Dramatic cuts in the workforce result in cuts to maintenance crews and accidents, and equipment-related blackouts increase. |
|
Where Mamet's play features blackouts, the film substitutes long, synthesized soft-rock montages. |
|
The frequency of entries, exits and prolonged blackouts during scene changes detracts from the performances. |
|
The production looks chic in her design, but it is clumsy, with long blackouts after each scene, and lazily paced. |
|
News organisations do occasionally agree to news blackouts if they are advised that this will help to secure the safety of hostages. |
|
Authorities have arrested high-profile editors, closed publications, and imposed news blackouts on politically sensitive events. |
|
More and more governments are tightening controls on media freedom and information blackouts. |
|
The young doctor suffered blackouts and colleagues discovered he was addicted to the painkiller pethidine. |
|
Rolling power blackouts and heating cut-offs are daily occurrences across vast swathes of Siberia, the far east and central Russia. |
|
The vast majority of what is known about alcohol-induced blackouts is derived from research with hospitalized alcoholics. |
|
In February, up to seven prison staff suffered memory blackouts after their drinks were spiked during a night out. |
|
She had also been warned that since her concussion had been pretty bad she might also have some momentary blackouts. |
|
It is a fast, snappy, moving show with short scenes and little time for scene changes during the blackouts. |
|
Pacemakers are usually used to treat an abnormally slow heartbeat which can cause dizziness, fainting or blackouts. |
|
Many fans that can't afford a generator have rigged up their televisions to car batteries to beat the blackouts. |
|
A piece on the May blackouts in Moscow is written as a pastiche of four short essays by Lu Xun. |
|
The newscasters are forecasting rolling blackouts much like California endured. |
|
American scientists, in a study, also found that predrinking can lead to blackouts and worse consequences. |
|
In one of the worst blackouts, residents were left without heat and light for nine hours. |
|
Patients with disequilibrium report feelings of light-headedness, faintness, or wooziness, sometimes involving blackouts. |
|
|
Occasionally, some individuals say they have blurred vision, feelings of unreality, faints, blackouts or even epileptic fits. |
|
At the very least, blackouts disable heating and air-conditioning systems, freezers, refrigerators, water pumps and lighting. |
|
Since age seven, he has been experiencing blackouts at moments of high emotional stress. |
|
Yet there will still embarrassingly long blackouts for the audience to fidget through. |
|
All of this seems to be told from Mike's narcoleptic viewpoint, with strange edits, blackouts, and powerful montages of varying film stock. |
|
Some known dissociative states induced by substance abuse include alcoholic blackouts and substance-induced amnestic disorder. |
|
Being informed of what transpired during fragmentary blackouts often cued further recall. |
|
Her first step towards recovery came after a visit to a counsellor after she started experiencing blackouts. |
|
By re-reading his childhood diaries he can transport himself back to the past, to the very moment of his blackouts. |
|
From the age of 35, Pat began experiencing blackouts and severe fatigue and eventually went for medical assessment. |
|
Despite still suffering blackouts and mood swing, she succeeded in passing her exams. |
|
Visitors will be able to rediscover the long-forgotten world of blackouts, air-raids, rationing and the Home Guard. |
|
Market manipulation by energy giants produced a power shortage that led to rolling blackouts and rising costs for consumers. |
|
In the past, monopoly providers worked together to prevent local or regional blackouts. |
|
But whether those steps will be enough to prevent blackouts is impossible to tell. |
|
The power corporation instituted rotating blackouts for periods in the community while the power plant was being repaired. |
|
In some states, we face the possibility of brownouts or blackouts in peak load periods. |
|
Since no electric power plants have been built in the past 10 years, he must endure rolling blackouts at least once a week. |
|
When the city suffered blackouts after power failures in 1998, his emergency response team provided the generators to keep the city functioning. |
|
While nationwide blackouts should be avoided, however, localised blackouts are likely if the weather turns severe. |
|
|
The choice is to light from above with the possibility of blackouts, or to use sidelights with no blackouts. |
|
A grid spokeswoman says there is little danger of blackouts, but power supplies are tight. |
|
You are not permitted to trade in shares and other Suncor securities during trading blackouts. |
|
Nonetheless, the blackouts in London and on the US East Coast a couple of years ago should remind us that it's not just Bermuda that's susceptible to these events. |
|
Patients who incur injuries during blackouts, including tongue biting, tend to have an organic rather than psychogenic cause for their loss of consciousness. |
|
There was the devil to pay with a force of MBS engineers and the apartment janitor nailing up beaverboard blackouts. |
|
Symptoms of hypoxia include dizziness, wooziness and, in extreme cases, blackouts. |
|
The X-rays ionize the lowest part of the ionosphere, causing radio communication blackouts, and can also be a severe hazard for astronauts. |
|
For example, emergency lights will be required in hallways and stairwells in case of extended blackouts. |
|
Many young women in Britain had already faced nightly bombing raids, the deaths of family members or friends, blackouts and rationing. |
|
These blackouts are planned 'load shedding' operations with supply rationed to cope with a lack of electricity generation. |
|
California dramatically reduced power consumption over just a few weeks and prevented rolling blackouts and the economic disruption they would have entailed. |
|
But in a country where electricity is in short supply and power blackouts are common, the frost-free and energy-efficient technology can be a major handicap. |
|
The ten, aged 29 to 53, had very severe diabetes from their youth, needed up to 15 injections of insulin a day and often suffered blackouts without warning. |
|
When mixed with alcohol it can lead to blackouts and amnesia. |
|
He now suffered headaches and blackouts and had to see a neurosurgeon. |
|
National Grid and its regulator, Ofgem, said there was little threat of blackouts or the need for other emergency measures. |
|
There have been media blackouts which have evidenced themselves on websites in the United States and then media blackouts have been dropped. |
|
They are capable of actively supporting the grid with reactive power and remaining on-line in case of short-term blackouts. |
|
The municipal liaison committees produced a guide to help municipalities prepare a security plan to deal with major blackouts. |
|
|
Many villages experience chronic power shortages and frequent blackouts, necessitating the use of expensive-to-operate backup generators. |
|
Half of the power was restored in Ontario the following day with rolling blackouts across the Province. |
|
Shocking images have come to light despite the news blackouts and the expulsion of journalists. |
|
For example, a short power outage might bring back terrible memories and feelings for a person who has lived through power blackouts during war. |
|
A serious incident on the continental European electricity network on 4 November lead to blackouts over most of the system. |
|
In fact, alternatives must be planned in case of storms, insufficient snow, intense cold, blackouts or fires, for example. |
|
This saturation can damage the transformers, create voltage dips, and in extreme cases, cause power blackouts. |
|
There is also a variety of gas lights and lamps, which are especially good to have at home during the storm season when blackouts can occur anytime. |
|
Although the grid is reportedly 99.9 percent reliable, blackouts or sags in the power supply can cause damage far greater than would at first seem evident. |
|
A few summers ago, when I was still temping and the weather was scorching the city, causing blackouts and other horrors, I decided to take a few days for myself and not work. |
|
Not since the blackouts of 2003 were the sheath-like towers of the city's iconic skyline etched in such deep black, as opposed to their customary high-wattage glitter. |
|
In his youth he has suffered blackouts that repress chilling memories of childhood abuse, death and the absence of his mentally unbalanced father. |
|
The electricity sector is heavily regulated, and the service is mostly provided by monopoly public sector utilities that fail to meet the demand, causing frequent blackouts. |
|
These highly engineered solutions help reduce blackouts, ensure balance and efficiency and enable fluid connection of the renewable energy resources that are such a vital part of today's energy market. |
|
Rolling blackouts were also used to keep demand below critical thresholds. |
|
Rules and restrictions regarding standard change fees, advance purchase, day or time applications, blackouts, and minimum or maximum stay requirements have been waived. |
|
He had a wild temper, and when sufficiently enraged could suffer seizures and blackouts. |
|
Such networks will reinforce the internal market for gas and electricity and to help avoid blackouts on the scale recently seen in some Member States. |
|
Thus around 80 to 90 percent of the time, electronic equipment is being affected by tiny surges as opposed to lightening flashes or blackouts. |
|
During the last 20 years, the Sun has fried some satellites and damaged others, given us some radio blackouts and power outages, is quietly corroding pipelines and cables, and is a contributor to global climate change. |
|
|
At the same time, the snakes started causing blackouts as they crawled up power poles and short-circuited the suspended lines, and many people who kept chickens noticed that snakes were killing the birds in their coops. |
|
Prolonged blackouts are the norm, tens of thousands of people have no access to clean water and sewage is now flowing in the open from the broken conduits. |
|
From blackouts to coronary thrombosis is not one of the 12 steps. |
|
The result can be uncontrollable blackouts if systems are faced with lack of reserve capacity and flexibility resources, or suffer from delayed emergency measures, or some other situations. |
|
When the broadband blackouts began, driven by overloaded networks as we stayed in to download HD films to our unsleeping computers, well, that was the spark. |
|
Crisis Center is a listing of real-time information on transportation, alarms and blackouts. |
|
The device will help clarify time-attendance records which otherwise would be unrecordable due to the blackouts. |
|
Meanwhile, the risk of brief summertime blackouts could rise: hydroelectric plants often are called upon to help urban power grids deal with sudden spikes in demand. |
|
The region can now reduce electricity consumption by 1.5 megawatts on demand. This helps to alleviate supply shortfalls that could cause brownouts or blackouts within the province. |
|
When blackouts struck, they dabbed blue skies by candlelight. |
|
During forthcoming solar storms, this could result in blackouts and disruptions in artificial satellites. |
|
The more a grid relies on undependable renewables, the more unstable it becomes and the higher the risk of blackouts and brownouts. |
|
In addition to the factory blackouts, nonindustrial businesses like stores will be asked to close in Shanghai when the temperature climbs above 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit, the newspaper said. |
|
Massive power blackouts, navigation failures, disrupted satellites and communications, and more recently, even the spectre of plane crashes, are all testament to the awesome power of the aurora borealis. |
|
This summer, major blackouts and brown-outs plagued Queens and other boroughs throughout the City. |
|
The news media consistently reported that the grid system could experience another widespread blackout, rolling blackouts or brownouts if consumer demand exceeded generation capacity. |
|
Britain's second biggest energy supplier also raised new fears about future blackouts by saying it planned to close down one of its two remaining coal-fired power stations by March next year. |
|
Between 2013 and the end of 2014, the government imposed more than 20 news blackouts on important stories, on various grounds including national security. |
|
Anthony Nelson, who served in Sir John Major's government, said people should not listen to the scare stories put out by energy companies, who claim the plans could lead to blackouts. |
|
When electricity demand exceeds supply, brownouts or blackouts may occur unless utilities import additional capacity or switch in peak-capacity generators. |
|
|
Back then, Davis was like the proverbial deer in the headlights, paralyzed by blackouts that started in San Diego and within months darkened most of the state. |
|
And, unlike in blackouts past, there was very little looting. |
|
Tepco, the troubled company that has illuminated the night sky of Tokyo for 50 years, has warned that Japan's capital could face blackouts this summer. |
|