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Examples

  • Empowering local stores seems to be a growing trend with national chains e. g.

    Joe Waters: All Cause Marketing Is Local Joe Waters 2011

  • Empowering local stores seems to be a growing trend with national chains e. g.

    Joe Waters: All Cause Marketing Is Local Joe Waters 2011

  • September 23, 2009 at 2:03 pm newspapers do occasionally add pages for a big unexpected story, e. g.

    Did we ever pay for content? « BuzzMachine 2009

  • History, to the X-ray vision that cuts through mere contingencies and distracting loose ends, knows no other movement than a parade of shining essences, e. g.

    Archive 2008-07-01 enowning 2008

  • History, to the X-ray vision that cuts through mere contingencies and distracting loose ends, knows no other movement than a parade of shining essences, e. g.

    enowning enowning 2008

  • P is also for PAVEMENT, which you should only mount in the most extreme circumstances e. g., if you are driven off the road by one of Ken Livingstone's demented new single-deckers, so long that they can't turn corners 6. As London goes down the tubes, village pubs call time

    Columns in other papers 2007

  • There is a bill in Congress to not only legalize abortion, in the case of Repuglicans it will be mandatory, and for select people, e. g.

    Think Progress » Former House Majority Leader Dick Armey (R-TX) 2007

  • Would missile launches in the midst of pulverizing the 18 or so nuclear processing facilities with low-yield nuclear bunker busters cause other nuclear powers, e. g.

    Experts Warn of an Accidental Atomic War Michael Caddell 2006

  • From such a point of view, the issue is whether we choose to picture the state (or some other political institution) as making choices on the basis of some collective interest or intention (e. g., preferences, goals, purposes), alternatives, and expectations (Levi, 1981).

    Rediscovering Institutions JAMES G. MARCH 1989

  • In situations where interpretations and explanations are called forth some time after the events, the institutional “memory” e. g., records, histories and the retrieval system by which it is consulted will affect the degrees to which different participants can use past events, promises, goals, assumptions, behavior, etc. in different ways.

    Rediscovering Institutions JAMES G. MARCH 1989

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