Titled " Affirmative Actions : Artists at Work, " its selections often lack the physical ambition ( read costliness ) and political fervor of previous years, which means that overreaching is minimized.
32.
The American Meat Institute, which represents the nation's meat packers and processors, agrees the current system needs to be overhauled, but objects to the lack of flexibility, costliness and dictatorial style of the proposed regulations.
33.
In December 1646 he was sent as ambassador extraordinary to the Hague, but the results of his embassy by no means corresponded to its costliness, and when he returned to Denmark in July 1647 he found the king profoundly irritated.
34.
While optimization technology can be applied to videos played on a variety of media-consuming devices, the costliness of mobile streaming and increase in mobile video viewers has created a very high demand for optimization solutions among mobile service providers.
35.
One would imagin it scarce fit to beare anything . . " On the cause of its increasing costliness, he stated, " thanks to the rich English who sent orders that it was to be got for them at any price ".
36.
Michael Kharfen, a spokesman for the Department of Health and Human Services, said the amounts of the emergency grants had been based on a formula taking into account the coldness of the state's temperature and the costliness of the heating costs.
37.
Cotter et al . went on to show the costliness of this social immune response-by providing females with microbe-infested carcasses, they found that the upregulation of antibacterial activity that followed led to a 16 % decrease in lifetime reproductive output.
38.
He said the United Nations should continue with its policy of raising international public awareness of global issues through large-scale conferences, such as the population summit in Cairo and the upcoming women's conference in Beijing, despite criticism of their costliness.
39.
What you see today is the authentic excess of Victorian design, all but shouting its costliness : a square, powerful brick structure, retaining classical details, filled with painted ceilings, inlaid floors, gold leaf, marble, tiger maple, mirrors and etched glass.
40.
But the fact that a course of instruction is required, of even a low degree of costliness, or that the labourer must be maintained for a considerable time from other sources, suffices everywhere to exclude the great body of the labouring people from the possibility of any such competition.