine writ large.
|
|
And: Writ large, I intend to exercise our statutory authority to enforce the laws of this nation.
|
|
In the primary writ large, Biden's resilient popularity with black voters was the keystone of his success.
|
|
Mike and I are both interested in infrastructure — not just bridges and tunnels but infrastructure writ large.
|
|
Not because Wisconsin isn't a great institution but because the state writ large over all has challenges.
|
|
At breakfast, I'd pore over every word on a cereal box as if it were holy writ.
|
|
The same principle, writ large, has helped the eurozone achieve its most solid growth in a decade.
|
|
Snyder has argued that what happened in Flint shouldn't be used to judge emergency managers writ large.
|
|
Appellate court ruling: The Georgia Supreme Court denied Foster's writ of habeas corpus, effectively rejecting his challenge.
|
|
"Based Stickman" became a minor meme in the alt-right, glorifying violence against antifa and leftists writ large.
|
|
The word writ has appeared in 108 New York Times articles in the past year, including on Nov.
|
|
Nirider filed the writ of habeas corpus that led to last week's judicial order quashing Dassey's conviction. 2.
|
|
The former strongman, Meles Zenawi, who died in 2012, boasted that the EPRDF's "writ runs in every village".
|
|
There's no holy writ that ever said you can't have a different point of view than the Fed.
|
|
All of these things are interconnected: Sexism, racism, discrimination writ large, the experience of contractors at this company.
|
|
For years, it seemed as if the future of the Thirty Meter Telescope was writ in the stars.
|
|
His attorneys filed a writ for habeas corpus claiming he is intellectually disabled and thus ineligible for execution.
|
|
The defendant first sought a federal writ of habeas corpus challenging his detention in 1988, court records show.
|
|
They become representative not just of what ails politics, but what ails America writ large: opportunism, privilege, entitlement.
|
|
And the president is more popular than the GOP leaders in Congress or the Republican Party writ large.
|
|
It will be a true turning point for patients with mental illness, their families and society writ-large.
|
|
It's beyond obvious that sexual misconduct and representations of sex are a problem facing reality TV writ large.
|
|
Referred to as "the Great Writ," habeas corpus affords citizens the right to challenge their arrests and jailing.
|
|
Dating apps writ large have been blamed for tectonic social shifts, from delayed marriage to relaxed sexual mores.
|
|
"The Kremlin Playbook" cites a series of Russian efforts to expand its writ in central and eastern Europe.
|
|
The Athenians prized direct engagement by their limited citizenry, but they accepted a highly inegalitarian society writ large.
|
|
The problem facing the Catholic church in the Amazon basin, then, is simply a worldwide problem writ large.
|
|
But it is part of the larger solution: This sort of transformation, writ large, can cushion climate crises.
|
|
I'd say it's a failure, writ large, of how people have treated Florida when it comes to organizing.
|
|
"Princeton's history is American history writ small," said Martha Sandweiss, above, the history professor who led the project.
|
|
"Should the petition for a writ of certiorari be denied, this stay shall terminate automatically," the court said.
|
|
But in Senegal and Africa and the once-colonized world writ large, their project never had a chance.
|
|
Impeachment is not just a matter of justice in politics, this is a matter of justice writ large.
|
|
Business Insider viewed a copy of the High Court writ sent to Elon Musk dated 10 July 2019.
|
|
The rest is given over to a surging sci-fi rumination on the idea of exploration, writ large.
|
|
Climate change and the environment writ large are major issues for B.C. voters, particularly in the Vancouver area.
|
|
I must tell you that the credit for the PIL/ writ petition goes to lawyer friend Shilpa Tulankar.
|
|
They peppered the lawyers with questions about the constitutionality of the individual mandate — and the law writ large.
|
|
USCIS declined to comment on the guidance, referring to previously published memos from DHS explaining Trump's orders writ large.
|
|
Museums are social spaces, in their structures and displays is writ the values and ideals of the world outside.
|
|
He has called the Middle East, writ large, "one big, fat quagmire" that the US should stay out of.
|
|
In response, the administration filed the rare "writ of mandamus" petition asking the Ninth Circuit to review Aiken's decision.
|
|
Sure the city writ large fits the bill, but Amazon doesn't want Brooklyn, and Brooklyn certainly doesn't want Amazon.
|
|
Buggy software is a fact of software writ large, not a unique feature of open- or closed-source code.
|
|
"There are larger questions here about what a Trump administration means for American foreign policy writ large," she explained.
|
|
Manti, Chinese dumplings writ large, had yielding skins and steamy centers of ground beef, lamb and pent-up broth.
|
|
In any case, an Ethiopian monastery is an island, the writ of the outside world barely reaching its gates.
|
|
It has room only for the individual and the world, a kind of the polyglot Hapsburg Empire writ large.
|
|
But political symbolism is increasingly a language that Silicon Valley and the tech industry writ large have to understand.
|
|
"The Simpsons," and the entertainment industry writ large, are better off creating shows that both challenge and represent America.
|
|
But they were so hostile to the idea of parties writ large that they do not provide much help.
|
|
Anten told the outlet that he plans to file a petition for a writ of certiorari on Sept. 12.
|
|
Mr. Rubio saw the presidency writ large years ago; Mr. Rivera helped shove the boulders out of the way.
|
|
But the fallout of the coronavirus pandemic on markets and the economy writ large has been swift and painful.
|
|
Mike: Er, O.K. But seriously, the whole thing really sours me on the internet and vlogging culture writ large.
|
|
"Her writ is in court, when that is decided, Asia Bibi can go anywhere she wants to," he said.
|
|
"I'm looking for people who have a message around food and changing the food system writ large," he said.
|
|
In other words, the idea was to shut down the Flynn investigation specifically, not the Russia investigation writ large.
|
|
There is no actual evidence to back the stories up, which is belief and religion and faith writ large.
|
|
How would you say US diplomacy writ large has been kind of rattled and reshaped by this impeachment process?
|
|
He was therefore considering suspending a writ of habeas corpus, which requires the state to justify arrests and detentions.
|
|
The left despises him Immigration activists and civil rights activists writ large fought Arpaio every step of the way.
|
|
This isn't necessarily bad for the economy writ large, as it may simply reflect needed rebalancing in the industry.
|
|
The end result is a study in Appalachian darkness and universal melancholia, writ in shades of green and black.
|
|
Likewise, the idea of burying someone alive is another common idea in horror films—or just cinema, writ large.
|
|
Such blatant disregard for the court's writ undermines its credibility and denies justice to victims of genocide and war crimes.
|
|
Bush, which extended the writ of habeas corpus (the right to go to court to contest imprisonment) to jihadist terrorists.
|
|
Part of this new commission's charge should be to rethink our nation's approach to legal and illegal immigration writ large.
|
|
Aaron Carroll a doctor and writer of The Incidental Economist didn't mince words in going after the media writ large.
|
|
Basically, it's teen rebellion writ large with the help of superheroic fantasy, all taking place in Marvel's rich fictional world.
|
|
She kneels in the gallery window, dabbing at a teal and yellow painting that closely resembles finger-painting writ large.
|
|
Ershad's action led a group of 12 citizens to file a writ with the High Court to overturn the amendment.
|
|
What about President Lincoln when challenged constitutional rights and liberties when he in fact suspended the writ of habeas corpus?
|
|
On December 14th a court in New York state heard a request to grant her a writ of habeas corpus.
|
|
She seemed to have spun her popularity on social media into literary fame, to the detriment of Poetry writ large.
|
|
Indeed, the next few years will be pivotal for the continent and crucial for the advancement of democracy writ large.
|
|
The chief problem with Cooper's account is his reflexive hostility toward Islamism writ large, which ends up being analytically debilitating.
|
|
Tulsi Gabbard attacked the Democratic Party writ large, arguing that her party is in the pocket of corporate interests. Sen.
|
|
Still, the party is preparing for both individual races and the House fight writ large to be very close calls.
|
|
But the result of Assad's tactics writ large across the country has been the separation of ethnic and religious groups.
|
|
I believe that, more than any country, they wave for the Capitalocene epoch writ large, spanning national and international borders.
|
|
"It's quite a compelling writ, reading it as a lawyer," Emily Taylor, CEO of Oxford Information Labs, told VICE News.
|
|
But it has also come at a cost — not only for superhero movies, but for ambitious studio filmmaking writ large.
|
|
In giving Vučić, who remains cozy with Russian President Vladimir Putin, a wide writ—and in turning a blind eye
|
|
It's a good way to keep these titles going, but it doesn't seem like it's good for journalism writ large.
|
|
If that were to happen, polling has consistently found that the party's voters trust [Biden] on foreign policy writ large.
|
|
"Moving one at a time, we realized we were never going to get to philanthropy writ large," Mr. Goldberg said.
|
|
Clearly, that trade was so crowded that Wall Street, writ large, had a singular, one-way bet on the market.
|
|
"As a rule, there's a bit more freedom and a higher spending cap in the pre-writ period," he said.
|
|
Bayer said it was aware of reports regarding a statement of claim about glyphosate but had not received a writ.
|
|
"Booking media for the Administrator was specifically to talk about CMS, its programs, and healthcare writ-large," the spokesperson said.
|
|
According to the state constitution, the Senate president must issue a writ for a special election to fill the seat.
|
|
It feels like a call-to-action, but not to "us" or "them" per se, but to humanity writ large.
|
|
"Performance writ large is oft examined and scrutinized in the visual arts, theater, dance, poetry, and literary communities," they said.
|
|
The conservatism of the Tea Party's members — or of the GOP base writ large — isn't necessarily that of the conservative movement.
|
|
And that's what is happening with the Democratic party writ large, and a microcosm of this is the abortion rights arena.
|
|
More telling was what she'd decided to talk about at length: racial justice, writ large and in Pete Buttigieg's South Bend.
|
|
This is a real, actual, official piece of paper with a record writ in fraction how much "Indian blood" I have.
|
|
Their experiences on set and off give them a fair degree of insight into how to approach dirty talk writ large.
|
|
While anti-immigration, pro-intervention voters have fled the Republican Party writ large, they have also turned on the president himself.
|
|
Its writ extends beyond the Holocaust to cover the denial of crimes committed by "Ukrainian nationalists" against Poles during the war.
|
|
The Whigs are mostly young and urban—David Cameron's Notting Hill set writ large—while the Tories are older and rural.
|
|
He filed a writ of habeas corpus, demanding the request to be canceled and asking for the representation of a lawyer.
|
|
And even if it weren't, it would remain the case that those delegates are overwhelmingly unrepresentative of Sanders supporters writ large.
|
|
The Pakistani army said the absence of Afghan central government's writ on its side of the border facilitated such militant attacks.
|
|
Clinton did not mention another Republican by name at the $2,700-a-head fundraiser but repeatedly hit the party writ large.
|
|
Our expectations, both of what happens on the show and as an example of society writ large are like, womp womp.
|
|
It's much like writing "for exposure" in the freelance writing sector, and it threatens the labor power of academics writ large.
|
|
We like to approach these and other characters writ large, for our local readers, our national readers and our worldwide readers.
|
|
The Internet is a utility, to a degree, but not one whose sanctity is guaranteed to us by some holy writ.
|
|
Seventy-one years of exertion has produced one other thing — time for Israel to steadily expand its writ over contested territory.
|
|
The judges issued a "writ of mandamus," a rare edict from a federal court that requires a litigant to take action.
|
|
"As such, the School Board intends to file a petition with the Supreme Court for a writ of certiorari," it said.
|
|
But big business writ large is comfortable with this form of confronting China because it mostly serves to advance their interests.
|
|
Since then our politics, and our evolving constitutional rights, have been shaped by the articulation and settling of grievances writ large.
|
|
So since it's just a matter of congressional law and not constitutional writ, we can always return to letting states choose.
|
|
The tariff fight with the United States is casting a pall not simply over trade, but over China's future writ large.
|
|
Leahy, a strong institutionalist and protector of the Senate's prerogatives, viewed the blue slip as something akin to a Holy Writ.
|
|
With "Big Phrygian" (2010-2014), Mr. Puryear created the cap writ large, as a five-foot-tall, red cedar-wood rendition.
|
|
Amazon 4-Star asks what would happen if the logic of the warehouse writ raw was applied to a traditional storefront.
|
|
That attitude puts the onus on individual women to improve their self-esteem instead of criticizing societal beauty standards writ large.
|
|
Some see him as a dangerous rogue actor, but others respect his intuitions about the dangers of political Islam writ large.
|
|
If granted, the writ would have the Appeals Court review a 2016 U.S. District Court decision not to dismiss the case.
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"The writ of execution that the money be handed back to Bangladesh has already been done by the court," Gomes said.
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Players jockey for roles, starters seek to hold the writ on their jobs and platoon players seek to steal more time.
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And when it happens inside the writ period, we have some notion of who it is that's putting the money forward.
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But what I can tell you is, just like ViacomCBS writ large, in the streaming space we have a tremendous opportunity.
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Much depends on the character of the national security adviser, who has enormous power to carry out the chief executive's writ.
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The writ was reportedly filed on behalf of retired farmer Paul Buxman, librarian Hope Nisly and Daniel O'Connell, an agrarian scholar.
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Across race and gender we have seen, and identity writ large, we have seen a deeper understanding of what communities need.
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These comments troubled lawmakers and others concerned about the integrity of the Mueller probe, and of the Justice Department writ large.
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This problem, writ large, is why liberals see a bigger role for "public options" — government programs that compete with private ones.
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The lower court had granted Electrolux's motion to dismiss the action as time-barred, finding that plaintiff Vittorio Ginzburg tolled the two-year statute of limitations on the second anniversary of the fire by filing a writ of summons in state court as allowed by Pennsylvania law, but had missed the 90-day deadline to serve the writ.
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He's long told his supporters that the people to blame are immigrants, Muslims, refugees, the Political Establishment writ large, and the media.
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Because what has played out over our airwaves the last couple of days is more than some petty office drama writ large.
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"Every movement writ large has people who sympathize with it and are willing to use violence to accomplish its goals," he said.
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But given the unpredictability of Trump and American politics writ large, the end of NAFTA continues to look like a conceivable possibility.
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The PCO said the panel will continue with regular meetings in the lead-up to the election and during the writ period.
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"Shell and the military regime formed an alliance in the events leading to the deaths of the Ogoni 9," the writ said.
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Ms Zoltan penned an academic thesis on the possibility of treating secular text as though it were a kind of holy writ.
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Second, though, it shows that the US has lost its main partner in the fight against ISIS and in Syria writ large.
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Dorsey's preoccupation with appearing apolitical blinds him, and Twitter writ large, to the fact that inaction and selective enforcement are political acts.
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He has managed to make the fate of coal miners a synecdoche for the fate of the white working class writ large.
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A stronger counterattack against the IRA or Russia writ large might only set off the next round of that tit-for-tat.
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In 2006, a fellow inmate aware of Hartfield&aposs situation helped him file a writ of habeas corpus that revived his prosecution.
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To begin, the researchers selected a photo they wanted writ large on a canvas or wall and uploaded it to a computer.
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Most past Republican presidents nominated EPA administrators who were more to the left on environmental issues than the Republican Party writ large.
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" When she showed The Diversity of Nature at the Writ & Vision Art Gallery in Provo, UT in 2015, "Everyone responded pretty well.
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Absolutely not," Trudeau told Reuters on Thursday, saying the decision would be made in the best interest of the country "writ large.
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The political process is the misguided and psychologically destructive appetency to control or fix others writ large, alchemized from vice to virtue.
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But the idea that Obama and the Democrats were ruling by arbitrary, extralegal means was established on the right as holy writ.
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While riding circuit, Taney ruled that only Congress could suspend the great writ; Lincoln ignored him and focused on saving the Union.
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The G.O.P. is now Ted Cruz writ large, a political party that has debased itself in the image of its standard-bearer.
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The festival's main offerings on Sunday could hardly have been more disparate: farce in the afternoon, small tragedy writ large at night.
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They will think of the U.S. as a version of their multicultural coalition of distinct racial and ethnic identity groups writ large.
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A media subpoena is a writ compelling a journalist to testify or produce evidence, with a penalty for failure to do so.
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There is no issue that will "bring Republicans home" to Donald Trump quicker than the future of the federal judiciary — writ large.
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Division over the language is also writ large in audience feedback to a morning radio news show on New Zealand's public broadcaster.
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Bernie Sanders (I-VT) and Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), have spoken more critically of Israel writ large and Netanyahu's policies in particular.
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Just how did the Song of Songs, a racy pop album that was possibly sung in ancient taverns, arrive in Holy Writ?
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Washi is more like an active metaphor for Japanese craft writ large — luxurious, laborious, useful and maintaining a rough-edged, pastoral simplicity.
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Questioner #3: The media as sort of writ large since the election has followed Kara's lead and started criticizing the tech companies.
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CORRECTION: This story has been updated to correctly state that Clark's attorney has already filed a writ challenging West Virginia's prostitution statute.
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And it risks establishing a precedent that future presidents -- Democratic or Republican -- will use to enforce their writ at the Justice Department.
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He proposed the Information Bank — the Times Index writ large — in 1965 and began working on it with IBM the next year.
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Folick's 2018 album, "Premonitions," is a feat of what she calls "domestic pop," its songs packed with quiet, intimate moments writ large.websterhall.
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It's not like a judge could issue a writ of resurrection that restores life to the people killed in this American airstrike.
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And it's disappointment with wages writ large, and male-breadwinner wages especially, that's crucial to the economic element in Trump's populist appeal.
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Critics of President Donald Trump frequently use the word "kleptocracy" to describe his leadership, administration, and imprint on American policy writ large.
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All of which may have fueled the party's deep "resentment" for Mr. Reid and the left writ large, Mr. Donovan has written.
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It filed an appeal to the Supreme Court, which, in October of 2019, granted writ of certiorari to listen to the case.
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Most significant to the sisterhood of tennis writ large, Venus has followed in Billie Jean King's feminist footsteps, calling for gender equity.
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Half the country likely saw it as a fitting metaphor for his presidency writ large: an assault on our most cherished values.
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But the stagecraft and typecasting of their appointments are definitely what you might call tokenism, writ large and on full, public display.
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Most concede that we do need certain species for food, medicines, or other products, but biodiversity writ large is not necessarily important.
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As is often the case on human rights writ large, Trump has sent mixed signals about what he will tolerate in Syria.
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The economy writ large is affected much more by factors such as interest rates, trade policy, productivity gains, and the business cycle.
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That makes the nomination itself, and the way it's handled, a defining moment for the way Americans see sexual assault writ large.
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We're using Hustle, it's a text messaging app that's helping us connect millennials in particular, but writ large communities together, using text.
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Black Panther is Afrofuturism writ large, the incorporation of distinctly African and African-American narrative symbolism as a means to reclaim modern blackness.
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While much remains to be done to protect consumers online writ large, the Commission's rules establish a baseline level of protection for all.
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Goic, like the Christian Democratic Party writ large, is generally center-left on economic issues and center-right to conservative on social issues.
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Meanwhile, the Trump administration has effectively turned this issue into a referendum on Turkey's relationship with NATO writ large, and America in particular.
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Yet that's our American business plan because we've not told the public writ large the truth that we've got to make some choices.
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The cult is nothing more than a scapegoat, a whipping boy for all of the problems of Hope County and America writ large.
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Maybe this will prove a wakeup call for Matsushita, Maeda, and Nintendo writ large, the moment when Donnel gets the respect he deserves.
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Russia has repeatedly denied sending troops or military equipment to eastern Ukraine and was expected to challenge the ICJ's writ in the dispute.
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In practice, this means that brands will have to treat trans models as unique individuals, rather than spokespeople for their communities writ large.
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In addition, the national security community writ large is not yet agreed on what policy goals an information initiative or surge might serve.
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It tastes a little like penne alla vodka, too, oddly, inexactly and wonderfully — marinara meets tikka masala, with momos as tortelloni writ large.
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Even better-known bands in the genre writ large, such as Germany-based Cock and Ball Torture, have just thousands of Facebook fans.
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The organization filed its petition for a writ of habeas corpus at the US District Court for the District of Columbia last October.
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"I worry that we are seeing a deinstitutionalization of society writ large occurring in not just America but in the world," Ryan said.
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Regardless of which report is more accurate, neither paints a picture of a government that is significantly expanding its writ throughout the countryside.
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We know that trauma is the reason for her behavior, but Halloween never lapses into a simplistic revenge fantasy against men writ large.
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Suggesting a neural network writ large, the objects overhead also seem downright heavenly — constellations in the night sky, celestial bodies orbiting on high.
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As in the Republican Party writ large, some of these commentators will likely turn against Trump if he does lose big to Clinton.
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The question is whether Colombia's government, as well as society writ large, can accept this fact and develop measures to cope with it.
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On his site, Cuddy's name, far from the only one he repeatedly invoked, became a go-to synecdoche for faulty science writ large.
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And despite the fact that his attacks were usually limited to immigrants (often "illegal" ones), he made Latinos writ large feel under attack.
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Plus, these large, sweaty, shirtless men in neon swimming trunks are considered obnoxious, inconsiderate, basic, lecherous—a scourge on the dancefloor writ large.
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At a joint appearance at the White House on Tuesday, Trump continued to show his backing for MBS and Saudi Arabia writ large.
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But for all its layers, "Balls" never gets anywhere near an insightful gloss on the battle of the sexes, writ large or small.
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Cicada killers bear the black and yellow markings of yellow jackets and bumble bees, writ large, onto two or more inches of insect.
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Although "Digital Renaissance" bills itself as a study of the "creative industries" writ large, it concerns itself almost exclusively with hit-driven sectors.
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Cummings also slammed Trump and the Republican Party writ-large for making "glorious statements" on gun control legislation that result in no action.
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This debate is Klobuchar's last chance to make a splash with Iowa voters writ large, and all signs indicate she'll jump right in.
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"Anybody who is propping up conspiracy theories -- promoting mistruths or distruths -- is doing a disservice to the democratic system writ large," Jankowicz added.
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He noted that Democrats were planning to offer multiple motions on specific witnesses, instead of one motion that covered their request writ large.
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It would provide clarity for the American public writ large through a single comprehensive report, as opposed to scattered and self-serving leaks.
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That mandate would seemingly give Mr. Mueller a writ to investigate whether Mr. Trump's interactions with Mr. Comey amounted to obstruction of justice.
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"This person in the White House is incredibly popular and our party writ large likes where we're heading in this country," she said.
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|
A path to citizenship, considered amnesty by many conservatives, would represent a huge blow to Trump's base, and to GOP voters writ large.
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Which brings me back to Mr. Gorka's comments, as well as the overwhelmingly "alpha male" approach the Trump administration is taking writ large.
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Nunes's campaign had reportedly alleged that the group that organized the writ of election conspired with "dark money groups" to harm his campaign.
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But Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson argues that we don't have to look overseas to find the face of angry American populism writ large.
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But I'm curious: Should Spider-Man, or Marvel writ large, make a concerted effort to probe some of this generation's big societal issues?
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That law didn't just go after those involved in 2016 election meddling, but also targeted corrupt oligarchs writ large, among other shady parties.
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Richard Torrey draws the savvy youngsters as cartoonish characters in wiry outline, their dueling fantasies writ large overhead in more sketchily scrawled thought balloons.
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The event, which dates back to 20143, is Americana writ large, an autumn duel that celebrates ingenuity, vision, wit, monster armaments and flying foodstuff.
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The issue whether a nonhuman animal has a fundamental right to liberty protected by the writ of habeas corpus is profound and far-reaching.
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But as the country's first nomination contest, the caucuses are seen as a significant predictor of a candidate's viability in the race writ large.
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He has appealed an earlier decision by a Supreme Court justice who rejected a habeas corpus writ his lawyers had filed seeking his release.
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An important part of the long-term solution—both at Stanford and in the industry writ large—is increasing incoming talent into STEM fields.
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But at one point we have to understand that you do what's in the best interest of the country and its citizens writ large.
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The conversation was less about whether what they did was right than about important it was and how society writ large ought to respond.
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It gives a new writ to nuclear lawlessness, since Iran's having abided by the agreed rules will be proven to have been in vain.
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In 1996, Congress passed the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act, more commonly known as AEDPA, to limit defendants' access to the Great Writ.
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But whacking the mole in Macau has made it pop up elsewhere, where China's writ doesn't run; in Saipan, the Philippines, Cambodia and Australia.
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All over America, black women were still, their eyes watching a form of God, because she represented their image writ large in the world.
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It also makes it that much easier to avoid dealing with things head on, creating an environment that is essentially this tweet writ large.
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But it has upended the Democratic primary, Washington and politics writ large just as it has upended sports, culture and the rest of society.
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The students defined the problem itself differently, as gun violence writ large: not just mass shootings but gang killings, police brutality, domestic abuse, suicide.
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One such "aha!" moment is writ large in Stephen Savage's Little Plane Learns to Write (Neal Porter/Roaring Brook, $16.99; ages 3 to 6).
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With this one statement, Wolff has done more to illuminate the political left writ large than any right-wing op-ed writer ever could.
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"We have to make sure we take care of folks, but I don't think the answer is going after sectors writ large," Gottheimer said.
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If that were to happen, polling has consistently found that the party's voters trust former vice president Joe Biden on foreign policy writ large.
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Needless to say, both the Review and the publishing industry writ large have a blind spot when it comes to books about nonwhite characters.
|
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Granted, sanctions writ large are increasingly seen as ineffective tools in modern geopolitics; it seems like there's always a workaround or hitch to them.
|
|
The vocals—a dry, bitter croak—are pure, tortured black metal writ slow, while the sonorous, complex riffs borrow from the darkest of death metal.
|
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This is Afrofuturism writ large, the incorporation of distinctly African and African-American narrative symbolism in sci-fi as a means to reclaim modern blackness.
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The organization that fought on their behalf, the Nonhuman Rights Project (NhRP), was seeking a writ of habeas corpus, or a right to bodily autonomy.
|
|
In a statement emailed to me, her spokesperson Jeremy Slevin emphasized that she did not mean to imply anything about the Jewish community writ large.
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Over the past two and a half years, she found, Trump posted 990 tweets criticizing reporters, news outlets, or the "Fake News Media" writ large.
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New elections laws put limits on third-party political operations in the months before an election — what the Liberal government calls the "pre-writ" period.
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Google's strong performance in mobile from this last quarter has convinced Wall Street that it is poised to succeed in the mobile business writ large.
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Texas law allows for witnesses who are likely to not show up to trial to be held under an order called a writ of attachment.
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Mrs Merkel's writ does not run in her own party, which recently ousted a close ally from his position as parliamentary leader in the Bundestag.
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The next government will also have to re-examine domestic policies on everything from financial regulation to fisheries as Brussels' writ comes to its end.
|
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First, there are men and women known as uqqal who have undergone the necessary training and discipline to read and understand the faith's holy writ.
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The stark consequences that can flow from maliciously minded lies being crafted to move a particular audience are also writ large across countless history books.
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Her historic candidacy has resonated with many voters interested in seeing someone new, and more representative of the US writ large, in the White House.
|
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And another and another for NYC's mass transit writ large, as the city faces a burgeoning transit crisis with rampant delays, and a growing population.
|
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And unfortunately for America (and, to an extent, the world writ large), his stated views on a number of crucial economic policy questions are absurd.
|
|
Schwartz was summoned to appear before the CPI and, like Fidelis, similarly filed for a writ of habeas corpus, demanding an extension for his appearance.
|
|
Trump accused Democrats writ large of pining for a socialist takeover of the country in an attempt to reshape America in the image of Venezuela.
|
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That extra time is intended to give insurance companies, medical care providers and Americans, writ large, a bit more leeway to adapt to this shift.
|
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The indictment underscores that Hillary Clinton and the Democratic Party weren't victims of happenstance or a broad-based attack on American political parties writ large.
|
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And sure enough, there in that first festival was Brahms's "A German Requiem" writ large, in a performance by Daniel Harding and the Staatskapelle Dresden.
|
|
No doubt during the confirmations process, many senators will continue to voice their support for the political spending rule-making and more disclosure writ large.
|
|
From this fanatic core a culture ripples out, in ever-widening circles of influence: the gun lobby, the Republican Party, the American government writ large.
|
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But I think the optics of the summit writ large show that Trump wasn't prepared, and he should not have gone in the first place.
|
|
The news also bodes well for the industry writ large, given any affirmative action by the SEC in this case could have had broad implications.
|
|
In 2017, Centerlaw filed a petition with the Supreme Court to issue a writ of amparo protecting residents of the district from the drug war.
|
|
Parts of the country are the New York subway writ large, a lesson in what happens when waste becomes endemic and needed investment is deferred.
|
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One gets the sense that these movies aren't just fixing up old plots; they're working as symbolic correctives to Hollywood's mistreatment of women writ large.
|
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"Regardless of the rapid demographic change that is going on in the state, it still maintains a pretty conservative political culture writ large," Blank says.
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"I am for sure happy, ready, willing and able to file a writ petition again on marriage equality and take that battle on," he said.
|
|
That's Haim Steinbach's "hello again," an all-purpose if ambivalent greeting of return writ large in serif font on a prominent wall in the lobby.
|
|
President Trump, his defenders, and the Republican Party writ large have increasingly tied themselves in tighter and tighter knots, piling one conspiracy theory atop another.
|
|
With 1503 percent of new jobs demanding a college degree at minimum, access to higher education has become a proxy for economic inequality writ large.
|
|
She presented herself not just as an opponent of Mr. Trump, whom she called "corruption in the flesh," but of the Washington system writ large.
|
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"The oil industry writ large is struggling for social license right now," Kert Davies, climate activist and founder of Climate Investigations Center, told BuzzFeed News.
|
|
And on Wednesday, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, the highest criminal court in the state, denied his application for a writ of habeas corpus.
|
|
It's also long been an open secret in media that web metrics writ large are bullshit and that Comscore is no stranger to this debate.
|
|
Taking less risk It seems silly for investors to try picking and choosing the best stocks — the market, writ large, historically tends to go higher.
|
|
Francis is broadly popular with American liberals writ large, in part because of his stances on issues including global warming, illegal immigration and income inequality.
|
|
"Shafiq fought against those elements who challenged the writ of State and were involved in target killings of innocent people and security forces," he said.
|
|
If accommodating diverse consciences in a publicly entangled health system gives one pause, perhaps so too should further government takeovers of health care writ large.
|
|
The group filed a writ of habeas corpus on the ground that Alexandros was forcibly taken, said Anel Ortega, a lawyer who works with GIRE.
|
|
His focus was not internet outrage or "wokeness" writ large, but rather white people who are obsessed with seeming — as opposed to being — anti-racist.
|
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"Leung and Yau have manifested an intent ... that they did not intend to make the Legislative Council oath or be bound by it," the writ states.
|
|
The truth is that we need these stories, writ large on the silver screen, to remind us of how far we have — and have not — come.
|
|
It's worth noting that the emergency writ says the canine unit was contacted before police spoke to Montanez during the stop, which seems a bit suspicious.
|
|
It's Game of Thrones fandom writ in microcosm, with all the ridiculous prophecies, backstories, revenge plots, and theories rolled into a single, easy-to-shout catchphrase.
|
|
Finally, petitioners filed a petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus and a Complaint for Declaratory and Injunctive relief with the federal court overnight in Boston, Massachusetts.
|
|
These are the heirs of Cobden and Bright who see the EU as the Corn Laws writ large and the open sea as Britain's natural metier.
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That's great for the first six seasons, but in the seventh we deserve to zoom out and see how the world writ large is reforming itself.
|
|
Only 18% of us believe the baby boomer generation writ large cares about us, and only 16% of us believe the same about baby boomer politicians.
|
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"In the end," he said, "the Grenfell Tower fire is an example writ large of how inequalities of political, legal and economic power can kill people."
|
|
They must contend not only with homophobia writ large, but difficulties faced by all female-fronted films in an industry notoriously unwilling to invest in them.
|
|
The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Monday ordered the drug purchasers suing Endo to respond to its August petition for a writ of mandamus.
|
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And in the end, what is the world but an island writ large, marooned in a vast blankness, burning through its stores of food and fuel?
|
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One of the most evincing themes in Mechanisms of Affection is how easy it is for computers, digital spaces, and technology writ large to be anthropomorphized.
|
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Republicans have tried to cast Trump and Giuliani's actions as part of a legitimate, good-faith attempt to crack down on corruption writ large in Ukraine.
|
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"Pompeo's emphasis on his evangelical Christian background, 'radical Islamism' and criticism of the prior administration's Muslim engagement suggests continued animus towards Muslims writ large," Zeya said.
|
|
Petraeus: Well, obviously, there's a sensitive time in the relationship, not just between Turkey and the United States, but Turkey with its NATO partners writ large.
|
|
Last weekend, Mr. Duterte warned that if lawlessness escalated in the country, he might suspend the writ of habeas corpus to allow for arrests without warrants.
|
|
Seeing the dire consequences writ large should, if nothing else, build momentum to pass broadly supported legislation that would help the industry clean up its act.
|
|
After all, even with all this growth and wealth for the U.S. economy writ large, there are a great many people left out of the success.
|
|
It's also worth mentioning that there is a provincial election in Saskatchewan, and SaskPower (a crown corporation) does not comment on stories during the writ period.
|
|
These nontechnical hurdles come down to whether society writ large grants SpaceX and Elon Musk the freedom to boldly go where no one has gone before.
|
|
It's a debate over the future of the political left writ large: Of whether a return to old-school socialism is both desirable and politically possible.
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Putin may have a reputation for slyness, but his vision of a dictatorial Russia as the dominant world power is writ large over the entire planet.
|
|
It's also important to understand that it's a much uglier and crueler environment that it was pre-Roe, and that's true in our country writ large.
|
|
"I felt it would be disconcerting for my authors to wander into a bookshop and see their editor's name writ large across a hardback," he said.
|
|
Ultimately, his writ extended only as far as the usually squabbling powers making up the Security Council — the highest U.N. executive body — allowed it to run.
|
|
Yet, it could still take 88 years to reach gender parity in Congress and 208 years to reach gender equality writ large in the United States.
|
|
In 2016, five gay and lesbian Indians submitted a writ petition challenging Section 377 on the basis that it violated their rights to equality and liberty.
|
|
They see Mr. Trump's slashing of the national safety net and withdrawal from the international stage as necessities — these things reflect their own impulse writ large.
|
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Defenders of private equity such as Pagliuca argue the benefits they provide to the companies they acquire — and the economy writ large — are not fully understood.
|
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The decision comes as immigration advocates have assailed the administration's efforts to hold more immigrants in detention writ large and its increased arrest of noncriminal immigrants.
|
|
Juggling work deadlines with family illness and nick-of-time travel planning triggered a sustained anxiety spike, and the evidence was writ large on my face.
|
|
The investigation appears to be examining "failures in the Olympic system, writ large, to respond to signs of widespread child abuse," one source told the Journal.
|
|
But the experience of the past few years has led some veteran observers to respect M.B.Z.'s intuitions about the dangers of political Islam writ large.
|
|
His seat is now vacant, prompting the Senate president to issue a writ for a special election to fill the spot, according to the state constitution.
|
|
Trump, writ large: The White House's John Kelly viewed Whitaker, the New York Times reported in September, as being his "eyes and ears" at the Justice Department.
|
|
The film he was planning was a playground toy battle writ large, imagined by a guy with the exuberance and resources necessary to build his own toys.
|
|
"The perils," she writes, "of the broader-canvas follow-up to the sleek and economical indie debut are writ large: This is Difficult Second Album: The Movie."
|
|
"It's the pattern of 2016 writ largem and if you aren't used to it by now, then it is time you came to your senses," Cramer said.
|
|
The fight over Proposition B became a proxy for a much larger battle, between animal rights activists — and HSUS in particular — and the agricultural industry writ large.
|
|
The title plays like a casual game, writ large with a fun through-line that finds Yoshi hunting down scattered "Dream Gems," like so many Dragon Balls.
|
|
In their critiques, the original Charmed trio brings up valid concerns over Hollywood's treatment of actresses over 40, and of older women in the industry writ large.
|
|
In a very essential way, Mr. Bowie helped make fashion writ large — fashion the system, fashion the pop culture force — the ever-mutating megalith we know today.
|
|
That case -- and religious freedom writ large -- is what brought together the nuns, the President, and a few dozen religious leaders in the Rose Garden on Thursday.
|
|
One week after the ruling, the U.S. Supreme Court granted Hawkins's writ of certiorari: In light of the Brown decision, the Florida Supreme Court's judgment was vacated.
|
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Similarly, Albini's lyrics would become as abstract as the music itself, though he'd still find ways to satirize, particularly the macho-driven fascinations of men writ large.
|
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A subpoena is a writ or order commanding a person either to appear and give testimony or to appear and provide certain specified documents, records or things.
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If he had said nothing, and the information had leaked, it would have shaken further the public's confidence in the FBI and the U.S. government writ large.
|
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And while the president pursues this strategy to empower and protect himself, he does so at great cost to the American republic and to democracy writ large.
|
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But in other series of her drawings and paintings, the violence is writ large: She often depicts blood seeping through the gridded tiles of a modern spa.
|
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President Trump's tweet referencing his own horrid new policy threatens to normalize his lies and misstatements and seeks to shroud his tragic misunderstanding of immigration writ-large.
|
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There was some expectation among Republican establishment types in the wake of Trump's victory that GOP voters had gotten that --Trumpism, broadly writ -- out of their system.
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Guys like us, it turns out, are hungry for a place to talk with other men, particularly about how fatherhood is changing us, and changing writ large.
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The Lums engaged a lawyer, who managed to get a writ of mandamus—an order that a legal duty be carried out—served on the school board.
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Two Iraqi refugees detained at Kennedy Airport in New York have filed a writ of habeas corpus seeking to be released, The New York Times reported Saturday.
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The bigger question is what to do about automation and computational propaganda—using information and communication technologies to manipulate perceptions, affect cognition, and influence behavior—writ large.
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It's a powerful document of raw, unfiltered house; its interstellar intimations are a reminder of the healing core essence of dance music and of music writ large.
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Iran&aposs private sector, which has been crippled by rampant red tape, ineffective bureaucracies, and corruption writ large, have had their woes compounded by the sanction headwinds.
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The response to Middle Tennessee's tornadoes is simply a barn-raising in the city, the death-in-the-family casserole and the Sunday second collection writ large.
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As James Hohmann pointed out in the Washington Post, Democrats will use the delay as further evidence the Republican party writ large cannot, or will not, govern.
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These victims, whose names are recited in protests like rosaries, serve as proxies in the long struggle to reform policies of policing and criminal justice writ large.
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This is Army-Navy writ small, the biggest little football game in the country, perhaps the best show in Division III, the determinant of Neptune's favored children.
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Next, Democrats are asking for documents from a broad set of individuals and entities that have come up in connection with the Trump-Russia scandal writ large.
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These businesses are going to experience the brunt of the effects of social distancing, as tourism and public life writ large is curtailed for the foreseeable future.
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We've entered a period in the gaming industry and society writ large where folks who are experiencing harassment or don't feel comfortable at work, they're coming forward.
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They say that his ideological moderation has a greater appeal to Democratic voters writ large than to the vocal but more limited universe of social media users.
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However the difficulties of regulating perpetually iterating Internet services — many of which are also operated by companies based outside the UK — have been writ large for years.
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That's the stark, unequivocal, monochrome message writ large on the Patagonia homepage Monday, following Trump's announcement that the government aims to dramatically cut back two national monuments.
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Steubenville broke and I was like, everything that we've all known and talked about and looked at and pointed at, here are all the characters writ large.
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So it's fitting that the Smartest Guy in the Room ™ among the Democratic candidates gestured to Holy Writ in defending this position, however dubious his exegesis.
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"Seeing that downturn has had a very positive effect on our being able to deal with the capacity numbers and border security writ large," the official said.
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Alfred Chestnut, Ransom Watkins and Andrew Stewart were granted a writ of innocence after being convicted of first-degree murder of a middle school student, DeWitt Duckett.
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It's tricky to make an explicit political statement in dress — unless it's printed across a T-shirt or, perhaps, writ large across a scarlet-'n'-sloganed hat.
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And Pompeo has managed to do something rare in the Trump era: survive in the administration and not wholly alienate himself from the Republican Party writ large.
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The rationale for spending more than $700 billion a year on the Pentagon -- and well over $1.2 trillion for national security writ large -- simply does not exist.
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Each work is a suggestive monochrome involving painted bed sheets on a large panel along with images and texts concerning the woman and her name, writ large.
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Higginbotham observes that the plant was run like the Soviet state writ large — with individuals expected to carry out commands from on high with an automaton's acquiescence.
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Tourism is booming in Tokyo, in part because the city specifically and the nation writ-large caters to foreigners' sometimes inaccurate or culturally insensitive perceptions of Japan.
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Valve's conclusion is reasonable, perhaps, but fails to address a longstanding critique of the platform writ large: Valve's misguided perception that the solution to everything is more data.
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Yet while a number of studies have endeavored to examine the impact of automation writ large on the employment picture, fewer have homed in on machine learning specifically.
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According to an emergency writ filed by Montanez's lawyer, he was pulled over by police on June 21 for not properly yielding while pulling out of a driveway.
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The Thermians are essentially fans writ large, driven to emulate the admirable principles that inform the series, while remaining blind to the flaws of its extremely human creators.
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The Fund is an institution providing invaluable service to its members and the global economy writ large, and I am pleased to have served it for so long.
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Headlines announced that it wasn't just Woodward, but the "yuppie" lifestyle writ large on trial, and the mother, Deborah Eappen, was harshly criticized for not staying at home.
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Without this kind of comparison, it's hard to know if gender studies is uniquely corrupt — or if there's a bigger flaw in the peer review system writ large.
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The big question is where the EPA's talent will go if they leave, and what effect their absence from the workforce would have, writ large, on the environment.
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On Monday she lodged a writ with the Supreme Court seeking to stop what she called harassment and intrusion into her private life by Duterte and his allies.
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Just four votes are required to "grant a writ of certiorari"—the taking up of a case—so Scalia's death will not prevent proceedings of the highest kind.
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The banks "manipulated BBSW so frequently that traders often joked about how easy it was to fix the rate", according to the writ filed in the U.S. court.
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Whether the justices declare the case moot or dismiss the writ of certiorari as improvidently granted, I'd bet the Supreme Court puts off consideration of the travel ban.
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It's interesting when you ask questions about how people behave, and then you see those things being writ large in the nation in which you currently exist in.
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We see it as essential to engage with the political system, but we also see Sunrise's role as being on the vanguard of the movement ecosystem writ large.
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"I feel sadness for what it means for the church writ-large, but more sad about what it means for the individuals who have been abused," Pelosi said.
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One of the most evincing themes that runs through Mechanisms of Affection is how easy it is for computers, digital spaces, and technology writ large to be anthropomorphized.
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He also gave the state attorney general five days to file an emergency writ, a type of appeal, to seek a stay and keep the law in place.
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"The Undressing" is most potent and mysterious when you sense, behind the writ, a writer, and one whose remarkable life story could really be rendered only in poetry.
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And I think if you zoom out far enough at that moment you've got an electorate writ large which is really angry at Washington that just isn't listening.
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Weiss emphasized that substance abuse centers (and health facilities writ large) need to have policies that respect the rights, pronouns, and needs of gender nonconforming and transgender individuals.
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For better or worse, Fish tries to dissociate characters from their actions, toying at a larger thesis about the ills of toxic masculinity writ large onto American society.
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After 9/2003, "all of us" Muslims were being blamed, writ large, for the actions of "some people," the hijackers, and it's important to fight against that conflation.
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They're beautiful wastelands writ small, delicately dotted with suggestions of trash; ruined structures and abandoned encampments; occasional tiny flags or palm trees; and enticing little pileups of paint.
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TIM MILLER: --and the women's--you know, maybe writ large, in the party, the primary voters, there's not a majority of voters who vote on electability; there's some.
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If the court denies his request for an appeal — known as a petition for a writ of certiorari — the lower court's mandate to release the records will prevail.
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Plus, if BlackRock is successful in getting corporate America writ large more focused on "sustainability," it perhaps lessens the need for investors to pick narrower ESG funds anyhow.
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In that case, did we just learn for the very first time that the Kardashians—and reality television writ large—manufacture events to profit from their supposed legitimacy?
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When Israel initially announced that it would allow them entry out of respect for Congress, it captured why keeping them out sends a statement to Congress writ large.
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It's a dynamic that could be taking place in many other districts and it's one that signals alarm for Republicans writ large going into the 2020 presidential election.
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Toobin has spoken before about contributing to false equivalency and made clear his comments Monday were only about his own coverage, not that of the media writ large.
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Elected officials are already calling for a formal investigation into what exactly went wrong at the CDC and with the Trump administration's response to the outbreak writ large.
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Others, especially voters who are affected by the ongoing drinking water crisis in Flint, are skeptical of Michigan politicians writ large and are looking for some new blood.
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This is the second time Writ Large has produced the event in Los Angeles; the first iteration was staged back in 2014, inside Traxx bar at Union Station.
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And for the country writ large, immigrants and their children will be crucial replacements in the labor force as the baby boom generation continues its wave of retirements.
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He defied a writ of habeas corpus, the legal privilege recognized by the Constitution which allows someone being detained to insist that a judge look into his case.
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This is less about a boycott of the Israeli state writ large, and more an American Jew and Israeli citizen expressing her concern with the state's current leadership.
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In the most recent debate, though, tensions have been especially high, driven in no small part by broader frustrations among the public with the Trump administration writ large.
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The government's writ stated Leung had no power to re-administer the oaths to the pair as, given their actions, they were disqualified from taking office under the law.
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The former still does, to a certain extent, though at a time when actual sportswear has infiltrated wardrobes writ large, that term no longer means what it once did.
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The mood was an apt metaphor for Mr. Sanders's performance in the Democratic primary writ large; the more that cable news talking heads proclaimed the race to be Mrs.
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I mean, they do feel slighted by Russia for the interference in the election, and they see that the president isn&apost standing up for election integrity writ large.
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The study suggests government policy and society writ large are failing this group and putting it at a "cumulative disadvantage" on a range of social, personal and economic fronts.
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The US intelligence community writ large is increasingly confident the Russian hacks were aimed at helping Trump, but the 17-agency intelligence community has not officially drawn that conclusion.
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Instead, it was because the Justices' values writ large (social, moral, religious, and partisan) changed when the people on the Court changed or existing Justices simply changed their minds.
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The Greek Cypriots want to scrap these provisions, arguing that security is guaranteed by EU membership (Cyprus joined in 2004, although the EU's writ extends only to the south).
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Trump's defenders have argued that he wanted to tackle corruption in Ukraine writ large, but the president only focused on cases that would falsely tar Biden and Hillary Clinton.
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Yesterday, Twitter rolled out a hefty redesign that includes a new side tab, generous amounts of white space, and most importantly to the internet writ large, rounded corners everywhere.
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Despite his unpopularity with the American public writ large, Trump is extremely popular among Republican primary voters, and the modern GOP has reshaped itself around his agenda and persona.
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"There is a significantly lower level of engagement of the sectors writ large across the board," one lobbyist, who like most others spoke on the condition of anonymity, said.
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Despite the judge in the San Bernardino case granting the writ, the judiciary is not universally comfortable with use of a general purpose law for such a specific purpose.
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A Fight Over a Sacred Mountaintop Will Shape the Future of AstronomyFor years, it seemed as if the future of the Thirty Meter Telescope was writ in the stars.
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BENGALURU, June 13 (Reuters) - Indiabulls Housing Finance Ltd on Thursday said a writ petition alleging financial misdeeds against the mortgage lender had been withdrawn, sending shares nearly 8% higher.
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With the election of Trump last week, that activism becomes more vital than ever as our incoming administration threatens to curtail the rights of the LGBTQ community writ large.
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The League of Conservation Voters has its own scorecard, but it focuses only on officials in office and covers environmental issues writ large rather than climate change in particular.
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Better yet however, for American and Chinese consumers, merchants and banks writ large, would be for U.S. and Chinese payments companies to have unfettered access to each other's markets.
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The past few years have seen a number of phenomenal, progressive and diverse queer female characters on TV writ large, from Orange is the New Black to Black Mirror.
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On Monday, the Justice Department petitioned for a writ of mandamus in the DC appeals court and asked for a stay on the 37 subpoenas issued in that case.
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In the rough countryside of northern Morocco the writer and horticulturist Umberto Pasti has created Rohuna, his garden, which is nothing less than autobiography writ from earth and flora.
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For a new generation of readers, the requisition of the handmaids' wombs quickly came to represent attacks on women's agency writ large, particularly in attempts to restrict abortion access.
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Comey said he instructed a friend — a Columbia University professor — to act as a conduit of the memos, rather than deliver the memos to the media writ-large himself.
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And queer sexism allows gay men to perpetuate the same effects of sexism writ large—income inequality, victimization, and internalized sexism—against men based upon their masculinity or effeminacy.
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What I remember of that drive was how brown everything was, until you arrive at Marfa's simple, transcendent reward, magic-hour light writ huge on Donald Judd's minimalist sculptures.
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Faces Places is primarily about its directors, but it's also a broader portrait — writ large, appropriately — of ordinary, mostly rural French people talking about how they see the world.
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Toll Brothers may not be a typical new homebuilder, but it is clear that the building industry writ large is aiming to pitch its product toward more affluent buyers.
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If you're beginning to notice a theme here, you'd be right to: Writ large, California's voting system is much, much more pro-voter than those in many other states.
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According to the constitution, the president may "in case of invasion or rebellion, when the public safety requires it", suspend the writ for periods of up to 60 days.
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Because of their position in the primary calendar, Iowa and New Hampshire have an outsized influence on the outcomes in later states and on the nomination process writ large.
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Otherworldly On the surface, K. J. Parker's fantastical new tale of empire, MIGHTIER THAN THE SWORD (Subterranean, e-book, $4.99; limited-edition cloth, $40), is a whodunit writ large.
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Both Ahya and Hatzius said the American economy — and the global economy, writ large — should be boosted in 2020 by the cooled trade tensions between the U.S. and China.
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"Roundup products are dangerous to human health and unfit to be marketed and sold in commerce, particularly without proper warnings and directions," the writ filed by Carbone Lawyers says.
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Trump and Congressional Republicans have repeatedly tried to portray Omar and Tlaib as representative of Democratic views on Israel writ large, despite the fact that they are clear outliers.
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There is a hidden language in how we stand together, Schlötter told me—a body language writ large that's so rich and specific that even strangers can decipher it.
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Based in the southern port city of Aden, the government struggles to impose its writ over militias and armed groups there, but strife now looms for its northern foes.
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They include the heads of the country's leading media establishments, the chief of the one remaining security force previously outside his writ and representatives of the kingdom's richest families.
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If he could help to solve their problems, writ small in the ink of a double catastrophe, maybe that could lead him toward a solution for the catastrophes themselves.
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That's actually giving me a lot of hope for Silicon Valley writ large, is that there are these forces who are ... A lot of these people are comfortable, right?
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Rosie Campbell at UC Berkeley's Center for Human-Compatible AI argues that these are examples, writ small, of the big worry experts have about general AI in the future.
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It is the American religious tradition writ large, as the story goes, that shapes the reaction to moral transgression, in contrast to the sharply more lenient attitude of Europeans.
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