Przykłady użycia

Przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.

Meanwhile, a YouGov survey for the Sunday Times found the Tory lead had dropped from 10 to eight points over the past week. It put the Tories on 40%, Labour (up three) on 32% and the Lib Dems down two on 18%.
The report will provide ammunition for all the main parties ahead of the first televised leaders' debate of the election campaign, on Thursday. With health bound to be a key issue for voters, it says that an increase in the number of GPs, new walk-in centres and GP-led health centres with extended opening hours, have made it easier to find a doctor at a convenient time and place. But not for everyone. "There remain some people who are still not able to see their GP at times that suit them and confusion about out-of-hours services," it states.
How? After four decades scrutinising this least predictable of games I have never seen anything like Mickelson's eagle-eagle-birdie burst through holes 13, 14 and 15. Five shots made up in three holes. To be fair, it was very nearly three American eagles on the bounce had his wedge at the long 15th not spun to a halt a mere five inches from the hole.
On Tuesday, when the two youths accused of murdering Terre'Blanche appeared at the town's magistrates court, stout, sunburnt white arms brandished the old South African flag, while women dressed in traditional Boer "Voortrekker" costumes piped up the apartheid-era national anthem, in an attempt to out-sing the black crowd's rendition of Nkosi Sikelel iAfrica, the new anthem.
The Vatican is being urged to arrange meetings between victims of clerical sexual abuse and Pope Benedict XVI when he comes to the UK later this year.
The call comes after the papal spokesman, Father Federico Lombardi, said that the pope had "written of his readiness to hold new meetings" with abuse victims in the "context of his concern" for them. Lombardi's statement is the strongest indication so far that the Vatican will continue to reach out to victims of clerical sexual abuse through papal visits. The pope's British visit in September would be a high-profile opportunity to do so.
Something had been festering in the American undergrowth. Calling themselves a militia, gatherings of extremely right-wing men (and some women) were crawling around the backwoods in camouflage fatigues playing war games against a loosely termed "federal government". Absurd, certainly, but the movement had a seriously dangerous core. Back then I explored this group and some of its more (preposterous) propositions: there should be an uprising against "The New World Order", of which the US government was a puppet; there was a site in Nevada where the militias believed a crashed UFO had been taken, the government plotting with aliens. The movement's leadership in Indiana were apparently preparing for armed insurrection, and a training compound in Arizona was headed by a man Timothy McVeigh knew, William Cooper, who threatened me when I tried to visit. In Cooper's 1991 book, Behold a Pale Horse, he insisted that the prison transfer centre in Oklahoma City was a "concentration camp" for those resisting the New World Order of the Antichrist. In November 1994, on his radio station, Cooper issued a call to arms: the militias should be ready, he said, to "fight a war" within six months. Closer to hand, at another compound called Elouhim City â?? visited by McVeigh â?? the leader of the Oklahoma militia, Robert Millar, urged his followers to "take whatever action necessary against the US government". A few weeks later, McVeigh and Nichols parked a rented Ryder truck packed with 2.15 tonnes of ammonium nitrate and fuel oil outside the Murrah Building, lit a fuse and walked away.
For Catherine Alaniz, the trial was at times too much: "McVeigh sitting there, smirking at us, and we not being allowed to cry, show emotion or wear buttons and ribbons", in guidance from the judge. "Sometimes I had to leave the courtroom. But I stayed on in Denver with Mom and got involved in a local Catholic church, making hundreds of ham and cheese sandwiches for the homeless. And they had a programme visiting people dying of Aids, and I met a man, a Hispanic man, who was dying and I hugged him and he said he hadn't been hugged for years â?? it turned out he was from Oklahoma City." Of course, there was also downtime for the bereaved families to talk: with each other, with survivors and with those who had rescued them.
"One purpose of this memorial," says Kari Watkins, "is to teach the impact of violence. On Easter Monday, our biggest effort this year becomes law, against considerable opposition: that the story of the bomb be entered into the school curriculum for the state of Oklahoma. We need to teach this story, especially right now, when in America there are a lot of the same movements that were around in 1995, there's a similar mood, a polarisation. Look, no one wants the government on their backs â?? who does? - but all this alarms me, and we must work against it by teaching the consequences of violence against the language of violence."
In the second row of chairs, indicating the building's second floor, 15 chairs are smaller than the others, commemorating the children. At the end, slightly apart, is that inscribed "Miss Baylee Almon", whose mother Aren's lovely face nevertheless wears the scars of grief until dispelled by a smile, at a joke by Bella or Brooks, or a memory of Baylee alive. Recently, Bella choked on some beef jerky and Aren was worried she'd been alone, but Bella said: "It's OK, Mom, Baylee was here." On Monday week, Bella will, for the second time, read out the names of the children killed in 1995, in reverse alphabetical order, so that the sister she never met, but whose birthday she will have celebrated the previous day, will come last.