Winans' approach is spiritual to making tough business decisions in the cut-throat entertainment industry. |
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It is also a spawning and rearing habitat for three threatened salmon species, steelhead and cut-throat trout. |
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Rainbow, cut-throat, grayling and brown trout make their home in the Bow River and its network of streams. |
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So how does he get the press in the cut-throat competition of London Fashion Week, when there are some 70 designers showing in five days? |
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Some say that imitation is the highest form of flattery, but in the cut-throat arena of fashion, sorry, it's not. |
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As a result, the co-op faces continuous cut-throat competition while trying to maintain a high return for its members. |
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Companies who hire the owner-drivers take advantage of cut-throat competition in the industry to drive down costs. |
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Graphics card vendors are having a hard time these days distinguishing their wares from the competition in this cut-throat margin market. |
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Instead, it's instilled by coaches in the cut-throat world of Russian competitive skating. |
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Financial services is a cut-throat business, with fierce competition between suppliers, which is often a good thing. |
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The prosecuting counsel held up two vicious-looking, cut-throat razors for everyone in a packed Kingston Magistrates' court to see. |
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This little ditty oft quoted by my granddad while shaving with his cut-throat razor came winging its way from out of my dim and distant past. |
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The most emotionally intense love song in the piece is the rapturous hymn delivered by Sweeney to his precious cut-throat razors. |
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And this spring has the makings of a property bonanza with the lowest mortgage rates in 35 years available amid cut-throat competition. |
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In an economy where competition is cut-throat, digital information must be able to offer quality. |
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In this environment, competition in the banking industry and in infrastructure financing is becoming cut-throat. |
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Against this, as a result of the pressure exerted by the buyers, their price is dropping from year to year, whilst competition is cut-throat. |
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Rainbow, brown, brook and cut-throat trout are all plentiful in the many rivers and streams in the vicinity of Crowsnest Pass. |
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Between June and October, the North Ram River and its tributaries are popular havens for cut-throat trout. |
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Concerning women's jobs the situation is that cut-throat competition is taking place. |
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Many markets are now subject to cut-throat competition, and pricing pressure is on the increase. |
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This has resulted in cut-throat competition and a drastic fall in the price of the Internet. |
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In their attempts to stem cut-throat price competition, railway leaders repeatedly formed cartels to set prices and allocate traffic. |
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He said the halal cut, when animals are slaughtered by the cut-throat method, is more humane and does not spread infection. |
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The hairdresser massaged Peter's scalp during the wash, and was very careful using the cut-throat razor to tidy up. |
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If there's ever a call for that kind of skill in the cut-throat world of international communications, I'll be quids in. |
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Relentless cut-throat competition has driven nearly all retailers and fast-food chains into a race to the bottom. |
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She holds a PhD in English and worked her way through the cut-throat art world. |
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Costs, already greatly reduced, must be lowered even further if the airline is to compete in an increasingly cut-throat word. |
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The chorus unveils gleaming shards of bombastic wit and cut-throat tuneage before the shroud of unfriendly uber-noise descends once more. |
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They are wholly unfitted, by temperament and training, for the cut-throat, hard-nosed commercial environment in which they now find themselves. |
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In today's world of liberalisation and cut-throat competition, everyone sets store by cost effectiveness even in the field of arts. |
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Relying only on price will lead to cut-throat competition and disappearing profits. |
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Its home loans business has also struggled in the face of intense competition in the cut-throat British mortgage market. |
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If you have a good memory you can probably recall the time when finals were intense, cut-throat affairs. |
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Couture fashion courting the cut-throat world of the seedy mafia and danger too. |
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That's how cut-throat international rugby is. |
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Both domestic and migrant IT professionals will suffer from a cut-throat drive to the bottom, and the union approach must seek to demonstrate and establish common cause between both groups of workers. |
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In the cut-throat world of tendering, all too often companies can be pushed into cost-cutting measures and I would not like to see safety measures being sacrificed. |
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In a environment of cut-throat pricing and fierce editorial battles, the average daily sale has only dropped by less than 250,000 on the same time last year. |
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The automotive industry in Europe is currently characterised by cut-throat price competition, high raw material and energy prices, a strong emphasis on cost management and a restructuring of production processes. |
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Is it tokenism, or just one small piece of evidence that the cut-price, cut-throat world of supermarkets is trying to appeal to a more ethical consumer? |
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This brings the unwanted attentions of local despot Hatcher who, with his ragbag of cut-throat henchmen, sets out to destroy the heroes and nab the treasure for himself. |
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A mugger who slashed a man with a cut-throat razor after he chased him through the streets of Bradford has been warned he faces a long jail sentence. |
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A disabled man was today being hunted by detectives after he failed to appear in court to be sentenced for slashing a have-a-go hero with a cut-throat razor. |
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Patents on biological material intensify and consolidate dependencies and bring with them the danger of monopolies and merciless cut-throat competition to the disadvantage of farming structures and farmers. |
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The cut-throat razor hovers inches above his neck for a little too long. |
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These Are My Friends from Sweeney Todd: a beautifully written, sweet lullaby … sung to a set of cut-throat razors. |
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The lessons of a sleepy Dutch spirits market were inapplicable in, say, the cut-throat world of frozen yogurt. |
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For editors facing evaporating budgets and cut-throat competition in oversaturated markets, advance screenings of movies and exclusive access to stars can be mighty tempting. |
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And the leaders of all these religions are corrupt and power-hungry, no matter how much peace and brotherly love they preach, they are cut-throat hypocrites. |
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By his gift of magniloquence, this small-time Cicero strives to lend a veneer of respectability to the cut-throat connivings of his cohorts. |
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This frills-free remake of a stonefaced Charles Bronson thriller shows that murder is a cut-throat business. |
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This need for both economic and social regulations arose mainly with transport liberalisation, which is partly responsible for cut-throat competition, a price collapse and problems in complying with social standards. |
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They are set out, not in the formal text itself, but in a chairman's statement accompanying the text a kind of gentleman's agreement in a cut-throat, ungentlemanly world. |
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Machetes, flick knives and cut-throat razors were among 62 lethal blades found in just one car boot. |
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She will go head-to-head with motormouth Today FM anchorman Eamon Dunphy, who presents 'The Last World', in the cut-throat drive-time slot. |
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Each is a light-hearted day in the life of a downmarket telephone tipster called Baxter and his battles to survive in the cut-throat betting world. |
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It is gloriously unstylish and all the better for it and you don't get to survive in this cut-throat game for three decades without knowing your customer base. |
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