Certainly the tens of thousands marching in Edinburgh are not there just because some pop star told them it was going to be fun. |
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Together, however, they are inexorably marching toward their fourth league title. |
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Children dressed in national costumes or their best clothes, waved flags and followed the marching bands through the streets of Oslo. |
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Unless you enjoy marching to a different drummer, stick with right betting, avoid wrong betting, and join the tribe. |
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Budget cutbacks have forced students to pay to play football and be in the marching band. |
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The film introduces viewers to the competitive world of collegiate marching bands. |
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A screaming-chorus of local popstrels accompanies one song, a marching band of local trumpeters and saxophonists another. |
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Amongst the small crowd are folks he invited from Ohio, including the entire marching band from Central State University. |
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Dozens of percussionists, brass players and baton-twirling dancers perform marching band standards like Ravel's Bolero. |
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We would sit at the football games and watch the marching band play as they crossed the field. |
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He was drum major of the marching band, student counsel president, and school dance committee president. |
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Machine-guns, gas, high explosives, flame-throwers and air attacks slaughtered the lines of men marching out of the trenches. |
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I played a little trombone and drums, and was the leader of the 72-piece marching band that we had. |
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In February and March, thousands of the over 70,000 American soldiers stationed in Germany received their marching orders for the Gulf. |
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I remain close with them, and as the unit received its marching orders a few called me to express their frustration. |
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Sweeney put the coastal county further in front with a well taken point before his brother received his marching orders. |
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Musically, this is more funky marching angry fighting music, using similar instrumentation, and cheesy 70's beats. |
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But, although the Hunslet scrum-half received his marching orders for his part in the incident, it all seemed to unsettle the York side. |
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He met the eye of one of the policemen who were marching, in full fig, beside the judges. |
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Travers' intervention was not appreciated and the Ford keeper received his marching orders, while Linden received a yellow card. |
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It was a day of galloping gales, thick mists, columns of rain marching across the hills, drenching the pinewoods and the dreary fields. |
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The police had blocked off the road out of Hyde Park to prevent the ferals from marching down to the restricted area. |
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The picketline itself, the marching and the improvised singing are very clear in my memory. |
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And Glenavon's gamesmanship saw Maguire receive his marching orders just a minute later. |
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They ended the day by marching to the almost pestilentially polluted Cuyahoga River. |
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The Staines man reacted angrily with his arms, receiving his marching orders while the Halifax player went unpunished. |
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A moment of madness and lack of control over comments aimed at the referee resulted in a Burley midfielder receiving his marching orders. |
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Thompson received his marching orders for apparently head-butting the Rangers striker. |
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A viewing camera allows me to see the penguins not just marching, but swimming under water. |
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Back then, he was wearing the handsome uniform of the Fairfield Central High School marching band as part of a Mardi Gras parade. |
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I had them mark time and started them off marching down the trail that led to the football field. |
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In the painting, Rivera included a scene of a giant May Day demonstration of workers marching with red banners. |
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In days gone by, marching against war was generally seen as something that lefties, peaceniks and pinkos did. |
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The noises of the city, voices, bells and marching feet, fell together in my ears like a symphonious orchestra. |
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If their demands are not addressed the teachers plan to protest by barricading streets and marching across the country. |
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Charity volunteers thought they were given their marching orders when the council booted them off their usual patch. |
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He died in Washington, D.C., in March 1891 from a cold apparently caught while marching bareheaded in General Sherman's funeral procession. |
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Those who dislike any form of martial mimicry or organised religion do not want to see their children parading and marching to church in uniform. |
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With the sun shining bright and the birds chirping, and the sound of my fathers guards marching around the palace area. |
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A fusion of pageants, marching bands, pomp, ceremony and celebration resurrected the spirit of St Patrick's Day in Dublin yesterday. |
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Any time I wasn't at school or doing homework, I was practicing music or marching. |
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The stadium rose as a marching band triumphantly played the anthem and guards hoisted the national flag. |
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Or do you picture them caked in mud, bodies swarming with lice, marching in sullen silence? |
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They really are better at wearing the ribbons and badges, chanting the slogans and marching on the demonstrations. |
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Calfe also is active in her high school marching, concert and jazz bands, orchestra and percussion ensemble. |
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Soon they hear orcs marching in great haste with their captains whipping them from behind. |
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The marching by Orangemen through nationalist areas has been contentious since the organisation's inception. |
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But on this particularly sunny April Saturday, the circling helicopters and marching Orangemen did not provoke trouble. |
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A middle-aged woman with stiff, wood-colored curls all over her head was advancing on her, marching in heavy-footed determination. |
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Peter had my package tucked under his arm and was marching down the hall, sending the hem of his cassock flying up to his knees. |
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Everybody is marching down that road to upgrade their networks, consolidate their headends, consolidate their operating centers. |
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Richard becomes a kind of cartoon character at one point, marching like he's in a video game. |
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The drummer applies a marching one-man band style drum kit, a perfect complement to the roaming and ranting guitarists. |
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There were hundreds of them, all marching inexorably east, crunching their way across the tundra, emitting comical, guttural oinks. |
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It's apparent that Snow is definitely marching to the beat of his own Caribbean steel drum. |
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Gone are the days of workers marching together towards the hammer and sickle. |
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She had been an oboist in her old school's band, while I played flute in concert band and was on flag line during marching season. |
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I've never seen a worse-looking bunch of hallions marching anywhere in my life. |
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The plot progresses like a horse marching over caltrops, jerking wildly every time its foot encounters the next point. |
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Legacy giggled in response before marching deeper into the pond, enjoying the muck and mud squish coolly between her toes. |
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She moved towards Wales and the north-west to collect support, with Edward marching from Windsor to intercept her. |
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I saw a company marching along the street, and noticed that they move with a quick, springy step, that enables them to cover ground quickly. |
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They came in their long dark-green cloaks and golden armor, carrying perfectly polished bows and marching in perfect synch. |
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The verses of this hymn became the favored marching song of the Union forces during the Civil War. |
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The German newsreels of the period depict young, bronzed, disciplined troops marching through the cornfields of France like conquering demigods. |
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Sure marching and playing are very important, but tuba players, particularly sousaphonists are not the sharpest pencils in the box. |
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Lupone, who played sousaphone in her high school marching band, will be hoisting a tuba onstage. |
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When he came out on the street, a phalanx of helmeted police with nightsticks out were marching towards him. |
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My current gardener is a lazy so-and-so and I'm sorely tempted to give him his marching orders. |
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He has us marching down box canyons, firing to hilltop greens and putting beneath balancing rocks. |
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The speaker and the guide walked out of the shelter, in their stoic marching stance. |
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We see a high school clarinetist marching smartly up and down the football field in perfect cadence with the others. |
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The caravan of desert travelers came over the ridges of sand, marching ceaselessly under the blazing yellow sun. |
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For a marching colour party, use the slope arms in kit 800 for the escort, and the officers arm with the sword raised. |
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The pain dulled his senses, making him an empty, unfeeling shell marching along the rough terrain. |
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We came home yesterday to find ants marching along the hall carpet and scurrying around the skirting boards. |
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She's a genius, a man-hater and the head drum major for our state wide championship marching band. |
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And marching behind the mouthless cat came an endless stream of fuzzy animals, sugar-sweet fashions and girl singing groups. |
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But for single women, especially singletons of a certain age, time is marching on. |
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The marching of our feet rings out in unison, an endless drone accompanied by the clattering hooves of the knights' horses. |
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The reader may have seen pictures of a mother duck leading her ducklings across a road, marching in single file. |
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We will be marching and attending rallies without end unless there is a significant and profound change in American life and policy. |
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We did try to float the idea that they should be allowed a wagonette pulled by shire horses and have them inside, but it's a marching parade. |
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You would have heard the marching feet of soldiers then, and the rumble of hooves and the creak of the wheels of wains. |
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Hikers can be seen disembarking at the train station and marching in a line straight through town to the trails. |
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Boots the marmalade moggie got his marching orders from the Rose And Crown when he popped in for a beer. |
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There will be street jiving, dancing all day, marching bands, music and entertainment. |
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When Blackhawk began to cut up didos you had storekeepers and squirrel hunters all marching together in your company. |
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It has all the pomp and grandeur of a Roman general marching into war with his troops. |
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During ads, march in place one minute, do 15 jumping jacks, another minute of marching, 10 squats, 10 alternating knee lifts, 10 kicks. |
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In the meantime, citizens are rallying in the piazzas, collecting signatures and marching around buildings. |
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Behind them is an army of shamrock-studded floats, Irish dance troupes and marching bands. |
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The demonstration spilled out of the square, and we started marching up Pride Hill, Shrewsbury's busiest shopping street. |
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When we were marching from one horror to another, I had shoepacks on because the ground was always wet or frozen. |
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But they just don't know whether the damage might happen anyway with the marching salinisation in the wheat belt. |
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In the darkness, the streets of Los Angeles echoed with the sound of marching feet. |
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The coffin was borne in by pall-bearers, marching to a rapid, but light step. |
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He was preparing for his first major bowl game as a quarterback, while I was too consumed with Goldschlager as a marching band geek. |
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These small crowded gouaches show scenes of marching, uniformed men and broadly painted, flat, wasp-waisted women. |
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Our current regimented method of marching kids through a series of fixed time length classes strikes me as a hold-over from the factory era. |
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All of a sudden an army of goblins and dwarfs started marching towards them. |
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We hustled to pack up our tables and bags and, holding our tents aloft, started marching. |
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Having found himself back in the team in March, he may yet be marching to South Korea and Hong Kong soon. |
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Thousands of us were demonstrating in Colchester and the police had barred our way from marching into town. |
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Ever since then, apparently, the British have been marching away from the promised land. |
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As the day grew longer and faded into night, the party continued on their perilous journey, marching through the mist filled forests. |
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As time keeps marching toward the bicentennial of the birth of Abraham Lincoln, scholarship about the sixteenth president continues apace. |
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I've often felt like marching into various offices and singling out the culprits and giving them a piece of my mind. |
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Thus transcribing RNA polymerases and ribosomes may all be bound to the same RNA molecule while marching in the same direction. |
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The asphalt is sticky black licorice and the traffic lights pulse to a blind man's marching tune. |
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We weren't marching off to conquer other countries, but to save them, for real, not for pretend purposes. |
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The film, however, is a celebration of marching through all these obstacles with aplomb. |
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Taylor was marching beside Shane when he heard a ruckus at the end of the line of soldiers. |
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She slowly walked into the room as if she were a brave soldier marching to the front line of battle. |
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In recent decades, marching band traditions in the United States have evolved along decidedly different cultural tracks. |
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Any Army marching to battle with this as their battle cry would turn into a bunch of berserkers. |
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In the key of A minor, this lively marching tune in triple meter uses only two fingers in the right hand and four in the left. |
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They had a short service in the town's Civic Hall before marching back through the park. |
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He took up swimming and diving, and joined a marching band, but the lure of the stage beckoned. |
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It constitutes the Church's marching orders, sending believers into all the world to share the Gospel with every person. |
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We see him taking his grandchildren on sketching trips and marching with them round the dining room in Nice, beating time on a drum. |
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A lambeg drum is an enormous instrument beaten with great enthusiasm by orange marching bands. |
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Targets of opportunity, including a column of marching troops, were attacked. |
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The former RAF wireless operator developed sores while on marching duty that became gangrenous, causing his legs to be amputated. |
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Imagine machinists, teachers, and even baseball players marching together to the docks to support the longshore workers! |
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A team of 17 individuals assists the band with marching rudiments, choreography and in developing tight musical and visual components. |
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The whinnying was becoming louder, and the marching was practically drumming through her brain, it was so close. |
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The soldiers at Micklegate Bar are not marching but are stood at ease, and may well have been from the Army Cadet Corps. |
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Fair enough, a lot of the people marching at the weekend do like a bit of the old tally-ho. |
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They have that symphonic sound with thundering, marching percussion perfect for the war scenes. |
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There will be 40 floats in tomorrow's procession, accompanied by marching bands, majorettes and cheerleaders. |
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We headed up the Lake Albert escarpment avoiding marching soldiers then stopped for an hour in the Budongo Forest for a walk with crombecs. |
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Now, on cold misty autumnal evenings, locals say they have seen the four hundred marching through the village still. |
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They stop halfway down for a military marching band playing a medley of all the songs you might predict they would play. |
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Snap competition was a contest between the twelve teams, each headed up by a senior, in which a series of marching maneuvers was carried out. |
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In New Orleans and across the country brass marching bands became very popular in the Napoleonic period. |
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As this is going on, the angry men are desperately trying to play a full set of marching band wind instruments. |
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Legge, Therefore a wise prince, marching the whole day, does not go far from his baggage waggons. |
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A brigade of infantry marching in column of fours, without its baggage, would take about 15 minutes to cross a bridge. |
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At the first moment of sunrise the passage began, the troops marching across one bridge, the baggage and attendants crossing the other. |
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The men form up on the Green as the sound of marching British troops is heard. |
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The Detachments marching in the Procession are formed up in The Mall, Marlborough Road and Cleveland Row. |
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He spoke of poetry and emigration to New Zealand as a ten pound pom, his discovery of marching girls, local verse, and suburban dreariness. |
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I just remember Cortez ordering his cannon to fire and the Spaniards marching around the bloodstained teocallis and little else. |
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Squatters were given their marching orders after police, bailiffs and immigration officials teamed up for an eviction sting. |
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The camera followed this fish out of water rocker as he auditions for the marching band and crams for finals. |
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Their marching shoes are covered with spotless white over-socks into which their pants are tucked. |
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We disembarked a few days ago, and are now marching steadily north through the countryside to our destination city. |
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Thousands of soldiers were walking around, marching, much like in the present day military manner. |
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The armies marching and countermarching throughout this township during the 18th and early 19th centuries discouraged early settlers. |
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She quickly turned and began marching towards her apartment building, now only a block away. |
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I turned around and started marching back our room, confident that Charles would never bug me again. |
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She nodded the moment I saw Dr. Kay enter the room and come marching over to us. |
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So he goes after the teenagers, and grabs one in a shop, marching him outside. |
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The overtures did not divert tens of thousands from marching against the government. |
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And to state the obvious, Gosnell's madhouse was not what I was marching for. |
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One African American woman brandished a pocket-sized copy of the Constitution while marching. |
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The patriarch, Josiah, had fought with the 42nd Wisconsin Infantry, marching all the way to Kentucky to battle the Confederates. |
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By the time Avery made it to the city May 7, more than 3,000 black young people were marching on the city. |
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Batiste and his band ended the evening by marching off the bandstand and playing amid the crowd. |
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Protest leaders talk of boycotting and marching through Clayton again to shut down area businesses. |
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By marching together, carrying banners and chanting slogans, thousands of students peacefully displayed their anger and emotion against the war that had started. |
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For a cardio bonus, do 30 seconds of jogging, marching, jumping jacks or split-lunge jumps immediately after each move, then go on to the next move. |
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And though as on that day in 1960, the students marching through Nashville this weekend were silent, their convictions are loud. |
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It's powerful, unsettling stuff, those thin wraiths marching off to war. |
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So instead of marching into Starbucks for a morning cup of brew, saunter in for a big bowl of bud. |
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The regiment was then marching to Fort Laramie to resupply before joining Brigadier General George Crook's Big Horn and Yellowstone Expedition in northern Wyoming. |
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In one of his famous cartoons, he shows soldiers of the French Foreign Legion marching endlessly through a desert expanse with two legionnaires in the foreground. |
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The concerts still feature free-form dancers, light shows and musicians in outlandish costumes marching through the audience while chanting and singing. |
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Whichever of the groups was in power would be marching the other to the gallows. |
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The guard is first seen marching up and down the gravel forecourt, before breaking into pirouettes. |
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More successful attractions included tag wrestling, Highland dancing, popstars Shane and Ray Columbus, marching teams, brass bands, a funhouse and even performing police dogs. |
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I looked around and I was marching next to a parent with two small white children. |
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Rain fell steadily, beating a tattoo on the broad leaves of the tree above his head, like the relentless footsteps of an army of marching warriors. |
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Soldiers marching with baggage, when they once enter on the southern or Pisidian route 3o miles west of the Limnai, must go on past the double lake. |
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In the mean time my servants had arrived, the lost mattress was restored to the baggage, and West and I, in light marching order, started for Brussels. |
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The summer heat proved particularly brutal to men marching in hot wool uniforms, and the landscape stretched before them, an unending plain of scorched grassland. |
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No more marching in to military music, no women teachers, new school caps with a badge in yellow which we raised when we met teachers out of school bounds. |
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We hear the shouts of the military squadron marching up the hills. |
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I exited the elevator quickly, marching out to the crowded street. |
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Perhaps music wasn't marching inexorably to dodecaphonic heaven after all. |
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Last weekend, as a huge detachment of US marines marched up Fifth Avenue preceded by their impressive marching band, enormous cheers rang out from the pavements. |
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Several tracks celebrate not only jazz and the marching bands but also that other integral aspect of New Orleans Carnival, the Mardi Gras Indians. |
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City's misery was all but sealed on 71 minutes when Edmondson received his marching orders for an unsavoury outburst directed at the referee's assistant. |
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However, the game was effectively over as a spectacle when Baker received his marching orders, as Dagenham were quite content to sit back on their lead. |
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Deep into injury time, Hendry received his marching orders after taking what was judged to be a dive on the edge of the penalty area, earning him a second yellow card. |
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Almost immediately after a Juventus player received marching orders for a second cautionable offence and moments later the referee was head-butted by a player. |
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Battersby was the villain of the piece in this fixture back in April when he was involved in an unsightly battle with Lancaster and both received their marching orders. |
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Wise has already shown he can fill the boots of Brass, taking charge of the defence when the City chief received his marching orders at Brunton Park. |
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Midway through the second half Dunnington had a man sent off and in the later stages another received his marching orders along with an Old Malton player. |
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I don't know why, but he'd slung a thick leather belt across each shoulder and resembled nothing so much as a young bandito marching home from a successful raid. |
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They were marching steadily across the marshy northlands, their pace slowed by the necessity of watching their feet for sinkholes and mud puddles. |
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The mellophone is the marching French horn and looks like a fat trumpet. |
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Several green creatures were marching by in tight formation. |
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I feel oppressed and confused by neat columns of figures marching down the page or screen, disoriented by colour-coded graphs and the arcane jargon of statistical analysis. |
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Hundreds of residents sent a message to Hampshire police chiefs by marching in protest at plans to cut the number of police officers based in New Milton. |
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The corpse was moved from the private bedchamber to the tomb in a public procession not unlike that at a wedding, with the family marching in hierarchical order. |
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And then, if Pope Francis is still with us, we may well see the leftist saints come marching in. |
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Next, a high school marching band filed onto the floor of the arena to play the theme song from the show. |
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There were families, church groups, and college kids, all marching in clusters. |
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I was able to be alone while not alone, processing the fact that while I was marching and chanting I could literally die. |
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Current and former ISI officers give the Taliban their marching orders and help assist with critical fundraising in Pakistan. |
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But it appears more likely that Reid and Pelosi were getting their marching orders and being read the terms of surrender. |
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Others reported that for the moment, their marching orders were to do more writing in-house or not use freelancers at all. |
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He began to pace slightly, his familiar heavy tread thudding in my ears as if he were marching in my head, crushing with his boots my own thoughts and dreams. |
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Closely related to these was the exhibition's main event, a line of 26 small bronze figures marching down a long wooden tabletop set on metal trestles. |
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Straight and gay men and women will keep marching into the savage machinery of an unfocused war for years to come. |
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The training consisted of marching, shining boots, more marching, polishing brass buckles, buttons and badges, more shining boots, blancoing webbing and more marching. |
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We didn't wear our marching order nicely blancoed in those days. |
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It was rooted in the parlour musicales, the outdoor sing-songs, the marching bands, the hymns stoutly sung in church, and other impressions of his boyhood. |
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And though most Internet groups inside big companies operate with a measure of unrestraint this group operates with the precision of a marching corps. |
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Has it been any help to investigators as they try to unravel his machinations by marching down the paper trail? |
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The popularization of the marching band made European instruments available to African Americans for the first time, at first primarily brass instruments. |
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The trees were stately, an opulent mix of mature broadleaf and conifer marching alongside the water in an unruly column stretching to the end of Hillside Drive and beyond. |
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I was in the band in high school and junior high, and played the sousaphone and a little trombone and drums, and was the leader of the 72-piece marching band that we had. |
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An immigrant buffeted by war and with little formal education, he learnt his trade as an intern before marching out on his own as a photojournalist. |
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The violence came after a group of protesters marching with about 3,000 demonstrators threw petrol bombs and red paint at riot squads, injuring one police officer. |
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It has also given the impression that Britain is acting detrimentally to the general European interest and is the only country marching out of step. |
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Not content to just dissolve all this history into an ambient puddle, the track's frantic marching band brass section stomps double time for its giddy finale. |
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Most statues of King have him marching or holding his hand up and orating. |
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She began learning to play the pipes when she was thirteen, practising first on the chanter, learning finger movement, arm movement, breathing control and finally marching. |
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Everyone ought to lead a parade once in their life, just to experience the curious sensation of marching down the middle of the street to cheers and hurrahs. |
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These astonishing creatures squirt formic acid to defend themselves, farm aphids for honeydew, and make so much noise on a warm day that you can hear them marching. |
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The sample of the sound of milk being churned into butter takes on an eerie sound that is more like a pack of marching troopers than a regular act of rural domesticity. |
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It had a nicely drawn design of fan-tailed animals marching in opposing directions, row by row, and was done in the silky wool characteristic of good Baluch work. |
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Floats and parades and marching bands and all the other events that have been lined up to celebrate the feast day of the national apostle are in the final stages. |
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Groups marching included the Alliance of Filipino Immigrants and Advocates, the Watts Committee Against Police Brutality, and the Bus Riders Union. |
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He kept on marching ahead with equipoise and firm determination. |
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Could this be a new wrinkle on the Communist conspiracy of yore, the politburo's instructions replaced with marching orders issued by the Social Workers Soviet? |
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How had I, and countless other well-meaning teachers and educational professionals, managed to spend three years marching down this terrible educational cul-de-sac? |
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He said the move was in response to last year's generally peaceful marching season, and was part of an ongoing de-escalation over the past three years. |
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Great Scott, who would have thought that this would be the destiny of the Union Volunteer in 1861-2 while marching down Broadway to the tune of 'John Brown's Body. |
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They disdain combat re-enactment, opting instead to show authentic training skills, precision marching and parade ground drill, to Latin commands. |
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Before that, he played the bass drum in his high school marching band. |
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American Honda remains committed to providing the best, fairest platform to showcase HBCU marching band programs. |
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The men form on either side of the rope to be hauled, and walk away with it like firemen marching with their engine. |
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As the poison takes effect, Hamlet, hearing that Fortinbras is marching through the area, names the Norwegian prince as his successor. |
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They nominated Morcar, the brother of Edwin of Mercia, as earl, and invited the brothers to join them in marching south. |
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In 1485, the future Henry VII landed close to his birthplace in Mill Bay before marching on to England. |
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In 1966 they took part in Irish celebrations of the 50th anniversary of the Easter Rising, marching in Dublin. |
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He succeeded in marching to the Sassanid capital of Ctesiphon, but lacked adequate supplies for an assault. |
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This theme is evident in the Sikh festivals of Hola Mohalla and Vaisakhi, which feature marching and displays of valor. |
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In 1303, Edward invaded again, reaching Edinburgh before marching to Perth. |
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Andrew Moray responded to news of its advance by marching east to confront it. |
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Of course, there is a toilet tissue protocol to observe before marching to the till with two 12 roll packs. |
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George Briant, when he was 103, remembered marching near the village of Le Charmel in France. |
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Absent this year were past crowd favorites such as the briefcase drill team and the gory Texas chain saw marching unit. |
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And when the toyful saints went marching through Presbyterian Valley Hospital on Sunday, parents and children beamed. |
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The difference is they play their own music on instruments ranging from tambourines to marching marimba bells or snare drums. |
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I was not marching, or demonstrating or taking part in sit-ins. |
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The primary orientation of the annual street parades is typically from north to south, marching along major avenues. |
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In marching by double file, four abreast, etc., elbows touch and no lagging should be allowed. |
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As in many organizations, tradition is an important aspect of marching bands. |
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The sun shone as hundreds of people lined the streets for a parade of floats and marching bands through the area. |
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Without conferring with his British ministers, George stationed them in Hanover to prevent enemy French troops from marching into the electorate. |
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London Mayor Boris Johnson joined a marching band yesterday but promised the move was temporary. |
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They were watching the newsreel pictures showing a film of British prisoners of war marching in some city in the Far East. |
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To say that Ellie is obsessed with marching band would be an understatement. |
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The French army in Spain advanced, advancing in Catalonia while taking Bilbao and Vitoria and marching toward Castile. |
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Biggs watched her ninth-grade son, who plays with the same trumpet that his father used for his high school marching band. |
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Naval Academy, can recall the gear issue process and marching back to the barracks carrying a seabag which felt like it was loaded with anvils. |
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When marching at ease, you must march in orderly ranks in silence, but you need not keep step or march at attention. |
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Whether it's jazz, marching bands, or symphony orchestras, thousands of musicians and composers use saxophones to express their creativity. |
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Arnold, therefore, as usual with him, led the forlorn hope, marching about one hundred yards before the main body. |
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He looked with some alarm at the long lines of marching men and animals. |
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The Highlanders resisted marching into England and there were some mutinies and defections, but they pressed on. |
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The daffodils I planted in the autumn are marching their way along the path, strident trumpets fanfaring the first warmish day of the year. |
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Frederick William crushed this revolt in 1662, by marching into the city with thousands of troops. |
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Strongbow responded in early 1174 by marching an army into Thomond and advancing towards Limerick. |
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If African-Americans are marching in Harlem, do they have to let the Ku Klux Klan into their parade? |
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And no self-respecting North East pit village or housing estate was without its own band of marching drums and kazoos. |
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So far, marching cubes enjoys a wide application due to its relatively simple principle and strong realizability. |
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Today's picture shows the Rag Week Parade marching down Northumberland Street from Newcastle University, but in what year? |
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You can forget the romantic Beau Geste image of Legionnaires marching through the desert, a blistering sun on their back. |
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A castrum was designed to house and protect the soldiers, their equipment and supplies when they were not fighting or marching. |
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Without any announcement, people started marching out of the park. |
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North and South Korea marching somewhat oddly together as the Democratic People's Republic of Korea. |
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Festive groups of spectators broke apart and gave way to Wolfgang and Arminius marching in lockstep into the Statilian Amphitheater. |
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One version of the large tuba, popular in marching bands, is called a sousaphone in honor of bandsman John Philip Sousa. |
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This was no other than a column of foot soldiers, marching with perfect regularity.... On they came at a slow march. |
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Most are held by Protestant fraternities such as the Orange Order, and Ulster loyalist marching bands. |
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This overhang was an excellent place from which to attack an enemy while it was marching in column through the pass. |
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The commander related that he was astonished to watch an army of 40,000 men in full equipment go marching past from the direction of the heights. |
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The parade includes over 30 floats, vintage cars, a marching band, various local celebrities and members of the Penrith Lions Club. |
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In this chapter, the history of solving elliptic problems by direct marching methods is reviewed. |
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The second rank either marching forward or standing still, will then fire just like the first. |
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Napoleon invaded Prussia with 180,000 troops, rapidly marching on the right bank of the River Saale. |
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In addition, the marching band in the parade, consisting of drummers, keeps crowds entertained. |
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At the first Super Bowl, the pregame featured the marching bands from the University of Arizona and Grambling University. |
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About 100 yards from the gate, we could see armed East Berlin troops marching along with tanks. |
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After this, Balj seized power by marching on Cordoba and executing Ibn Qatan. |
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For just 2,000 French casualties, Napoleon had managed to capture a total of 60,000 Austrian soldiers through his army's rapid marching. |
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It acquired its nickname after being sung in Paris by volunteers from Marseille marching on the capital. |
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Turkmeni marching lords seized land around the western part of the Silk Road from the decaying Byzantine Empire. |
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A HOUSEPROUD pooch is believed to have given burglars their marching orders after an attempted break-in at their owner's Dudley home. |
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Though he had made his son Henry king of Sicily before marching on Germany, he still reserved real political power for himself. |
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The army marched to the Baltic before turning around and marching to the Rhine, winning much booty with no harassment. |
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He returned in 775, marching through Westphalia and conquering the Saxon fort at Sigiburg. |
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Valens arrived there after marching for seven hours over difficult terrain. |
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On 6 August, reconnaissance informed Valens that about 10,000 Goths were marching towards Adrianople from the north, about 25 kilometers away. |
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