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All to supposedly combat a problem which does not exist!
He said: "Any plan to combat a problem needs a backbone.
Ofgem has published proposals to combat a problem that it says costs customers £200m a year.
The event is appealing, she said, because donors can see culinary stars and help combat a problem that has touched them all.
Why should governments spend untold resources combating a problem that is as old as human nature itself?
Goodyear had nearly 1,3000 tires shipped in overnight from North Carolina to combat a problem with the wear.
"It is outrageous that the UK is prepared to make poor countries even more heavily indebted trying to combat a problem they did not cause".
However, few projects, even if well targeted, are not enough to combat a problem concerning over a million victims a year, above all women, teenage girls and children.
This is our only hope of effectively combating a problem that poses a threat to all of Europe, and I would stress the word 'all'.
The online Viagra sales are Pfizer's latest effort to combat a problem that has grown with the popularity of the Internet.
Again, Law and Order Magazine was there educating administrators on new tools and techniques to combat a problem that had not existed 20 years prior.
They argued that when the government spends money to combat a problem, it should be able to ensure it is transmitting the message it intends to send.
The more comprehensive one, introduced in July, is utterly underwhelming: it would provide a paltry $19 million to combat a problem that costs the nation about $62 billion a year.
"Government officials have difficulty appropriating funds to combat a problem unless we can show them that the situation is deteriorating," says van Veen, adding "that requires trend analysis."
That is not accepted by critics who contend that the Federal Government has a responsibility to provide money to combat a problem that is supposedly a top national priority.
"It is vital that the major sport organizations in America work together to combat a problem that, left unchecked, has the potential to destroy the value and integrity of sport," Ueberroth added.
Effective laws are in place to deal with the problem in the UK but, as in other countries, combating a problem which comprises some 10% of world trade requires constant vigilance and enforcement.
So when Indian diplomats argue that it is unfair to expect their country to accept limits on growth to combat a problem that Western nations are still overwhelmingly responsible for, it's hard not to be sympathetic.
While in practice this seems to combat a problem of on gassing too much nitrogen it does expose the diver to potentially high Helium compartment over pressures, which themselves may cause symptoms of DCI.
A year ago, Community Board 7 created its Drug Task Force to work with law enforcement agencies to combat a problem that surrounds and frequently intrudes on the Upper Upper West Side.
That episode, combined with the increasing problem of drinking parties in homes involving minors, prompted parents and the police in Glastonbury to try and come up with ways to combat a problem that seemed to be out of control.
Also, as they point out, Salmonella is a universal problem and as so often happens, once such legislation is in place in one country, to combat a problem so general as salmonella, it is often quickly implemented across exporting countries.
The railway operator, Deutsche Bahn, said its miniature drones would be used to patrol the depots and train yards on its own property, not in public spaces, in an effort to combat a problem that costs the company around $10 million a year.
"This partnership is a prime example of how the private and public sectors can come together to combat a problem that touches people all over the planet: global hunger," said Monica Marshall, WFP's Head of Global Private Partnerships.
It's the third major sweep since Attorney General Eric Holder, Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius announced in May they were adding millions of dollars and dozens of agents to combat a problem that costs the U.S. billions each year.