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demarcation |
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demarcationIn British industrial relations, the practice of stipulating that particular workers should perform particular tasks. The practice can be the source of industrial disputes. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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| Jerusalem must somehow be politically shared between Israelis and Palestinians and new boundaries must be drawn there also--but the boundaries must demarcate, not exclude. Such flags not only demarcate individuality but also help point out where one's seats are amid the sea of humanity should a member of the party venture out for beer or one of the festival's delicious and shockingly reasonably priced delicacies (mouth-watering soft-shell crab po'-boys go for a mere $8, and a bowl of some of the best gumbo you're likely to enjoy is only $5). Punctuated by intertitles that demarcate fifteen "pages," the film insinuates a relationship to contemporaneous structuralist cinema--think of the wall-mounted seascape photograph that is central to (and literally at the center of) Michael Snow's forty-five-minute zoom in Wavelength, 1967. |
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