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much and publicized
Toshiki Kaifu's much publicized spring 1991 tour of five Southeast Asian nations — Malaysia, Brunei, Thailand, Singapore, and the Philippines — culminated in a 3 May major foreign policy address in Singapore, in which he called for a new partnership with the ASEAN and pledged that Japan would go beyond the purely economic sphere to seek an " appropriate role in the political sphere as a nation of peace.
While much of normal news agency work is little publicized, many UP / UPI news staffers did gain fame, either while with the agency or in later careers.
John Muir publicized the damage to the subalpine meadows that surround the Valley and in 1890, the government created a national park that included a much larger territory — enclosing Yosemite Valley and Mariposa Grove.
The concert received much publicized media attention with critics praising Spears's performance.
The project prompted much attention when it was publicized in The New York Times in 2003.
The First National Bank in Castle Shannon was the site of a much publicized bank robbery in 1917.
Dimock was the site of a much publicized incident of water contamination from hydraulic fracturing, a process used to extract natural gas from the Marcellus Formation.
Dimock was the site of a much publicized water contamination from hydraulic fracturing.
The much publicized exploits of Al Capone with the Chicago Outfit made him the most famous mobster in American history ; however, Capone did not exert influence over other Mafia families, something Luciano did in creating and running The Commission.
They filed the much publicized case versus Jon Johansen whom they alleged wrote DeCSS.
In 1982 she accepted a much publicized and lucrative recurring guest role in the television series Falcon Crest.
Lawrence quickly gained much popularity, but because her name was never publicized, fans began writing the studio asking for it.
Following the much publicized VH-1 reunion, the original group received many offers and incentives to continue to play together, but disagreements continued between the band members and the reunion was short-lived.
I shall not bury them but give them to the lads who long for a wider education "; his philosophy quietly anticipated Andrew Carnegie's much publicized Gospel of Wealth by more than 25 years.
Concealed doors lead to a walk-in safe that once contained Mrs. Marcos ' fabled jewels and to a staircase leading to the ground floor room that contained Mrs. Marcos ' clothes and accessories, including ternos and the much publicized 3, 000 shoes ( actually 1, 500 pairs ).
In, a group of Yankees met at the famous Copacabana nightclub to celebrate Martin's 29th birthday ; the party ultimately erupted into a much publicized brawl when Martin, Hank Bauer, Mickey Mantle and Yogi Berra challenged a few drunks who were hurling racial slurs at performer Sammy Davis, Jr. A month later, general manager George Weiss — believing Martin's nightlife was a bad influence on teammates Whitey Ford and Mickey Mantle — exiled him to Kansas City.
They were offended not so much by Mencken's widely publicized essay " The Sahara of the Bozart ", with which they tended to agree, but by his subsequent bitter attacks on aspects of Southern culture that they valued, such as its agrarianism, conservatism, and religiosity.
The shanty genre was unfamiliar to much of the lay public until it was publicized in the 1880s, however, so most of the popular references in fiction do not begin until that decade.
Since Hands Across America was much better publicized in the United States, only 4000 runners participated in New York City for Sport Aid.
Hopetoun continued to struggle to diminish pre-existing local parochial sentiments within the states, though his position within the Commonwealth was much better publicized and secured after his coordination and hosting of the Royal Visit in 1901.
This was a much publicized debate about whether the Dershowitz book, The Case for Israel was plagiarized and inaccurate.
She also had a much publicized romance with rock star Rod Stewart ; they were introduced in 1975 by Joan Collins and lived together for over two years, with Ekland giving up her career to focus on the relationship.
In 1987, Crosby was cast in the role of Tasha Yar for the much publicized return of Star Trek to television in the syndicated series Star Trek: The Next Generation.
The much publicized executions of the Arab nationalist leaders in Damascus led Hussein to fear for his life if he were deposed in favour of Ali Haidar.

much and wartime
The war years also saw the flowering of the Powell and Pressburger partnership with films like 49th Parallel ( 1941 ), The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp ( 1943 ) and A Canterbury Tale ( 1944 ) which, while set in wartime, were very much about the people affected by war rather than battles.
The army was organized into a small standing army of a few thousand, which defended the capital and the palace, and a much larger conscription-based wartime army.
Its domestic market is much smaller, and almost all wartime production was devoted to fighter and bomber types, while the US was also building military transport aircraft, which could be easily adapted to the airliner role.
Marat's radical denunciations of counter-revolutionaries supported much of the violence that occurred during the wartime phases of the French Revolution.
However the Prime Minister, Lord Liverpool, aware of growing opposition to wartime taxation and the demands of Liverpool and Bristol merchants to reopen trade with America, realized Britain had little to gain and much to lose from prolonged warfare.
Although stories of his courageous wartime service earned him much respect among fellow actors and fans alike, files held in the Public Records Office reveal he had actually been discharged from the Army for mental instability and having a " psychopathic personality ".
But Wesley finally did get tired of her wartime lifestyle, she realized that her way of life had become too excessive: " too many lovers, too much to drink ... I was on my way to become a very nasty person ".
At first, Yoshida — whose battles with Kishi dated from their opposing positions during the wartime mobilization — wanted no part of him, so much so that he had intervened with the Occupation authorities to keep Kishi from being de-purged.
He appeared in the 1955 BBC Television serial Quatermass II, had a role in the Powell and Pressburger wartime drama Battle of the River Plate ( 1956 ), and came to wide popular attention in Britain when he played the duplicitous Spanish envoy Mendoza in the ITC Entertainment series Sir Francis Drake ( 1961 – 62 ), after which he was much in demand ; an ' in-joke ' in the 1971 Doctor Who story Colony in Space refers to that role: the Brigadier tells the Doctor not to worry — the suspected sighting of the Master was only the Spanish Ambassador!
The advantage of a scientifically and technologically sophisticated country became all too apparent during wartime, and in the ideological Cold War to follow the importance of scientific strength in even peacetime applications became too much for the government to any more leave to philanthropy and private industry alone.
As President throughout much of World War II, Franklin D. Roosevelt on the domestic front used his fireside chats and the press to explain and justify his difficult wartime decisions abroad.
After much audience cheering, he then defended free speech during wartime and received a standing ovation after his conclusion.
Making unreasonable profits from war is widely considered unethical and is deeply unpopular, so attempts to prohibit excessive war profiteering, such as the imposition of an excess profits tax, receive much political support in wartime.
The CP was more vocal and consistent in supporting the wartime no-strike pledge – a position that ultimately cost it much support within the labor movement.
While a belt was originally never worn with a suit, the forced wearing of belts during wartime years ( caused by restrictions on use of elastic caused by wartime shortages ) contributed to their rise in popularity, with braces now much less popular than belts.
Faurisson generated much controversy with a number of articles, published in the Journal of Historical Review and elsewhere, as well as various letters he has sent to French newspapers ( especially Le Monde ), which deny various aspects of the Holocaust, including the existence of homicidal gas chambers in Nazi concentration camps, the reality of the systematic killing of European Jews using gas during World War II, the authenticity of The Diary of Anne Frank, and the veracity of Elie Wiesel's accounts of his wartime suffering.
In much of Asia, brown rice is associated with poverty and wartime shortages, and in the past was rarely eaten except by the sick, the elderly and as a cure for constipation.
However much he may have wanted to see it implemented, emergency measures for wartime were in effect.
Gen. George Marshall approved a Broadway production of a wartime musical for the army, allowing Berlin to conduct the arrangements and rehearsals at Camp Upton much like he had done during World War I. Sgt.
A lineup of S. E. 5a aircraft belonging to 32 Squadron ( the wartime censor has scratched out serial numbers on the negative -- but left the much more revealing squadron markings )
Generally, the wartime Vis were of much lower quality than the original, and further degrading towards the end of the war.
The interior of St Olave's only partially survived the wartime bombing ; much of it dates from the restoration of the 1950s.
At the insistence of the United States, and much to the chagrin of Winston Churchill, the wartime leader of Britain, British forces were given, as their primary goal in the war against Japan, the task of recapturing Burma and reopening land communication with China.

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