So I think that it's you know, at the end of the day, you've got to get a cut off point and the question is, where there's a reasonable cut off point.
The cut off point they appear to want to impose is 1, 500 metres - which, in this year's competition would exclude some teams from Ecuador, Peru and Mexico, as well as the Bolivians.
The editorial standards committee also ruled that by not making the cut off point clear, it did not "treat those who engaged with the programme fairly" because listeners might be misled by being encouraged to contact the show.
Radio 2 went on to change the wording used in the show and on phone messages to reflect that not all messages may be used, but the BBC Trust said the revision was still in breach of accuracy guidelines and needed to be amended further to make clear there was a cut off point.
So is there now some arbitrary cut-off point, the Crimean War (1853-6) perhaps?
That is roughly 0.3% of the power of the 180-decibel cut-off point that the operational system would have.
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After this cut-off point, it gives preference to Catholic pupils, with a proportion of places also allocated for non-Catholics.
Viddy only allows you to shoot for 15 seconds, which is just about the cut-off point where posterity-making becoming perturbing.
The cut-off point for payments is 31 March, so if the cold spell continues into April, these payments will not be made.
But take 1963, the year that marked the end of national service and the rise of the Beatles, and you have an interesting cut-off point for comparison.
Sir John adds that the current cut-off point for awarding medals - five years after the operations have ended - should stay in place.
England play a seven match one-day series in India, with the cut-off point for automatic Champions Trophy places to be confirmed after the second match.
Mr Stirling said anyone who signed up before the cut-off point at the end of August would still receive their newsletters and a birthday card.
The Northern Irishman finished the season at 125th on the money list, the cut-off point at which players keep their full playing privileges on the US Tour.
The cut-off point for resuscitation - when a person is pronounced dead - is when all eight have been checked and there are still no signs of life.
Dredge has only enjoyed one top-10 finish this year and was resigned to making it four missed cuts out of five until the weather turned and the cut-off point dropped to two over, keeping him here.
It is too late to claim for 2000 to 2002, as the government's cut-off point for claims has ended, but men who were 60 in winters 1997, 1998 and 1999, but did not get the payment should ring the helpline to see if they are eligible.
If your kid in college came to you over and over saying he needed book money, but spent the money instead on beer, you might cut him off at some point, right?
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Actually, this Western-imposed economic malpractice is fast turning a monetary crisis into a solvency crisis that could endanger otherwise salvageable companies and financial institutions-and, more to the point, cut off our own expansion.
He comes out of it still with the time to try his option in Iraq without a cut-off of funds at this point and - rebuked but not censured, so to speak.
Credit was cut off Chouinard says his accountant at one point introduced him to a mafia guy who offered to lend at 28 percent interest.
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Here's one starting point: Drive smarter and cut 10 minutes off your commute.
Democrat-leaning and bailout recipient Goldman Sachs estimates that an expiration of the tax cut could knock two-thirds of a percentage point off growth in early 2012.
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If investment bankers are increasingly cut off from the information that analysts glean about companies, is there much point in keeping analysts at all?
Which may be why Mr Hemming's point of order on super-injunctions this week was twice cut off by the Speaker - who said he would discuss it in private, but not in the Chamber.
Gallian also offered a chance, on 84, off Khan when he cut low to Walker, who could not accept the opportunity at point.
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As a point man, Staff Sergeant Miller was at the front of the patrol, cut off from supporting elements and less than 20 meters from enemy forces.
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Boston cut a 26-point deficit to four points twice down the stretch, but failed to pull off one more improbable run.
"At its lowest point, Falintil was down to a couple of hundred men, its commands completely cut off from each other, " notes Sonny Imbaraj, a Darwin-based author who has written extensively on the East Timor conflict.
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