What gave Shaw the impression that the law accords print and broadcast journalists the same rights? |
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Shaw requested that the income from his legacy should be distributed to subsidise cultural activities in Carlow. |
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Shaw has problems with shaping the final chorale, rushing both the climax and the closing diminuendo. |
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Like Minnie Burton, Rose was the child of Shoshone parents and had come to Fort Shaw from Idaho's Lemhi Agency. |
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Though Shaw was prone to bouts of megalomania, he viewed his apotheosis with amused detachment. |
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Shirley should have seen bubbles burbling up as Shaw vented the expanding gases in his rebreather and drysuit. |
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The outstanding rhythm section included pianist Claude Hopkins, Arvell Shaw on string bass, and Buzzy Drootin at the drums. |
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Long Lee Under-7s clocked up a 7-3 victory over Eldwick after Kian Shaw scored a goal in the first minute. |
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Marco, picking up the scent, tries to investigate, following Shaw around the country. |
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Shaw said it was vital to teach everyone in your business how to deal with awkward customers. |
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Construction crews broke ground last week on the long-awaited skateboard facility at Shaw Millennium Park. |
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The point was made another way yesterday by Martin Shaw, professor of international relations and politics at Sussex University. |
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For his research, Mr Shaw trawled through the minutes of more than 600 meetings, many beautifully hand-written in old Woolworths jotters. |
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A good bibliography of Spencer's publications is given by Shaw, and the Bibliography of North American Geology gives an even more complete list. |
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So Fiona Shaw presents us with a woman who is wreathed in actorly display yet is also in a state of nervous panic. |
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A recent system swap between Shaw and Rogers gave Shaw control of systems in Western Canada. |
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In 1959 he scored four straight kayos two of which were over rugged Joe Shaw and talented Al Andrews. |
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Long characterised as a didactic brainbox, Shaw, at his best, was a displaced poet. |
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From exaggerated mannishness to excruciating kittenishness, Shaw never for a second stops Acting. |
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Discovered by the press, he speedily re-enlisted, this time as Pte Shaw of the Tank Corps. |
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For years, Shaw spent his days spraying termites with pesticides and his nights in worried sleep. |
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Never did Shaw speak a truer word, that all professions are conspiracies against the laity. |
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Mr Shaw is a first year graduate student in physics at the University of Southern California. |
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Shaw was often criticized for writing plays full of unsubstantial, if witty, banter. |
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Marlena Shaw is described as a true original and one of the most charismatic and versatile vocalists on the scene today. |
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Shaw starts fumbling and, for the first time, lets out an audible grunt of effort. |
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Born in Dublin in 1856, Bernard Shaw was a firm believer in home rule for Ireland. |
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Wayne Shaw and Stephen Dunn layer complementary guitar parts over Brad Higgins' melodic bass lines. |
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Imploding his linear narrative in a single frame, Shaw creates on canvas a kind of literary black hole. |
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Yet still others, like Gertrude LaRance of the Little Shell band of the Chippewa, had nothing but fond memories of their years at Fort Shaw. |
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The layeredness that Smithson found within the various strata of the jetty, Shaw finds in, and grafts into, the process of textual production. |
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Traffic warden Gerald Shaw hangs up his fluorescent coat for the last time today after 16-and-a-half years of duty in the town. |
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It can appear in the urine of autistic children at very high levels, and the source is unclear but Shaw suggests it could be a product of breakdown of arabinose in the gut. |
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Reece Webb's opener was followed by goals from Niall Wals and Keann Shaw. |
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Another important ally gained at this period was Harriet Shaw Weaver, business manager and then editor of the Egoist, and a lifelong benefactress of Joyce. |
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It was Nagendra Shaw and his team who stole the show afterwards. |
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Just before you begin, Mr Shaw, I understand the parties have been informed that I hold a small parcel of shares in Publishing and Broadcasting Limited. |
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Some of them, like Irwin Shaw, faded early, and some, like Styron, faded in the stretch. |
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The main purpose of stating the case is this, that your Honour has indicated that a case will be stated in the next few days in the matter of Shaw. |
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But times have changed and the chatelaine, Lucinda Shaw Stewart, has diversified into other businesses, like so many other members of the landed gentry. |
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Pygmalion was the first of three Shaw adaptations that he was to direct, and the first film on which the great dramatist himself worked as scriptwriter. |
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In 1994, Bezos took his wife, left a cushy job as vice president of hedge fund D.E. Shaw, and went west. |
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Community services manager at CDA Peter Shaw has been giving talks on British Sign Language and every talk he has given has been followed by donations and letters of thanks. |
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Summers had a brief, lucrative part-time gig last decade at hedge fund D.E. Shaw. |
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Shaw points out that hydraulic hammers and pulverizer attachments have allowed them to pick up demolition work on bridges and commercial and industrial buildings. |
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Satisfied that Ganzel, Shaw, and Leifer were all telling the same story, volk concluded the matter was resolved. |
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So if you've realised how unappealing walking around in the cold is, then go get warm in Teddy Hall and acquaint yourself with a little Bernard Shaw. |
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The starry cast is led by Ralph Fiennes as Mark Antony, Simon Russell Beale as Cassius, Paul Rhys as Brutus, Fiona Shaw as Portia and John Shrapnel as Caesar. |
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Buddy was just beginning with Artie Shaw then, and once in a while he would give me and my friend Billy half a lesson. |
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Shaw put himself right alongside the line and took a minute to shake hands and greet each delegate. |
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He was unnerved when he hired a Grand Master to tutor her in chess and, after a few months of lessons, she started beating Shaw. |
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When Celeste Shaw was growing up in Colorado Springs, she and Sara, her younger sister, were inseparable. |
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In 1999, after three years of construction, the old candy factory on the corner of Queen and Shaw reopened, converted into stylish and expensive residential lofts. |
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Shortly after being laid-off as an account executive for Coca-Cola, Harris and his two fraternity brothers, Shaw and Smith, came together to further develop the idea. |
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Their Internet connection is acting up, so I mucked about and deduced that either Shaw is having issues or stranger things are afoot, then promptly fell asleep. |
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Shaw filed a missing persons report with the Colorado Springs Police Department and contacted the American consulate in Tijuana. |
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It's just an incredibly natural film where Robert Shaw heads up a crew of four men who hijack a New York City subway train and ransom the passengers for a million dollars. |
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Of the eight rappers that Shaw follows over the course of a year, one winds up dead, one gets a record deal, and the rest end up exactly where they started. |
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When Shaw went to the bottom on his rebreather, he tooled around exploring, used only 5,800 liters of gas, and got back to the surface in nine hours and 40 minutes. |
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For the past several years, Shaw has created works using holographic laminate, a two-dimensional material that can produce three-dimensional effects. |
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Mr Hughes-Wilson's views lend weight to the words of George Bernard Shaw. |
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Whereas quotations with an apothegmatic feel are normally ascribed to Shaw, those with a more grandiose or belligerent tone are almost automatically credited to Churchill. |
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Influential natives included patriot James Otis, historian and writer Mercy Otis Warren, jurist Lemuel Shaw, and naval officer John Percival. |
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This name was coined in the late 19th century by British journalist Flora Shaw, who later married Lord Lugard, a British colonial administrator. |
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Professor Dodd and Professor Malcolm Shaw of Leeds University supported this proposition. |
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Once, when I was a comiconomenclaturist, I captured the name Rick Shaw. On the radio, t'other day, was a Robin Banks. |
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A path heads directly west from the triangulation pillar to reach the road that is Deepdale Lane near White Shaw Moss. |
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The River Beal, flowing northwards, forms the boundary between Oldham on one side and Royton and Shaw and Crompton on the other. |
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The stone Lady Shaw Bridge still exists at this point, as do the ruins of an old inn. |
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Shaw has been elected assistant vice president, ad valorem tax, of its Coastal States Management Corporation subsidiary, based in Houston, Texas. |
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Major, Don Mango, Richard Shaw, Gary Venter, Steve White, and Susan Witcraft. |
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Shaw decided that this area, and others like it, needed a new approach to reduce juvenile delinquency. |
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George Bernard Shaw turned the Edwardian theatre into an arena for debate about important political and social issues. |
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Oliver Valves based off the B5085 in Shaw Heath, Knutsford, makes needle, check, gate, relief and ball valves for the oil and gas industry. |
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Reflecting Roadstuds Ltd, where cat's eyes were invented by Percy Shaw, are in Boothtown, in the north of Halifax. |
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The inventor of cat's eyes was Percy Shaw of Boothtown, Halifax, West Yorkshire, England. |
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On March 15, 1935, Shaw founded Reflecting Roadstuds Ltd, which became the first manufacturer of raised pavement markers. |
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The Shaw Library, housed in LSE's Founders Room in the Old Building contains the School's collection of fiction and general readings. |
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According to his autobiography, he and Shaw played cowboys in a silent film that was never released. |
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Chesterton and Shaw were famous friends and enjoyed their arguments and discussions. |
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Shaw represented the new school of thought, modernism, which was rising at the time. |
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Belloc was closely associated with Chesterton, and Shaw coined the term Chesterbelloc for their partnership. |
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George Bernard Shaw even remarked that Great Expectations was more seditious than Marx's Das Kapital. |
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Once Shaw returns home, his battlefield exploits are quickly taken advantage of by Iselin, a hard-line McCarthyesque anti-communist crusader. |
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Choirs like the Robert Shaw Chorale, the Norman Luboff Choir, and The Seafarers Chorus have released entire albums of shanties and sea songs. |
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Robert Shaw, the actor who sang the tune in Jaws, also sang it years earlier in a 1956 episode of the television show The Buccaneers. |
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The cause of authentic performance was advanced in 1965 by the publication of a new edition of the score, edited by Watkins Shaw. |
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Elgar refused, but would have collaborated with George Bernard Shaw had Shaw been willing. |
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The following year, the Elgars moved back to London, to a large house in Netherhall Gardens, Hampstead, designed by Norman Shaw. |
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The film starred Charlize Theron and Michael Fassbender, with Noomi Rapace playing the leading role of the scientist named Elizabeth Shaw. |
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This issue was first introduced by the Irish Parliamentary Party led by Isaac Butt, William Shaw and Charles Stewart Parnell. |
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In November 1873, under the chairmanship of William Shaw, it reconstituted itself as the Home Rule League. |
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It also starred Michael Caine, Christopher Plummer and Robert Shaw as Squadron Leaders. |
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Among the most notable of the early missionaries were Barnabas Shaw and William Shaw. |
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George Bernard Shaw was his neighbour in London for several years, and once participated in a Western that Barrie scripted and filmed. |
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Shaw included an account of the argument between Harris, Douglas and Wilde in the preface to his play The Dark Lady of the Sonnets. |
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In the same year the critic William Archer suggested a collaboration, with a plot by Archer and dialogue by Shaw. |
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The young Shaw suffered no harshness from his mother, but he later recalled that her indifference and lack of affection hurt him deeply. |
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Left in Dublin with his father, Shaw compensated for the absence of music in the house by teaching himself to play the piano. |
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Early in 1876 Shaw learned from his mother that Agnes was dying of tuberculosis. |
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Shaw maintained contact with Lee, who found him work as a rehearsal pianist and occasional singer. |
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Nonetheless, when the Edison firm merged with the rival Bell Telephone Company, Shaw chose not to seek a place in the new organisation. |
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For the next four years Shaw made a negligible income from writing, and was subsidised by his mother. |
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Here he met Sidney Webb, a junior civil servant who, like Shaw, was busy educating himself. |
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On 5 September 1882 Shaw attended a meeting at the Memorial Hall, Farringdon, addressed by the political economist Henry George. |
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Shaw then read George's book Progress and Poverty, which awakened his interest in economics. |
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Its profile was raised in 1889 with the publication of Fabian Essays in Socialism, edited by Shaw who also provided two of the essays. |
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In 1884 and 1885, through the influence of Archer, Shaw was engaged to write book and music criticism for London papers. |
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When Archer resigned as art critic of The World in 1886 he secured the succession for Shaw. |
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Their emphasis on morality appealed to Shaw, who rejected the idea of art for art's sake, and insisted that all great art must be didactic. |
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From 1895 to 1898, Shaw was the theatre critic for The Saturday Review, edited by his friend Frank Harris. |
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In January 1893, as a Fabian delegate, Shaw attended the Bradford conference which led to the foundation of the Independent Labour Party. |
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During the first decade of the twentieth century, Shaw secured a firm reputation as a playwright. |
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As the new century began, Shaw became increasingly disillusioned by the limited impact of the Fabians on national politics. |
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Shaw visited Dublin in August, and met Michael Collins, then head of the Free State's Provisional Government. |
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At the end of the decade Shaw produced his final Fabian tract, a commentary on the League of Nations. |
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Shaw met an enthusiastic welcome in South Africa in 1932, despite his strong remarks about the racial divisions of the country. |
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Harried by the intrusive attentions of the press, Shaw was glad when his ship sailed from New York harbour. |
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The revival in his popularity did not tempt Shaw to write a new play, and he concentrated on prolific journalism. |
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In the same year the government asked Shaw informally whether he would accept the Order of Merit. |
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Shaw contributed more than 150 articles as theatre critic for The Saturday Review, in which he assessed more than 212 productions. |
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After the turn of the twentieth century, Shaw increasingly propagated his ideas through the medium of his plays. |
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Shaw later explained that he had intended An Unsocial Socialist as the first section of a monumental depiction of the downfall of capitalism. |
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Through his journalism, pamphlets and occasional longer works, Shaw wrote on many subjects. |
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Shaw published articles on travel, took photographs of his journeys, and submitted notes to the Royal Automobile Club. |
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Crawford lists numerous playwrights whose work owes something to that of Shaw. |
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It produces plays by or written during the lifetime of Shaw as well as some contemporary works. |
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It became the first theatre group to present all of Shaw's stage work, through their monthly series Project Shaw. |
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The International Shaw Society was founded in 2002 and regularly sponsors Shaw symposia and conferences in Canada, the US, and other countries. |
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Besides his collected music criticism, Shaw has left a varied musical legacy, not all of it of his choosing. |
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Morris also regularly contributed articles to the newspaper, in doing so befriending another contributor, George Bernard Shaw. |
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In 1943 Burton played Professor Henry Higgins in a school production of another Shaw play directed by Philip, Pygmalion. |
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It went on to provide a breakthrough for some of the city's most famous writers, such as Synge, Yeats himself and George Bernard Shaw. |
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There are rare dramatists, notably George Bernard Shaw, who have had little preference as to whether their plays were performed or read. |
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It was kind of a team thing, because Shaw is a horse, but we bum-rushed him and got him before he got any momentum,' Matson said. |
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Others in form were Tom Pattison, Josh Shaw, Jordan Silds, Reece Lawrence and Mathew Walker. |
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He worked for a hedge fund, D.E. Shaw, where he made a ton of money. |
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Elsewhere, Newcastle Benfield will face the winners of Darwen v Chadderton, while Shildon travel to take on Shaw Lane Aquaforce. |
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James Spratley, listed building consent for installation of satellite dish, 4 Long Ing Cottages, Shaw Lane, Holmfirth. |
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Shaw embarked in 1873 on a comparable mission to Europe, he represented a sleepy cow town with 6,000 residents. |
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The practice was a linchpin to Shaw's utopic thinking and forms the focus of Yde's Bernard Shaw and Totalitarianism. |
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Shaw paused to consider the 6,500 geophysicists convening for their annual meeting across the street. |
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Only it's Shaw with a heart and gonads, a species of drama that exults in messy emotions and impure beliefs. |
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Stephen Allinson headed RA in front and after Stuart Shaw equalised with a direct free kick, Whitehaven had Kevin Law sent off on 66 minutes. |
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Penrhyn struck first in the 25th minute when Shaw raced through to fire a half-volley across keeper Louis Mackin into the bottom corner. |
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Inside the hangar, Kristine Shaw giggled nervously as she worked a hang glider through a computer-simulated flight. |
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The 2007 Best of NeoCon product competition honored Shaw Contract Group with a Gold Award for its Dressed to Kill tile collection. |
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Shaw was forced to adjourn Tuesday's EGM for 10 minutes to conduct an emergency Board meeting before admitting defeat and abandoning it. |
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Shaw took an ironing board out to his garden and pressed his pants, with his iron on a long extension cord. |
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Following a Cam Murphy flyout, Sam Shaw took a pitch off the shoulder to load the bases with the top of the order coming up. |
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Thousands of other women have followed Shaw into the franchising world, which now has a workforce of more than 8 million people. |
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To that witty, avuncular Fabian figure, Bernard Shaw and Totalitarianism supplies Teiresian alterity, a counter-narrative of identity that is unsettling and at times shocking. |
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Psychoanalytic therapist Shaw discusses narcissism as a relational phenomenon, building off of previous work characterizing the narcissistic bent of many cult leaders. |
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During his later years, Shaw enjoyed tending the gardens at Shaw's Corner. |
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Clarinetists ever since have been measured against him, although there certainly were others who were rivals during that time, like Artie Shaw and Woody Herman. |
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There was more drama to follow in stoppage time as Luke Shaw was sent off for a second yellow card offence but that was of little comfort to the Hammers vice-captain. |
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Shaw, 17, was slain near his Arlington Heights home on March 2 by an 18th Street gang member who police say had targeted Shaw because he believed he belonged to a rival gang. |
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In 1944 nine Shaw plays were staged in London, including Arms and the Man with Ralph Richardson, Laurence Olivier, Sybil Thorndike and Margaret Leighton in the leading roles. |
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During the 1920s Shaw began to lose faith in the idea that society could be changed through Fabian gradualism, and became increasingly fascinated with dictatorial methods. |
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But Rangers soon scored again when Will Foster curled his shot into the top corner from near the corner flag and Al Stevens provided for Elliot Shaw to make it four. |
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He and Leigh were close friends, and Shaw tried hard to persuade him to play the part, but Gielgud had taken a strong dislike to the director, Gabriel Pascal. |
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The other eminent creative artist most closely associated with the festival was Sir Edward Elgar, with whom Shaw enjoyed a deep friendship and mutual regard. |
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Reviewers were lukewarm about the direction by Glen Byam Shaw and the designs by Roger Furse, but Olivier's performance in the title role attracted superlatives. |
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After Saint Joan, it was five years before Shaw wrote a play. |
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Shop Direct Group have their Shaw National Distribution Centre. |
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The pint-sized Yorkshire Terrier leapt into action by hitting a panic button and crying into the intercom when his owner, Judith Shaw, feared she was having a heart attack. |
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Shaw noted that automakers are finally committing to stop using mercury switches, which can often be found in the trunks and glove compartments of vehicles. |
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After the First World War began in August 1914, Shaw produced his tract Common Sense About the War, which argued that the warring nations were equally culpable. |
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He gave high praise to Mona Limerick's 'dragonsome Blanche' and thought Shaw would redraft his description of his character Cokane as played by Charles Bibby. |
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Shaw asks, not for a new kind of philosophy, but for a new kind of man. |
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George Bernard Shaw the Grovy A shaw is a small thicket or grove. |
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Others, including the future Labour prime minister Ramsay MacDonald, wanted unequivocal opposition, and resigned from the society when it followed Shaw. |
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There had earlier been a romantic liaison between Shaw and Campbell that caused Charlotte Shaw considerable concern, but by the time of the London premiere it had ended. |
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Shaw has discovered, with characteristic sense, that it is very doubtful whether any existing human being with two legs can be progressive at all. |
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He had declined, but when she insisted on nursing him in a house in the country, Shaw, concerned that this might cause scandal, agreed to their marriage. |
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The previous year she had proposed that she and Shaw should marry. |
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Chesterton's style and thinking were all his own, however, and his conclusions were often opposed to those of Oscar Wilde and George Bernard Shaw. |
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Two of the actors, Gabriel Spenser and Robert Shaw, were also imprisoned. |
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Among the cast of the London production was Florence Farr, with whom Shaw had a romantic relationship between 1890 and 1894, much resented by Jenny Patterson. |
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The two figures in the contemporary art world whose views Shaw most admired were William Morris and John Ruskin, and he sought to follow their precepts in his criticisms. |
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In his lifetime Shaw professed many beliefs, often contradictory. |
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The project foundered, but Shaw returned to the draft as the basis of Widowers' Houses in 1892, and the connection with Archer proved of immense value to Shaw's career. |
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Initially, Shaw refused to seek clerical employment in London. |
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Between 1865 and 1871, Shaw attended four schools, all of which he hated. |
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A Centrica spokesman said a service was held in the Fife town of Kirkcaldy for John Shaw, 51, known as Jakie, one of those killed in the crash in Morecambe Bay. |
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Shaw pushed the man into the bathroom where he punched him to the side of the face and squirted shaving foam over him, some of which went onto his own jacket. |
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It's probably a good thing for us,'' Brian Shaw said of the yackety-yak. |
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Shaw claims Floraplex is a win-win situation for both ends of the business, though the middlemen may find themselves looking for a new line of work. |
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Authors who have been influenced by Bunyan include Nathaniel Hawthorne, Herman Melville, Charles Dickens, Louisa May Alcott and George Bernard Shaw. |
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Local sources say the girls and their cousins Latisha Shakespear and Cheryl Shaw, both 18, were caught in the crossfire when the Johnson Crew and the Burger Bar Boys clashed. |
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Sir Hiram Shaw Wilkinson served in British Consular Service in China and Japan for 40 years retiring as Chief Justice of the British Supreme Court for China and Corea. |
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As it was William Shaw, who died in 1720, and who donated the land for the old church to be built on, it is possible that the initials are those of some of his ancestors. |
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Yeats, Aleister Crowley, Lady Gregory, Tallulah Bankhead, George Bernard Shaw, the cellist Guilhermina Suggia, the Marchesa Casati and Elizabeth Bibesco. |
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Dublin has a significant literary history, and produced many literary figures, including Nobel laureates William Butler Yeats, George Bernard Shaw and Samuel Beckett. |
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There's faux jeopardy, tension and dirty tricks, which even to the untrained eye is as clear to spot as the miscasting of overqualified Adam Shaw. |
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Chances are that Shaw and his companions took possession of the gentleman's smoking room in the converted basement... a suitable place for nicotian philosophical meditations. |
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Instead, in a more Brechtian key, we are left stranded in catastasis, and Bernard Shaw and Totalitarianism forgoes anodyne closure in favor of sustained dissonance. |
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The other nominees were Karla Black, Hilary Lloyd and George Shaw. |
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Among many American writers professing a direct debt to Shaw, Eugene O'Neill became an admirer at the age of seventeen, after reading The Quintessence of Ibsenism. |
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In 1903 Shaw joined in a controversy about vaccination against smallpox. |
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The stars of the film were George Baker, Stanley Baker, Harry Andrews and Michael Medwin, with Stephen Boyd and Ronald Lewis, and Robert Shaw also had a small part. |
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