Freezing temperatures, blowing snow, landslides and washouts all keep the maintenance of way crews busy on the pass. |
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After failing to catch New on Friday, Teddy Hall went for the kill on Saturday, coming to within a canvas as the crews approached the gut. |
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North Yorkshire Fire and rescue crews released Mr Brader using specialist winches and airbags to lift up the tractor. |
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In the light airs, the crews must step gingerly around the boat to retain boatspeed. |
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Although a peaceful mission, it required aircrews to travel vast distances, so the need to have rescue crews on hand was still required. |
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Australian squadrons, crews or individual airmen took part in practically all noteworthy events. |
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Many felt a need to recapture the thrill they felt during the war as members of tank units or bomber crews. |
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James Bond has to be recast every decade or so, new Starship crews must be recruited, or prequels devised to allow for fresh faces. |
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He said it took the two crews ten minutes to fight the fire with foam and ten minutes to damp the car down with water. |
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Fire crews were due to revisit the area today to talk to neighbours and fit smoke alarms in properties without them. |
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However, with inexperienced crews and poor workmanship, the process usually took up to eight hours to complete. |
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When there are six or less boats entered in a class, the crews race for lanes on the day before finals. |
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A sub-standard home is scheduled to be set alight by fire crews, then demolished by a digger. |
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By May 2000 the crews decided their best solution was to formally arrest the ships. |
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The victim waved a sun reflector in an effort to guide emergency crews through the fast-moving current. |
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Fire crews worked with paramedics to cut the two men from the mangled wreckage of the car. |
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The submariners say it was only the comradeship which enabled crews to endure the wretched conditions. |
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And Ergon Energy stockpiled materials and put crews on alert yesterday in preparation for possible damage to the electricity network. |
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While aircraft are refueled, crews can find a warm meal and a comfortable place to rest. |
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There are also individual coaching decisions on what crews race at which international regattas. |
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Floating flak jackets were developed for the crews of the US Navy's inshore patrol craft. |
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At the airfield, chaos reigned as rescue crews equipped with fire extinguishers doused the flames emanating from the downed fighter. |
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The Royal Navy found their early crews among the yachtsmen, racing enthusiasts, and fishermen who populated Britain's coastal towns and villages. |
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It takes time for the airlines to relink their crews with the aircraft once they start to get their systems back in order. |
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The purpose of the session was to educate ground crews on the proper procedure for landing a helicopter. |
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Tank crews that engage friendly or civilian target arrays will receive zero points for the entire engagement. |
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Traffic crews then had to block all but one lane of the bridge while the crane righted the container. |
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Abandoned cars left on private land are to be targeted by scrapper crews in Colchester. |
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The construction crews work day and night to add more and more skyscrapers to the skylines. |
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With sharp rocks and deep ruts, crews had to strike the right balance between setting fast times and ensuring a reliable finish. |
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After dark, tank crews on foot led their tanks forward in low gear to our new defensive positions. |
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It's a disgrace that British-flagged ships should sail the seas carrying British exports but the crews are foreign. |
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Thus it is less favored by roofing crews who are usually paid by the number of shingles they install, not by the hour. |
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Among the advantages, few of the Army's tanks and armored fighting vehicles were lost to enemy action, and in most cases, their crews survived. |
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Sea Scout crews made light work of the locks, for some of the crews this was their first canal boating experience. |
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This can cause delays in ambulance crews attending patients who may have life-threatening injuries. |
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The crews also secured live electricity cables as falling trees and branches brought down overhead wires. |
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In the meantime, some visiting boats anchor out in the roadstead and their crews dinghy in to the adjacent, landlocked municipal marina. |
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Information gained by Bedfordshire on Sunday has revealed that the service is already running desperately low on crews. |
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A police helicopter also circled the site, sending images of the inferno down to fire crews to help them tackle the blaze. |
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Along with tree-planting efforts, crews are laboring to remove the invasive salt cedar, which monopolizes water supplies and crowds out natives. |
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The sloped skylight is supported by laminated-glass structural ribs and is strong enough to support the weight of cleaning crews. |
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Late that day one of the search crews spotted Doug's body in such rugged terrain they were unable to get to it before dark. |
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A clanging of tailgates announced the arrival of the trucks that would carry the crews to the equipment shacks, and then to their aircraft. |
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The broadcasts are produced by separate crews, announcers and field reporters. |
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Then, in the early twentieth century, cleanup crews hauled away the tailings from the gold mine, leaving a depression that created a lake. |
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Russian space vehicles have been resupplying the station and ferrying crews since the Columbia disaster. |
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After his release from incarceration, he worked briefly with construction crews building the Autobahn, Germany's superhighway. |
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Fire crews in south and mid Pembrokeshire were inundated with calls over the weekend as storm force winds caused havoc across the county. |
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Elsewhere in the county, fire crews had a relatively quiet weekend despite the storm force winds. |
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There was a sizable crowd on the pier where crews, supporters and on-lookers were gathered to watch the racing. |
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Fire crews, using breathing apparatus, had to search the building and ensure no persons were either trapped or seriously injured by the blaze. |
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A teenager has thanked fire crews who saved his life by rescuing him from a blazing inferno. |
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And there was an unmistakable atmosphere of satisfaction from the waiting ground crews when the aircraft taxied towards them. |
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Surely the film crews are more deserving of the limelight with their technological expertise and patience with the stars. |
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I had good teams and good crews and we had people who handled the logistics. |
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Submarines were supposed to surface and give crews time to abandon ship before sinking their vessels. |
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It had the most advanced fighter and bomber aircraft and the best trained crews. |
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Emergency crews were called to Charfleets industrial estate, on Canvey, three times last night. |
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The warplanes and helicopter gunships were ready, their crews primed to deliver precision strikes. |
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In the past, large crews on our ships were the keystones to accomplishing their missions. |
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The crews travelled down to Gravesend by water on the Saturday in order to take part. |
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Any discrepancies can then be adjusted, ensuring crews have an accurate measurement of their speed. |
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A significant on-farm innovation has been the installation of jetties on the riverbanks by Braum's own construction crews. |
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Nine different crews then delivered these parts into space where the giant jigsaw puzzle was pieced together. |
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Drivers race at such places for the love of the sport, and pit crews are largely a volunteer effort. |
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Fishing boats were tied up last week as crews earned a well-earned rest after a long haul from the last decent break at Christmas. |
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The next day emergency crews rushed to that same address after receiving a call. |
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It took fire crews around two hours to put out the blaze, which caused extensive damage to the maisonette. |
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The freeway remained closed for two hours while crews put out assorted grass fires. |
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Some friends and I had a recent discussion about today's railroading and how working conditions had improved for train crews. |
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Then we saw iron rings in the rock, through which river steamer crews ran ropes to help them across the rapids. |
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This is the latest in a spate of vandal attacks on fire crews and buses in the area. |
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Because of the wacky aero rules, drivers are relying more on their pit crews to get the cars out quickly and up front. |
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Local fishing crews had told him of the Lombok Strait's fiendishly shifting currents, vicious whirlpools, and unexpected waves far from shore. |
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The crews are trained to undertake tows of crippled boats, extinguish fires afloat and provide first aid. |
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The aircraft and crews also provided logistic and aero medical evacuation support to forces from six nations. |
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Although this was the amount of rations laid down by law some of the shady crews often kept back food for to sell when they reached shore. |
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They called the fire crews at around 2.15 am but they were unable to get into the building until a keyholder arrived. |
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Fire crews dealt with the blaze before attending to a diesel spillage at Narberth Bridge and making the road safe after an accident involving two cars at Robeston Wathen. |
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When about 50 yards from the shore the pinnaces cast off, leaving the boats to be rowed to the beach by their naval crews, under covering fire from the warships. |
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Yemen lies just 200 miles across the Gulf of Aden from Somalia and is well within reach of pirate crews, who generally have little trouble evading foreign anti-piracy patrols. |
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After the Lexicon was docked, crews from the shipyard unloaded the Aloft and transported the shuttle deep inside the engineering bays where her new engine lay waiting. |
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Viewers of last night's late editions of Ten News and Sports Tonight would have enjoyed the zany antics of the respective crews if they were watching closely. |
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As soon as the aircraft landed, crash crews strategically deployed along the main runway, raced behind the jet until it came to a stop at the end of the airfield. |
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The problem with sailing in strong winds with light crews, is that we're both so high up above the boom, we can't see much to leeward, as the sails block our view. |
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Dutch cabin crews from KLM and Martinair told their management that they would not work if BA tried to wet-lease an aircraft from a Dutch carrier. |
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Eurostar has even switched from Anglo-French crews to all-British staff to avoid disruption in case French SNCF workers decide to down tools on Tuesday and Wednesday. |
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Early in the nineteenth century crews of visiting ships came looking for flax, and from 1829 whalers came to share the bounty in this southern area. |
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News crews are converging from around the world, buying airplane tickets, hotel rooms, and food. |
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Far too may lives of both air passengers and crews have been put at risk by lager louts, champagne Charlies and ordinary people who get into a rage. |
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Figures resembling servants often appear along with the flight crews. |
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We learned that at least three major news organizations had sent full crews to Doha this week to try to find the Taliban Five. |
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Bronstein makes an annual offer to send crews aboard the Japanese whaling fleet or even just interview representatives. |
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Construction crews bustled about and the front door through which Hayes and Gilbert led me revealed an old entry hall being refashioned into a suave, modern lobby. |
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He struggled as television crews tried to mike him up for sound and seemed taken aback when delegates asked him for an autograph. |
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The catchline for the new programme is surprising stories from familiar places and camera crews are currently out filming on location for the series. |
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Pan Am International Flight Academy offers initial, recurrent, requalification and upgrade simulator training to airline and corporate flight crews. |
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Paul Martin began reflagging his ships in countries with little or no corporate taxes and very low employment standards, and using non-Canadian crews. |
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Rocky Mountain House has more than tripled in population, and that doesn't include the countless oil and gas roustabouts, drilling maintenance crews, surveyors and the like. |
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Geological Survey crews also observed a shift in the crater floor and on part of the 1,000-foot lava dome that essentially serves as a plug for magma, he said. |
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Beal has recruited hundreds of crews to clean up and replant around the streams and has now established a network of volunteer groups living in the area. |
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This delicious vegetarian-friendly dish will satisfy even the most carnivorous of crews. |
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A supershort landing strip ensures that flight crews at least are awake. |
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Donaldson's new role means that he will not be able to coach specific crews but he hopes to keep his hand in by occasionally taking out the megaphone at training camps. |
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The three crews that lined up for the men's coxed pair had met each other for the first time yesterday in the race for lanes and it was Germany that secured the centre lane. |
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The inn is actually a front for illegal operations involving the luring of ships onto the coastal rocks where the crews are murdered and the ships' cargoes can be plundered. |
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Most bumps in the Rowing-On divisions took place below the gut, leaving spectators not much more to observe than the bizarre attire of various crews. |
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Two days after the attack, Urban Search and Rescue crews from Montgomery County, Virginia worked to clear debris and strengthen temporary shoring at the disaster site. |
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Two full hotels on Giglio port have been rented entirely for two years for the salvage crews and the command center. |
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Our crews tackled the fire inside and found upstairs three young children. |
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The simulated airdrops allowed the crews to train with station-keeping equipment, used in adverse weather, while using the new procedures for flying in tactical formation. |
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One recent day, search crews found an ace of diamonds playing card, a doorknob, a pair of security guard pants, a woman's black wig and a pink toothbrush. |
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Foot traffic on Tuesday consisted mostly of construction and clean-up crews in white zip-up suits. |
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Railroad crews also were checking the rail lines and a rail car was being sent along the route with a solution of baking soda and water to neutralize the acid. |
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Helicopters and crews able to airlift troops and supplies to get behind the other guy, and to get your guys back out when they need a rest or are too outnumbered. |
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The three-and-a-half-hour struggle to make the area safe ended when the fire crews managed to get tarpaulin over the roof and made the ground debris safe. |
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The 60-year-old was trapped inside his home for crucial minutes while fire crews dealt with rubbish set alight by pranksters on the other side of town. |
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Instead, crews should use wood wedges, tapping gently when necessary. |
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This modification was typical of the hard-working ground crews who would labor day and night to find solutions for the problems that came up in this new theater of war. |
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He traveled with the aid of dogsleds and three separate support crews who turned back at successive intervals before reaching the Pole. |
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What Americans call a goat-fuck, an unstable, tottering, towering pile of photographers and TV crews, had appeared. |
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As soon as Lee reaches the Command Post, Matthew directs him forward to the gun line where the crews are preparing the Light Guns. |
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His ships with the frozen crews, including Captain Willoughby and his journal, were found by Russian fishermen a year later. |
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At this point Eadric Streona, the Ealdorman of Mercia, deserted Aethelred together with 40 ships and their crews and joined forces with Cnut. |
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When steam boats were introduced in the late nineteenth century, crews were enlarged to four. |
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Captured German air crews also indicated the homes of industrial workers were deliberately targeted. |
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The diversion of heavier bombers to the Balkans meant that the crews and units left behind were asked to fly two or three sorties per night. |
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Ambulance crews in the area will no longer be paid to interrupt meal breaks and attend to some types of emergencies. |
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The school was responsible for the training of all aviation fire crews for British airfields as well as those of many overseas countries. |
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The proportion of these attributable to patients left with ambulance crews is not recorded. |
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It was common for seafaring Viking ships to tow or carry a smaller boat to transfer crews and cargo from the ship to shore. |
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Many crews worked for hours and some were on high levels of the minster at the time when the South transept roof fell in. |
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Teach and his quartermaster, William Howard, may at this time have struggled to control their crews. |
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Shanty songs functioned to economize labor in what had then become larger vessels having smaller crews and operating on stricter schedules. |
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The ship's company for each megacarrier topped 25,000 men, not counting the pilots and air crews for the aircraft on board. |
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The OBS used its own cameras, and crews subcontracted from other Olympic broadcasters, to cover the events. |
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That could go head to head in attempt to find the best sailing crews and teams. |
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Captains and their crews come from all around the world to attend these races. |
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Pirate galleys were small, nimble, lightly armed, but often heavily manned in order to overwhelm the often minimal crews of merchant ships. |
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Unlike traditional Western societies of the time, many Caribbean pirate crews of European descent operated as limited democracies. |
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Some crews were treated as harshly as naval crews of the time, while others followed the comparatively relaxed rules of merchant ships. |
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Some crews were made up of professional merchant seamen, others of pirates, debtors, and convicts. |
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The extra crewmen were also useful as prize crews for returning captured vessels. |
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The nature of submarine warfare meant that attacks often came without warning, giving the crews of the merchant ships little hope of survival. |
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During their attack at Arras, the British lost 316 air crews and the Canadians lost 114 compared to 44 lost by the Germans. |
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These gave crews practice in navigation and avoiding air defences, and set off air raid alarms which disturbed civilian morale. |
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Fighter tactics were then complicated by bomber crews who demanded closer protection. |
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Fail Safe Commission recommended installing devices to prevent rogue commanders persuading their crews to launch unauthorised nuclear attacks. |
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The incident was filmed by television news crews and shown around the world. |
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The RAF lacked aircraft large enough to transport Chinooks and so the helicopter crews flew themselves to Freetown. |
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After her death was announced, media and camera crews appeared, as crowds gathered near Winehouse's residence to pay their respects. |
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The next day, the bumping crew will start ahead of any crews that have been bumped. |
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Typically men and women compete in separate crews although mixed crews and mixed team events also take place. |
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This freed up crews and money to increase the number of large modern ships in home waters. |
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The crews are also trained to deal with situations such as bomb threats, hijacking, and terrorist activities. |
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The crews of the watchtowers and forts on the coast of Cumbria were usually only able to warn the population. |
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Its crews teams explored the coasts of Ireland and Scotland and circumnvigated Britain. |
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The home bases for Atlantic Fleet crews were Groton, Connecticut and Charleston, South Carolina. |
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The two crews used to maximise the availability time of the boats are called 'blue' and 'red' crews. |
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These accidents were attributed to a combination of fatigued aircraft, inexperienced crews and poor weather. |
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In 1940, a torpedo training unit was formed, which trained both RAF and Royal Navy crews. |
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The crews regularly featured as part of the popular Channel 5 documentary series Highland Emergency. |
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Six named men together with the crews of four ships of Bristol were rewarded with a payment of 220 marks. |
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Salvage crews secured the vessel and it was hauled into the port of Bilbao, Spain. |
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Navy weapons stored in proximity to ship and submarine crews, due to its lower radioactivity. |
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Operators are responsible for the safety of the work crews that frequently do repairs on the mechanical and electrical equipment. |
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When larger scale battles ensued, Viking crews would rope together all nearby ships and slowly proceed towards the enemy targets. |
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The roping technique allowed Viking crews to remain strong in numbers and act as a unit, but this uniformity also created problems. |
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The Imperial Navy's main ships were turned over to the Allies, but then were sunk at Scapa Flow in 1919 by German crews. |
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In the fleet itself, complaints were beginning to be made in 1908 about underfunding and shortages of crews for the new ships. |
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Twenty Admiralty trawlers with American crews, 16 more Lapwing class minesweepers, and another repair ship Panther were assigned to his command. |
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Ships began to arrive in port, their crews sending messages to friends and relatives both of their survival and the loss of some 6,000 others. |
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Some crews coming ashore found rumours had already reported them dead to relatives, while others were jeered for the defeat they had suffered. |
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The gun crews were removing the charges from their containers and removing the paper covering over the gunpowder igniter charges. |
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Their operations crews did not believe they had authority to shut off production, even though they could see that Piper Alpha was burning. |
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Nelson knew that the superior seamanship, faster gunnery and better morale of his crews were great advantages. |
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On being taken in tow, the Spanish crews rose up against their British prize crews, putting them to work as prisoners. |
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She plied between Portsmouth and Hong Kong, taking out relief crews and bringing home the crews they replaced. |
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It was Fisher's policy to conduct all manoeuvres at full speed while training the fleet, and to expect the best from his crews. |
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The slow speed, overloaded crews and lack of battlefield communications undid the French. |
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At nightfall Keller and some of the crews made their way on foot to Gavelines. |
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Due to shortages of personnel, many small craft crossed the Channel with civilian crews. |
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Morale of the crews was high, no sabotage had occurred at Brest and the crews went ashore freely. |
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Thick low cloud and intermittent rain hid the view and only ten crews could see the German ships for long enough to bomb. |
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It involved dropping wires across high voltage wires, and was probably as dangerous to the aircraft crews as to the British. |
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The first confirmed sighting of Antarctica can be narrowed down to the crews of ships captained by three individuals. |
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Around 600 of their crews were killed and the cargoes confiscated before the merchantmen were set afire. |
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A vast majority of pirates also came from the crews of captured merchant vessels. |
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However changing ships many times was not the norm and most crews would stick with one or two ships. |
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The raiders escaped, only to have their ships beached at Tynemouth and the crews killed by locals. |
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Added to the tension of the mission which exhausted and drained crews, tiredness caught up with and killed many. |
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The crews were redistributed and the abandoned ships usually burned to recover their iron nails and fittings. |
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Seven masonry crews of five to ten men each carved boulders and cement into a naturalistic poolscape, with elaborate lighting and sound systems. |
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They might need to seek refuge more often, and crews intentionally beached some ships for maintenance and repairs. |
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For small cruising boat crews, celestial navigation is generally considered an essential skill when venturing beyond visual range of land. |
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Celestial navigation trainers combine a simple flight simulator with a planetarium in order to train aircraft crews in celestial navigation. |
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The new Brazilian Navy is constituted mainly with the Portuguese ships based in Brazil at that time and their respective crews. |
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Fishing vessels with Basque, English, Portuguese, French and Spanish crews started to make seasonal expeditions. |
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In January 1494, Columbus gave him the task of finding the members of a number of crews that were lost in the hinterland of the island. |
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Portuguese degredados are assigned to spend the night in Tupiniquim villages, while the remainder of the crews sleep aboard ships. |
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The Portuguese seize around ten Arab merchant ships then in harbor, confiscating their cargoes, killing their crews, and burning their ships. |
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For the next two weeks, the captains and crews of the different ships exchange tales of their travels and adventures. |
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A number of vessels visiting the islands were attacked and their crews killed. |
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The Portuguese ships were defeated and their crews taken to Mocha to be sold as slaves. |
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Many had the bald-headed sail rigging, so crews would not have to go aloft in the winds to do dangerous reefings. |
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Similarly, grime crews such as Scumfam use a modern Sheffield accent, which still includes some dialect words. |
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The stopover is very short, and crews will have about 15 minutes to turn the plane round. |
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Foleshill sub officer Paul Wattling said fire crews believed a spark could have been burning for as long as six hours, setting fire to sawdust. |
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An MoD spokesman stressed Air Vice-Marshal Walker did not say he would order his crews on suicide missions. |
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To apply the algicide, crews affixed a huge spreader filled with copper sulfate to the underside of a helicopter. |
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Three crews from Leamington attended and were able to bring the fire quicky under control. |
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Fire crews rushed to tackle the blaze, which broke out in the building's ground-floor recreation room. |
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Fire crews were called to the terraced house in Laund Road, Salendine Nook at lunchtime yesterday to tackle what was described as a 'small fire. |
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And as lifeboat crews rushed to rescue the stranded pair, Diarmuid fought to keep them afloat with the help of a single life buoy. |
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Fire crews praised the actions of a passer-by who threw in a life ring after spotting the 28-year-old woman in the water near the promenade. |
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But once larger crews flew, ejection was no longer possible. |
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He the fire generated a huge amount of smoke and four adults and a child were rescued by crews from adjacent maisonettes. |
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Further, there are maintenance crews who have to fix those drones. |
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Police, hunters and fire crews spent hours trying to catch it in Bolzano, Italy, before shooting it in a car park. |
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This is a real company with excellent book keeping and two crews of well trained, courteous staff. |
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Construction crews in Brazzaville immediately got to work on the new airport. |
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The goal of Sidekick is to enable station crews with assistance when and where they need it. |
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Now TV crews are set to descend on Calderdale again to film another highprofile drama. |
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From mileposts 8 to 18, 25 to 96 and 96 to 102, construction crews will remain active until at least October. |
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The crews at the port batteries were pumping steel at the enemy. |
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Yet if he remained, it would simply mean that his own and Hagthorpe's crews would join in the saturnalia and increase the hideousness of events now inevitable. |
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The cavalcade would then proceed slowly through the tunnel with the boat crews travelling in the tug and a British Waterways operative steering the last boat in the chain. |
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In June each year, the Durham Regatta, which predates that at Henley, attracts rowing crews from around the region for races along the river's course through the city. |
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Initial operating capability, or IOC, is scheduled in FY15 and is defined as a detachment of four aircraft, with combat ready crews, logistically prepared to deploy. |
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During the Second World War Wild Boar Fell was used by the British Army at Warcop Training Area for training tank crews to operate in difficult terrain. |
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She often leads both the crews of the Amazon and the Swallow. |
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With a danger of vaccination crews spreading the disease, only trained farmers were allowed to administer the vaccine under veterinary supervision. |
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Most of the crews were rescued by nearby vessels, but some perished, either drowning in their attempt to reach shore or dying of cold, hunger, or illness. |
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Coroner Derek Winter heard how the crews of the Apache helicopters, which had the call-signs Luger 67 and Luger 61, saw the explosion during a flight. |
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Boat crews were often lost in the dense fogs prevalent in these waters. |
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Basque vessels had been fishing cod shoals off Newfoundland's coasts since the beginning of the 16th century, and their crews used the natural harbour at Placentia. |
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Already before the Cape, provisions had grown stale, scurvy and dysentery had often set in, and deaths of crews and passengers from disease had begun. |
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Over 100 Allied bombers and their crews were interned during the war. |
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The crews were to abandon their submarines shortly before the collision with the viaduct, leaving the submarines to steer themselves automatically. |
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Fire crews also rescued four adults and one child from other maisonettes within the three-story building, Wentworth Court in Maldon Road, where the fire started. |
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He retained 40 ships and their crews as a standing force in England. |
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The inexperienced crews had difficulty with the changing conditions, and it took nearly an hour and a half for Villeneuve's order to be completed. |
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At midmorning, crews from Direnzo Towing and Recovery removed the vehicle. |
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By this time, the French crews were exhausted and disheartened. |
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In effect, the gun crews had laid an explosive train from the turret to the magazines, and one shell hit to a battlecruiser turret was enough to end a ship. |
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Between 1937 and 1991, 88 international polar crews established and occupied scientific settlements on the drift ice and were carried thousands of kilometers by the ice flow. |
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Until recently lifeboat crews were called to duty using a firework rocket which was launched from the shore base and which exploded with a loud bang. |
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The crews for different movies would all come down to the bar at night. |
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More recently these have been joined by rowing students of Harper Adams University, University Centre Shrewsbury and some crews from other local schools. |
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The ships' yards were all fully manned, and the loud cheerings of the crews, and of the countless company in the surrounding boats, emulated the roar of the cannon. |
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Llandudno's active volunteer crews are called out more than ever with the rapidly increasing numbers of small pleasure craft sailing in coastal waters. |
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Aircraft and crews are held at a high state of readiness, 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, to respond to unidentified aircraft approaching UK airspace. |
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The crews were named Blue and Gold after the US Naval Academy colors. |
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Airport crews often need to discourage birds from taking up residence. |
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Airport crash tender crews are equipped for dealing with airfield accidents, crew and passenger extractions, and the hazards of highly flammable aviation fuel. |
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Certain exemptions also apply to the crews of ships and aircraft. |
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Masters events use age ranges to separate crews of older rowers. |
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The United States also has had very competitive crews, and in recent years these crews have become even more competitive given the surge in women's collegiate rowing. |
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What ensued was a land battle between the crews of the grounded ships. |
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Others of the new ships were manned by Free French, Norwegian and Dutch crews, but these were a tiny minority of the total number, and directly under British command. |
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Although this was much less than the 80,000 sorties flown by fighters, bomber crews suffered about half the total number of casualties borne by their fighter colleagues. |
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A number of crews were also lost to hypothermia during the Battle of Britain when planes ran out of fuel or were shot down and ditched in the English Channel. |
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The slave trade was hated by many sailors and those who joined the crews of slave ships often did so through coercion or because they could find no other employment. |
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This advantage in manpower was vital in overpowering the crews of larger vessels, which themselves often lacked sufficient crewmembers to put up a strong defence. |
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The increase in competition for crews on armed merchant vessels and privateers was due, in a large part, because of the chance for a considerable payoff. |
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The investors would arm the vessels and recruit large crews, much larger than a merchantman or a naval vessel would carry, in order to crew the prizes they captured. |
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The object was simply to keep awake, like wartime bomber crews. |
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These two donations continue to highlight the work that SOLAS does not only for yachtsmen and their crews but also for the broader community, such as bushwalkers. |
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This day is celebrated with the Procession of Boats, in which the top rowing crews from the top four years row past in vintage wooden rowing boats. |
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Fire crews from the main York fire station in Clifford Street worked hard to protect the Rose Window and stop the fire spreading into the tower and organ. |
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This was largely focused on the west coast, with the Exchequer Rolls of 1326 recording the feudal duties of his vassals in that region to aid him with their vessels and crews. |
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Under the Thai government's Be My Guest campaign, Thai Airways' cabin crews will provide travel information about Thailand to foreign passengers on international flights. |
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Again, in 1052 when Edward's fleet was waiting at Sandwich to intercept Godwine's return, the ships returned to London to take on new earls and crews. |
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Cure times for coating repairs are lower and many of the fasteners and access panels are not coated, further reducing the workload for maintenance crews. |
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The contract involves the production of aircraft in Italy and covers logistics, operational support and the training of flight crews and ground personnel. |
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So this Autumn the RNLI is celebrating the sacrifices their crews make every day with a brand new, highly enjoyable fundraising event we can all join in. |
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A US baggage handler discovered a ruptured, smoking suitcase while unloading luggage from an international flight, drawing fire crews and bomb specialists to examine it. |
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Private ambulances are expensive and it is argued money would be better spent making the work of NHS ambulance crews more attractive so fewer leave the profession. |
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There is increasing reliance on private ambulance firms to deal with emergencies despite concern that their staff may be less well trained than NHS ambulance crews. |
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The fire proved tricky to tackle as it was based in the middle of the landfill site and crews had to utilise extra lengths of hose reel to reach the incident. |
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Streams became rivers as roads were flooded and the organisers rescheduled several stage recces to allow the crews to safely make their pace notes. |
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Each center employs dispatchers who maintain communications with trains, maintenance crews and yardmaster via two-way radio using more 200 microwave links. |
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There are reports in Aden Post that Iranian crews and technicians have been sent to Sanaa International Airport, as effective safeguards of YAF air assets. |
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By late afternoon, crews brought airboats to the store to help blow out smoke that had filled the building, and to clear out water from the sprinklers. |
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This decreases the number of ambulance crews available to deal with new calls as well as delaying patients getting the care they need from trained hospital staff. |
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Some large modern dance companies, most large ballet companies, and most large theater companies also require union crews. These are called yellow card companies. |
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