I do not mean to belittle the heroic deeds achieved by the pioneers, some whom even laid down their lives in fighting crime. |
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These paintings clearly have precedence in date to the first abstracts of such acknowledged pioneers as Dove, Kandinsky, and Kupka. |
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Perhaps the best part of my visit was visiting my great aunt and uncle, who were both quite the pioneers back in their day. |
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In the spirit of pioneers, we're concocting our own remedies and salving our own wounds. |
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Among the pioneers of e-commerce were the banks, dealers in stocks and shares, and booksellers like Amazon. |
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Both can also be referred to as shifting cultivation, and forest pioneers are sometimes called shifted cultivators. |
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Without such pioneers putting their work into the public domain, the Internet as we know it would not exist. |
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As readership grows, so does the competition, but pioneers are not used to worrying. |
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And to an extent, some forward-thinking pioneers already have made their foray into this new frontier. |
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As pioneers of electronica, it behoves them to be at the forefront of technical developments. |
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North American pioneers are thought to have developed folk medicine by studying the plants sick animals made use of. |
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He was one of the pioneers in school counseling, dedicated to helping young people get a constructive start in life. |
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Euramerican pioneers populated the central Mojave so recently that many survived into the mid-twentieth century as celebrated living relics. |
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The pioneers of political correctness made people think twice before opening their stupid mouths. |
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The pioneers of persuasive advertising copy, however, were usually medicine makers. |
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They will be setting up a working camp in the park, which means they will live as the pioneers did with no electricity and modern conveniences. |
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They benefited from the efforts of the earlier pioneers, but still found state control too restrictive. |
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At present in Singida the Pallotine Fathers are trying to promote the pioneers association. |
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Each cantonment had its own workshops for servicing and repairing vehicles and its own crews of pioneers for servicing and repairing the road. |
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Artilleryman, medics, pioneers and mortarmen, were all needed and eager Diggers stepped forward to fill the ranks. |
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The Western provides Americans with comforting images of resolute pioneers and lone gunslingers. |
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Although assault pioneers were all trained riflemen and could fight as a rifle platoon, their value to the battalion was in their versatility. |
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In the 100 years since, the Wrights have become the most famous aviation pioneers of all. |
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Directors may be pioneers who like to venture into newer and bigger ventures. |
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TiVo pioneered the technology, but the company appears to have gone the way of so many other brave pioneers. |
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Anaesthesiologists have been pioneers in developing and applying patient simulators for research and training. |
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A few pioneers like Alfred Stieglitz were trying to establish photography as a fine art. |
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And Shay Hutchinson has been credited as one of the true pioneers of country music in Ireland. |
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One of the speakers was Professor Noel Rose, who many decades ago, was one of the pioneers of autoimmune research. |
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Early computer pioneers actually borrowed directly from the techniques of ancient artists. |
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They met in their early teens and both grew up listening to electronic music pioneers like Kraftwerk and Brian Eno. |
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Utah was settled in 1847 by Mormon pioneers seeking to establish a theocratic kingdom of God in the desert. |
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But let's not fool ourselves into thinking we went to the Moon because we're pioneers or explorers or selfless discoverers. |
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As British children learned to admire the valour of Drake and Nelson, so young Australians were taught to honour the explorers and pioneers. |
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They are explorers and pioneers in the great tradition like Columbus and Cook who sailed across the oceans. |
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Those astronauts who died were explorers, pioneers and the last of the frontiersmen. |
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In other words the pioneers who settled America shot at every lion they saw and they taught the cats to keep their distance. |
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The U.S. Government could fund and order Lewis and Clark to explore the West, but it could not pay or force pioneers to settle the region. |
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But while he speaks of war-time heroes and exploratory pioneers, he forgets about another interesting lifetime. |
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The vocabulary of these pioneers was based on a primitivising language of simplicity and immediacy. |
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The writings of great masters and new pioneers continue to inspire my artistic journey, and my dancers have patiently travelled along with me. |
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Second, the Moravians were the pioneers in what we would today know as evangelical hymnody. |
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Surely the Parsees of Western India, with a love of games inherited from their Persian ancestors, were the pioneers. |
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Sunflower seed hulls, roasted and ground, were used by Native Americans and pioneers as a coffee substitute. |
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Here you walk the streets side by side with merchants, miners, Indians, Eskimos, pioneers and cheechakos. |
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Life was very hard for these early pioneers and they had to overcome many problems. |
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The submariners of World War One were true pioneers of submarine warfare, especially on this scale. |
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Moreover, the bulk of the newly acquired lands were not democratically distributed to yeomen pioneers. |
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Unfazed, members of the band have, it seems, decided to evolve into sonic pioneers instead. |
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We're all pioneers, breaking ground, changing people's minds about what the Latino image is. |
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I want to be informed, entertained and thrilled by these pioneers, not bored and nauseated by mawkish and self-regarding metaphors. |
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These days the botanical gardens established by those plant pioneers of previous centuries are in their full maturity. |
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One feels the movement should have been booby-trapped by its own pioneers in order to repel the historians of the future. |
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They play it with the enthusiasm of pioneers coming upon uncharted and unclaimed land. |
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The work of pioneers like Dr Stephen Scott and Dr Carole Sutton shows the way ahead. |
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Toshiba were one of the pioneers in mobile computing and their machines still retain a little bit of pioneering class. |
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For now, bioprinting pioneers hope to make use of even the smallest 3D-printed organs. |
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For years, all was quiet as the Western frontier was slowly settled by a trickle of pioneers. |
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He was also one of the pioneers in binaural stereo recording and helped develop the 8-track tape. |
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For warmth and comfort, the pioneers stuffed their moccasins or shoepacks with deer hair or dry leaves. |
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Path was synonymous with trace, another invaluable gift that pioneers used to penetrate the otherwise impassable. |
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In tents, shacks, log cabins and frame dwellings, pioneers gathered together for protection. |
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Cosmopolitans, not tough pioneers, they lacked the grit required to face the hardships of frontier life. |
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Among the pioneers of free verse, D. H. Lawrence stands out as one who, though gifted in metrical verse, is happier without meter. |
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As American pioneers headed westward, scoundrels occasionally would present forged letters of credit to wholesale merchants in larger towns. |
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All inductees, whose seminal work has been influential in the medical and scientific worlds, are pioneers in their respective fields. |
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Interspersed throughout are brief sketches of the lives and works of pioneers like Marconi, Edison, Ben Franklin, and Nicolai Tesla. |
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He is one of the new generation of pioneers in batik design, which he makes on textured woven fabric with the play of soft color gradation. |
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He was listed among the first four pioneers in barley breeding and tested barleys of hybrid origin as early as 1904, but none attained release. |
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The pioneers invested heavily in productive capital assets like mines, overland telegraph lines, dams and artesian bores. |
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Aviation security is breaking new ground and those beginning this training now will be among the pioneers who set policy in this emerging field. |
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The valley of rocks still bears the marks of early pioneers who wrote their names with axle grease on the rocks. |
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He is one of the pioneers of that city's sound and is rightly considered to be the best DJ playing techno in the World today. |
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Second, I was on my way to visit one of the pioneers in community-based ecotourism. |
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Austin, one of the sport's pioneers, has been compared to a soaring seabird, so graceful are his moves. |
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He says he wants to encourage Vincentian youths to think outside the box and become pioneers. |
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Subaru's very good Outback was one of the pioneers, and there are several European all-wheel drive wagons for the image conscious. |
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There was a big turn out at the table quiz for schools organized by the regional council of the pioneers association held in the old school on Friday last 6th December. |
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Charter Life is one of the pioneers of bancassurance in South Africa. |
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Electronic music pioneers Kraftwerk are playing their first of three shows in two nights at Moogfest in Asheville, North Carolina. |
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As one of the b-boy pioneers, he travels around the world, performing, teaching workshops, and judging battles. |
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One year later and 10 blocks away, my mother came into the world, the granddaughter of those pioneers who had roamed the prairie. |
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As pioneers of experiential art, the duo wanted to blur the lines between reality and cartoonish fantasy. |
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John Coffer, one of the new pioneers of the old art of wet plate collodion, lives in a 19 th-century-style, two-room cabin he built himself on an upstate New York farm. |
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Argentina can justifiably claim to being one of beach soccer's pioneers. |
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First, the recentness of the Supreme Court decision may help members of interracial families to see themselves as pioneers or heroes of a new cause. |
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From there they would repair telegraph lines, escort traders and pioneers, and, if necessary, fight the Cheyenne and their allies the Comanches and Kiowas. |
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It is their freedom from the traditional literary, anecdotal, or moralistic associations of painting that has caused him to be regarded as one of the pioneers of modern art. |
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As long as future computer animated films maintain the same level of quality as that of the pioneers in the field, their ascendance can only be seen as a positive thing. |
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Cowpunk pioneers, they combined the thrashy energy of punk with Hank Williams songs and their incendiary live shows left a trail of torched venues in their wake. |
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We meet, too, the pioneers of agricultural science from across the nation, people such as the irrepressible Liberty Hyde Bailey, a ruralist if ever there was one. |
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This section is dedicated to luminaries, pioneers and individuals who have made significant contributions to the international art, science and technology community. |
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His parents were the village awkward squad, anti-socialists in a community of socialists, who built fences to separate them from other, more gregarious pioneers. |
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In the early spring of 1762 Hazen joined the pioneers with a party of settlers who built a primitive sawmill and gristmill and constructed rude shelters. |
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She and her partner had a lot of stature as reporters for The Washington Post, yet they had thrown over those incredible careers to become pioneers in modern market gardening. |
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But you were there, and I want to make the point that I know you were one of the pioneers, and that you did play a significant part in the early development of microcomputers. |
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Silent film has become all but invisible, wiped clean from the collective memory by sheer neglect, and yet it is a world of giants, trailblazing pioneers and hidden delights. |
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Having tonally redefined rap, he was ready to claim the mantle of one of the greatest musical pioneers of all time. |
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People who are only now coming online strike me as trepidatious pioneers, curious about what's out there but apt to flee homeward if the natives seem hostile. |
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Spring is planting season, and the prairie, unlike the days of the pioneers, becomes a monochrome green. |
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Edmonton and Calgary have become the capitals of Ukrainian dance in North America, thanks to dedicated pioneers, teachers and dancers, 99 per cent of whom are volunteers. |
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In San Francisco, one of the pioneers of authentic Mexican food and fine tequila thrives far from the pulse of today's ultra fashionable urban drinking scene. |
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For many years its tight-eye forests blocked the westward trek of pioneers and forced them onto the plains to the north. |
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The inclusion of photographs of some of the pioneers in neuropathology adds to the historical perspective of general pathology and neuropathology in particular. |
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In many ways, Kansas City is a leaving town, a place for pioneers and rovers with an eye on the distant horizon. |
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In a TED talk she delivered this year, Patton said that the general was the grandson of early California pioneers. |
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For those space cadets who, like myself, witnessed the event on television, the spirit of those pioneers will live on, whatever the fallout from the latest tragedy. |
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Like other great pioneers, she took to heart what she had learned from the finest of those who preceded her. |
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Cornwallis fumed, and later historians have echoed his frustration, but should that be accepted as an objective judgement of the behaviour of Halifax's pioneers? |
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Though many of the original Funny Car pioneers switched back to carbureted Super Stockers, Grove learned how to run a supercharged engine with great skill. |
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Yet if modern Hebrew is the reincarnation of Yiddish, he must show a relationship rather than what the Hebrew pioneers claim to have achieved, a rupture. |
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The guides who aided and fleeced the pioneers who moved West were struck by how clueless many of them were about the wilderness they were entering. |
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Yesterday I met Don Bains, one of the web pioneers of this artform, and thereby discovered some really lovely sites displaying virtual panoramas from around the world. |
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The kitchen was housed in a log cabin, because in 1876 it was believed that New England settlers, like frontier pioneers, had lived in log houses. |
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This goes back to the puritans and pioneers who settled this country. |
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She also loves the questing spirit of explorers, pioneers and artists. |
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Holism was the great buzzword of the early pioneers of the green movement. |
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Very broadly speaking, in most armies the low-status pioneers, sometimes not even regarded as soldiers, did the work and the engineers got the credit. |
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The idea of combining different arms was not new but for the sappers and the pioneers there were significant lessons learned throughout the deployment as a joint group. |
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There was plate after plate of exquisite illustrations, interleaved with pages of old-fashioned print, detailing some long and involved story of Pacific pioneers. |
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Topshop was one of the pioneers of turning catwalk cool into high street hip, and it has been hailed as Fashion Retailer Of The Year, not once but twice. |
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They were pioneers in the use of local ores, albeit ironstones from coal measures rather than the celebrated haematites of the Carboniferous Limestone series. |
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Oklahoma is largely populated by pioneers from other States. |
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Danny, full name Danny Foster, is one of the pioneers of UK garage. |
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Although e-cash offers apparent benefits of freeing punters from fumbling for change the idea hasn't taken off anything like as quickly as early pioneers hoped. |
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Even the most imaginative pioneers did not foresee the real impact of GPS on many fields of professional life, in particular my field, geodesy and surveying. |
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An argument can be made that since so many Cajun pioneers copied the Creole accordionist that Cajun music is a descendant of Creole music. But that's another column. |
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He went on to say that the swelling optimism among pioneers of the forties, fifties and sixties had given way, in some cases, to mild despondency. |
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Some people will consider their national heroes to be pioneers of civilization. |
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The interpretation of the wavefunction was one of the thorny issues facing the early pioneers of quantum theory. |
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Cabaret dates back to the 1930s and artists like Wim Kan, Wim Sonneveld and Toon Hermans were pioneers of this form of art in the Netherlands. |
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Uncertain of the meaning of reduction, pioneers, provincial, convention, associators, fencible or establishment? |
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Novera Ahmed and Nitun Kundu were pioneers of modernist sculptures in the country. |
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It is not documented as to why these names were chosen, however it features names of pioneers in the fields of hygiene and tropical medicine. |
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Big data researchers are hoping to learn from the microarray pioneers who have already tackled some of these replicability challenges. |
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Boston thrashers Revocation and Arizonan deathcore pioneers Job For A Cowboy added even more weight to the hellish four-band line-up. |
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The 1930s brought more signal results from Jansky and Reber, early pioneers in the recognition of radio signatures from the Milky Way. |
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Founded in 1961, NimCor is one of the industry's first pioneers in manufacturing carbon fiber air shafts. |
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Clinique's Chubby Sticks, which can be used for both lipstick and lip liner, are one of the pioneers. |
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One of the earliest pioneers of trampoline as a competitive sport was Jeff Hennessy, a coach at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette. |
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New wave pioneers Blondie celebrated their 40th anniversary last year and the band has an awful lot to thank its lead singer for. |
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An official memorial to the church pioneers may be found in the Japanese Garden in Avenham Park. |
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Bringing the festival to a close on Sunday July 19 are the original big beat pioneers of dance music The Chemical Brothers. |
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Many of the companies founded by early pioneers still remain major international brands. |
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The beats were pioneers with no destination, changing the world one impulse at a time. |
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His writings on his experiments and models would become influential on future aviation pioneers. |
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Elements of the division's pioneers joined in the assault on the heights beyond the river and aided in the capture of the position. |
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Alessandro Padoa, Mario Pieri, and Giuseppe Peano were pioneers in this movement. |
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As if the story line were not enough, the author has included mini-biographies on black female pioneers at the back of the book. |
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So, the Walser were pioneers of the liberalisation from serfdom and feudalism. |
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I tell people it was No 1 In Heaven, the 1979 classic LP from quirky Californian synthpop pioneers Sparks. |
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The principal pioneers in developing T-Groups were Kurt Lewin, followed by Kenneth Benne, Ron Lippitt and Leland Bradford. |
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Cecil Rhodes and other early white pioneers like Leander Starr Jameson are buried in these hills at a site named World's View. |
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Earliest inhabitants included the Native American Esselen tribe, followed by pioneers who settled the area in the late 19th century. |
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The Robert and Lucy Thomas Fountain stands as an ornamental monument to the pioneers of the South Wales steam coal trade. |
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Locke ranked alongside Robert Stephenson and Isambard Kingdom Brunel as one of the major pioneers of railway development. |
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General Electric was one of the pioneers and early widespread adopters of planned obsolescence, with a major part in the Phoebus cartel. |
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Because of their fruitfulness and relatively moderate climate, the Chiricahuas provided a haven for the Apaches and later pioneers. |
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The monks were granted extensive lands for sheep grazing and were the pioneers of the woollen industry in Wales. |
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It was reinforced in 1786 when The McDonald arrived at Quebec from Greenock with 520 new pioneers. |
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Written by one of the pioneers of the field, Frontier Orbitals is an essential practical guide to the successes and limitations of this theory. |
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Contains exhibits relating to medical pioneers, William and John Hunter, who were born in the area. |
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English industrialists, Josiah Wedgewood and Matthew Boulton, are often portrayed as pioneers of modern mass marketing methods. |
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Luigi Galvani, one of the pioneers of bioelectricity, discovered that the muscles of dead frogs legs twitched when struck by an electrical spark. |
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The VOC shareholders were the pioneers in laying the basis for modern corporate governance and corporate finance. |
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Nordic countries were pioneers in liberalizing energy, postal, and other markets in Europe. |
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It was a transition zone where explorers, pioneers and settlers were arriving. |
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Eva Hesse, Sol LeWitt, Jackie Winsor, Keith Sonnier, and Bruce Nauman, among others were pioneers of Postminimalist sculpture. |
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Cossacks were warriors organized into military communities, resembling pirates and pioneers of the New World. |
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Most of the Brethren pioneers such as Groves, Darby, and Muller, were convinced Calvinists. |
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It was also widely used by early aviation pioneers for aircraft construction. |
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The pioneers were Uruguay, Chile and Argentina, as they started to develop the first welfare programs in the 1920s following a bismarckian model. |
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It had been Mr. Crilly's home since the early settlement of the pioneers in that region. |
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The ones St Maggie christened brave pioneers in the new nonindustrial revolution. |
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The poets William Blake, Wordsworth and Coleridge were amongst the pioneers of Romanticism in literature. |
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It also gains funds by sponsorship from commercial and industrial companies, in which the Academy was one of the pioneers. |
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Missionaries in many instances became explorers and pioneers. |
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In fact, the director of the EH Williams Group claims they are pioneers in the sector, being among the first to establish the modern-day retail garden centres. |
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On 22 May 1940 during the Battle of France, two British Guards battalions and some pioneers attempted to defend Boulogne against an attack by the German 2nd Panzer Division. |
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Driving School One of the pioneers of the docusoap genre, this 1997 BBC One hit followed a group of learner drivers around Bristol and South Wales. |
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From the first settlement, the pioneers applied themselves to agriculture and by the 15th century Graciosa exported wheat, barley, wine and brandy. |
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One of the most successful pioneers in this field was George Eastman who set up the Eastman Dry Plate Company in 1880, the company which was to become known as Kodak. |
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Tech pioneers such as former Sun Microsystems chief Scott McNealy and Palm co-founder Donna Dubinsky are still around and working on a variety of different projects. |
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The interior and furniture of the gallery were designed by the Belgian architect Henry Van de Velde, one of the pioneers of Art Nouveau architecture. |
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The pioneers of modern art were Romantics, Realists and Impressionists. |
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In general, they are propagating the image of Ukrainians as the European descendants of good peasant stock, of multiethnic pioneers, and of an ancient multiethnic state. |
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Golf's first superstar Harry Vardon, a member of the fabled Great Triumvirate who were pioneers of the modern game, won the Open a record six times. |
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German designers became early leaders of modern product design, with the Bauhaus designers like Mies van der Rohe, and Dieter Rams of Braun being essential pioneers. |
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Coventry has been the home to several pioneers in science and engineering. |
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Despite this, some Methodist churches became pioneers in the teetotal Temperance movement of the 19th and 20th centuries, and later it became de rigueur in all. |
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During the 1950s, famous belly dancers including Samia Gamal, Tahyia Karioka and Naima Akef marked themselves as pioneers of belly dancing in Egypt. |
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It is worth noting that countries that took a long time to adopt women's suffrage had previously often been pioneers in granting universal male suffrage. |
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From that moment on, the two have worked together as pioneers of the underground comics world, creating comics that have been featured in Weirdo and The New Yorker. |
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Wyoming has been a favorite haunt of paleontologists for the past century ever since westering pioneers reported that many vertebrate fossils were almost lying on the ground. |
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Now Jim, of Brancepeth, near Durham, has written a book about one of the pioneers of both aviation and motor cars, Louis Janoir, who built his Delage car body. |
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These are the pioneers of the suppressed and scorned Americans who dared to oppose the relentless bichromatism that entrapped white and black Americans alike. |
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These first spacefarers were pioneers in every sense of the word, and it is with this in mind that French and Burgess introduce us to these brave men and women. |
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The son of Jonathan Hornblower the Elder and the brother of Jabez Carter Hornblower, two fellow pioneers, the young Hornblower was educated at Truro Grammar School. |
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Bramah and William George Armstrong were the two pioneers in the field. |
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Throughout the 1920s, Stopes and other feminist pioneers, including Dora Russell and Stella Browne, played a major role in breaking down taboos about sex. |
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Countries of the Iberian Peninsula were pioneers in this process, seeking exclusive property and exploration rights over lands discovered and to be discovered. |
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Entrepreneurs of Chintamani are regarded as the pioneers of the rolling joss sticks, popularly known as Aggarbatti and basically it is a cottage industry. |
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Beauty Paradise is an exclusive beauty salon in Bains Centre in Pioneers Park in Windhoek. |
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As the match progressed the tussle for a goal advantage continued but Pioneers were content with a well deserved draw. |
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Pioneers in steel, oil, railroads, banking etc. have created foundations that bear their names. |
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Pioneers in neuroeconomics believe the key to understanding economic behavior lies deep in the brain, at the level of cells and synapses. |
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Northern United was unable to increase the score as they pulverized the Pioneers defense, but too often kicked wide. |
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It was attended in a body by the officers and members of the Yukon order of Pioneers. |
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Pioneers swear in fidelity to the Communist Party and Lenin. |
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Pioneers to this region must have been astounded to find massive tree falls that had literally been turned to stone, as if it were an eccentric display of some fabled deity. |
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Pioneers of bushwalking and advocates of national parks were the harbingers of an engagement with nature that at last offered respect for and restitution of the environment. |
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Pioneers of evolutionary biology read him, notably Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace. |
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Pioneers of multiplex cinemas in India, PVR operates 40 cinemas with 173 screens spread over 24 key cities. |
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Pioneers of the modern science of hydrology include Pierre Perrault, Edme Mariotte and Edmund Halley. |
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They include Askam, Barrow Island, Dalton, Hindpool, Milliom, Roose Pioneers, Ulverston and Walney. |
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Pioneers waged wars of extermination against wolves and other predators. |
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Mike Meza nearly single-handedly kept the Pioneers close despite being in foul trouble himself. |
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Pioneers such as Mads Alstrup and Georg Emil Hansen paved the way for a rapidly growing profession during the last half of the 19th century. |
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Sacla', the Pesto Pioneers, have increased the size of their Squeezy Pesto Sauce to make it even more versatile for pesto lovers. |
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Pioneers of central station generation include George Westinghouse and Samuel Insull in the United States, Ferranti and Charles Hesterman Merz in UK, and many others. |
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Pioneers of town planning, such as Thomas Coglan Horsfall and Patrick Geddes called Ruskin an inspiration and invoked his ideas in their writings. |
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The Pioneers were notable for combining the notion of the patronage dividend alongside investing trading surplus for member benefit, especially in education. |
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