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At and corners
At each of the corners, a 1 m radius quarter-circle is drawn, and a dotted line is painted parallel to the shortline and five metres away from it without extending into the penalty area.
At the corners of pediments they were called acroteria and along the sides of the building, antefixes.
At this time singers would gather on street corners and in subways, generally in groups of three to six.
" At the time of my school Elkland was a mere hamlet, not even a four corners, as there was no street from Skinner ’ s store to the river.
At each of the eight corners are castings with openings for twistlock fasteners.
At a time when competitors boasted that all four corners of the vehicles were visible from the driver's seat, the new Taunus instead offered a streamlined form.
At each of the four corners is a square tower surmounted by a spire, and, near the center of the complex ( and taller than the rest ) rise the pointed belfries and round dome of the basilica.
At the same time, a 33-inch-high concrete wall was constructed in front of the main grandstand and around all four corners to protect spectators.
At least one of the two is shot and probably killed when Alex corners them in the cafeteria meat locker.
At corners, corner monuments are established to mark their exact location on the ground.
At this time, the stars in the top corners were also replaced with the same check letters as used in the lower corners, but in reverse order.
At corners, there are quarter-turn caps.
At the north-west corner there was a thick square minaret 10 – 15 meters high with chamfered corners.
At no time can you go by the corners and not count the spaces.
At the southeast and southwest corners of Yonge-Dundas Square are drinking water fountains.
At least four species are also able to squirt an aimed stream of blood ( see Autohaemorrhaging ) from the corners of the eyes for a distance of up to five feet.
At the time, this was a very novel thing to do, which deviated dramatically from the normal practice of young boys hawking newspapers on street corners.
At the four corners, the gopuras have a facia of Lokesvara ( Buddhist deity, Avalokitesvara ) mounted over Garuda images ( it is also mentioned that the smiling faces are of King Jayavarman II, similar to those seen in the Beyan temple ).
At the four corners of the courtyard are the four minarets, a number only allowable to mosques endowed by a sultan ( princes and princesses could construct two minarets ; others only one ).
At each of the four corners of the cube, is a dome-capped octagonal tower seven stories high with a staircase inside.
At sixty-two, the Woodman can still mine caustic laughter from the darkest corners of his psyche.

At and central
At the central level the scrutin uninominal voting system was selected over some form of the scrutin de liste system, even though the latter had been recommended by Duverger and favored by all political parties.
At the very first, then, Brumidi was required, by the classically pyramidal shape of his central group, to fill in the triangular space above the seated girl on Liberty's right, before starting on the allegorical figures themselves.
At the same time, the Romantic reaction to the Enlightenment produced thinkers, such as Johann Gottfried Herder and later Wilhelm Dilthey, whose work formed the basis for the " culture concept ," which is central to the discipline.
At Montgomery, in the central region, the average annual temperature is 66 ° F ( 19 ° C ), with a winter average of 49 ° F ( 9 ° C ), and a summer average of 81 ° F ( 27 ° C ).
At the end of 1874, when Field Marshal Serrano left Madrid to take command of the northern army in the Carlist War, Brigadier Martínez Campos, who had long been working more or less openly for the king, led some battalions of the central army to Sagunto, rallied to his own flag the troops sent against him, and entered Valencia in the king's name.
At first there was no passenger service, for south of the station was the Akihabara cargo docks, where goods from all over the world would flow into Kanda by river and be hauled up the east bank of the canal to be ticketed at the central cargo transport window.
At the zenith of prosperity of the empire, the An Lushan Rebellion was a watershed event that devastated the population and drastically weakened the central imperial government.
At the navel, throat and crown, there is a twofold knot caused by each side channel twisting once around the central channel.
At the founding congress of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party ( the predecessor of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union ) Vladimir Lenin was able to gain enough support for the establishment of an all-powerful central organ at the next congress.
At that point, Madero would declare himself provisional President of Mexico, and called for a general refusal to acknowledge the central government, restitution of land to villages and Indian communities, and freedom for political prisoners.
At least one work of fiction, the film Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within, uses Gaia philosophy as a central point to the plot, and may arguably represent a fictional parallel to Sir James Lovelock in the character of Dr. Cid, who is met with skepticism from the scientific and social community when he promotes the idea of a " living Earth ".
At the time of the Arab invasion in the middle of the 7th century, the Sasanian central power seemed already largely nominal in the province in contrast with the role of the Hephthalites tribal lords, who were settled in the Herat region and in the neighboring districts, mainly in pastoral Bādghis and in Qohestān.
At the end of the 9th century the northern and southern parts of the town were abandoned for the central section.
At the same time, the early industrialization process that characterized the northern and central parts of the country starting from the 1880s, completely excluded large areas in the North-East.
* 2007 – At least 88 people are killed when two car bombs explode in the Bab Al-Sharqi market in central Baghdad, Iraq.
At that time, the town of Kuwait was settled by migrants from central Arabia who arrived at what was then a lightly populated fishing village under the suzerainty of the Bani Khalid tribe of Arabia.
At each valid point ( a point that is awarded, with a legal part of hand or foot to legal targets and with legal technique ), the central referee halts the fight and at the same time as the two judges, shows with his / her fingers the number of points in the direction of the fighter who is being awarded points.
At the same time, they occupied areas in central Italy and southern Italy.
At this stage, the synapsis ( pairing / coming together ) of homologous chromosomes takes place, facilitated by assembly of central element of the synaptonemal complex.
At power-up, the central processor would load its program counter with the address of the boot ROM and start executing ROM instructions.
At this time, several Polish territorial acquisitions of his father were lost: Upper Lusatia ( also known as Milsko ), part of Lower Lusatia, Red Ruthenia, western and central part of Upper Hungary ( now Slovakia ) and probably Moravia.
At the last minute, as the helicopters were arriving at Fürstenfeldbruck, the German police aboard the airplane voted to abandon their mission, without consulting the central command.
At the end of each round, all bets are gathered into the central pot.
At the same time, there has been a convention that party and state offices be separated at levels other than the central government, and it is unheard of for a sub-national executive to also be party secretary.
At the start of the game the football is placed on the central point, unless one player gives the other a handicap, in which case the ball starts nearer one player's goal.

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