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At and entrance
At the entrance side of the shelter, each roof beam is rested on the inside 4 inches of the block wall.
At the western entrance to the Augustaeum was the Milion, a vaulted monument from which distances were measured across the Eastern Roman Empire.
At from the entrance is a square hole in the roof of the Descending Passage.
At the beginning of the 19th century Scottish universities had no entrance exam, students typically entered at ages of 15 or 16, attended for as little as two years, chose which lectures to attend and left without qualifications.
At the entrance were a number of poppies and other hypnogogic plants.
At the center of the courtyard he designed a glass and steel pyramid, first proposed with the Kennedy Library, to serve as entrance and anteroom skylight.
At age seven, after apparently taking lessons from Antoine François Marmontel, he passed the entrance examination for piano at the Paris Conservatoire, but he was refused admission because he was believed to be too young.
At the November 2006 groundbreaking for a new ballpark for the New York Mets, Citi Field, it was announced that the main entrance, modeled on the one in Brooklyn's old Ebbets Field, would be called the Jackie Robinson Rotunda.
At the age of fourteen, he began receiving tutoring in Latin and Greek from his church pastor to prepare for entrance to Yale College.
At the entrance to the sea, a flood protection system called Maeslantkering has been installed ( completed in 1997 ).
* At any entrance gate, bow respectfully before passing through.
At the exhibition's entrance he placed Salvador Dalí's Rainy Taxi ( an old taxi rigged to produce a steady drizzle of water down the inside of the windows, and a shark-headed creature in the driver's seat and a blond mannequin crawling with live snails in the back ) greeted the patrons who were in full evening dress.
* At the Isthmian entrance to the Underworld was a robber named Sinis, often called " Pityokamptes " ( Greek: Πιτυοκάμπτης, " he who bends Pinetrees ").
At the Villa Savoye the act of cleansing is represented both by the sink in the entrance hall and the celebration of the health-giving properties of the sun in the solarium on the roof which is given significance by being the culmination of ascending the ramp.
At 19 he won an entrance scholarship to Balliol College, Oxford.
At the west end of the nave are two projecting towers, with a narthex ( entrance ) between them.
At Midsummer, a grand entrance of king Gustav was arranged at Söderport, the southern gate of Stockholm.
At the far side of the plate, the parallel wave is exactly half of a wavelength delayed relative to the perpendicular wave, and the resulting combination ( red ) is orthogonally polarized compared to its entrance state.
At around 1: 10 p. m., Bryant got in line behind other cars at the toll booth at the entrance to the historic site.
" At Moscow State University, Jews were required to take their entrance exams in different rooms from non-Jewish applicants, which were nicknamed " gas chambers ", and they were marked on a harsher scale.
At the entrance to the north in the center, between the streets Via Aliprandi and Via Zanzi, a fork of the river artificially created for defensive purposes in the early decades of the 14th century gives rise to Lambretto, which is joined to the main course Lambro at its exit to the south from the ancient circle of medieval walls ( Monza ) ( now completely demolished ).
At the age of 17 years he failed the physical tests of the entrance exam to the École Polytechnique and he therefore decided to enlist in the navy.
At the center of the northeastern side, there is another entrance, which enters the roofed area on the southeastern side of the northwestern section, and through which access can also be gained to the southeastern ( fully roofed ) section.
At a much earlier period the Greeks had established on the coast the colonies of Cius ( modern Gemlik ); Chalcedon ( modern Kadıköy ), at the entrance of the Bosporus, nearly opposite Byzantium ( modern Istanbul ) and Heraclea Pontica ( modern Karadeniz Ereğli ), on the Euxine, about 120 miles ( 190 km ) east of the Bosporus.
At the entrance of the current Plaza de la Virgen Blanca, was the site of Santa Clara, who was joined by the wall at the Convent of San Antonio.

At and harbour
At the port city of Jaffa ( today part of Tel Aviv ) an outcrop of rocks near the harbour has been associated with the place of Andromeda's chaining and rescue by the traveler Pausanias, the geographer Strabo and the historian of the Jews Josephus.
At the end of the ceremony, any fireballs that are still burning are cast into the harbour.
At the end of the 19th century, a channel was excavated to allow the military ships to enter Mar Piccolo harbour, and the ancient Greek city become an island connected to the mainland by bridges.
At the seaward end of the harbour are the RNLI Lifeboat Shed and the Alfred Corry Museum.
At the beginning of the 1800s a harbour was developed, but it was the coming of the railways in 1843 that would have the bigger impact.
At the east end of Breydon Water the river returns to a narrow channel, passing under Breydon Bridge after which it is joined by the River Bure then under Haven Bridge from where it is 4. 4 km through the harbour into the North Sea.
At low tide the water in the harbour is fifteen feet deep.
At that time it was the only real harbour town along the Danish west coast, being sheltered from the North Sea by the wall of Holmsland Dunes ( Holmsland Klit ).
At the same time as the breakwater was being built in the 1850s, the island was fortified by a string of 13 forts, designed to protect the harbour of refuge.
At the coast, he organised the construction of a fortress, and a harbour for the fleet at Pattala.
At approximately 07: 45, the commander of the Light Brigade, the Earl of Cardigan, reached his cavalry, having arrived from his yacht moored in Balaclava harbour.
At the time of the construction of the Dublin and Kingstown Railway, Lord Cloncurry was compensated with, among other things, a private railway bridge and harbour.
At the start of the 19th century 90 % of Poole's population's employment was directly dependent on the harbour, but this dropped to 20 % during the century as the railways reached the town, and deep hulled boats moved up the coast to Southampton, which had a deeper harbour and is closer to London.
At about this time, Grenville also seized lands for colonisation at Tracton, to the west of Cork harbour.
At Timmendorf harbour there are a pilot's station and facilities for yachts and local fishermen.
At one time the harbour was a major port serving the peninsula's gold mining and kauri industries.
At the entrance to the harbour of Rhodes city, statues of a fallow deer buck and doe now grace the location where the Colossus of Rhodes once stood.
At the same time as the railway was being built more improvements were being made to the harbour, with a second pier on the eastern side of the harbour, the Albert Pier, completed in 1853 to provide even better shelter for shipping, and a lighthouse built on the Old Pier in 1855.
At the Britannia Yacht Club, a utility crane in the inner harbour was named Charlotte Whitton in honour of the former mayor of Ottawa.
At that time, and until the 1950s, the main industry to the north and east of the town was coal mining, and an extensive waggonway existed to take the coal to the harbour.
At the time that the new river mouth harbour was being constructed, so too was a more planned development laid out in streets running parallel and right angles to each other.
At Wimborne Minster it is joined by the River Allen, and at its estuary at Christchurch it is joined by the River Avon before it flows through the harbour into the English Channel.

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