1. But it is publicly acknowledged that these numbers, which represent people who have put themselves forward for testing, are underestimates. 2. Help the Aged is a national charity representing older people. 3. One obvious disadvantage of a telephone survey is that it does not represent people who are too poor to afford telephones. 4. The act of representing peoples under direct colonial rule or as disadvantaged economic partners of the west is therefore also political. 5. The new law has been criticized by groups representing disabled people. 6. The sample for this study is designed to represent people in certain occupations or with particular qualifications throughout Great Britain. 7. The union represents people who work in the entertainment industry. 8. It would be difficult indeed to argue against the T andG being allowed to merge into the G M B. 9. This organization represents peoples who work in the same type of companies, very often within the same workplaces that we work. |