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Attrill and at
In 1996, Attrill rowed for Imperial and won the premier event for eights at Henley Royal Regatta — the Grand Challenge Cup.
Attrill won a silver medal in the eight at the 1999 World Championships in Canada.

Attrill and on
In memory of a battle in the town of Musa Qala in Afghanistan in 2006, involving the Royal Irish Regiment, a new regimental march, composed by Chris Attrill and commissioned by Larne Borough Council, was gifted to the regiment on Saturday 1 November 2008 in Larne, during an event in which the regiment was also presented with the ' Freedom of the Borough '.
Attrill lives on the Isle of Wight.

Attrill and .
See Wisconsin v. Pelican Insurance Co., 127 U. S. 265 ; Huntington v. Attrill, 146 U. S. 657 ; Finney v. Guy, 189 U. S. 335 ; see also Clarke v. Clarke, 178 U. S. 186 ; Olmsted v. Olmsted, 216 U. S. 386 ; Hood v. McGehee, 237 U. S. 611 ; cf.
Louis Attrill is a British rower and Olympics gold medallist.
Louis Attrill was selected for the 1997 senior eight.

took and up
When Fred Powell's brother-in-law, Charlie Keane, moved into the dead man's home, the anonymous letter writer took no chances on Charlie taking up where Fred had left off and wasted no time on a first notice:
Hez looked up at the high face of Emigrant Rock, official signboard for the Raft River turnoff, and gloated, `` Seems funny that them Burnsides never took time to leave their John-Henry up thar ''.
Prohibition was the law of the land, but it was unpopular ( how many of us oldsters took up drinking in prohibition days, drinking was so gay, so fashionable, especially in the sophisticated Northeast!!
and in her forthright way, Henrietta, who in her story of Sara had indicated her own unwillingness `` to think of men as the privileged '' and `` women as submissive and yielding '', felt obliged to defend vigorously any statement of hers to which Morris Jastrow took the slightest exception -- he objected to her stand on the Corbin affair, as well as on the radical reforms of Dr. Wise of Hebrew Union College -- until once, in sheer desperation, he wrote that he had given up hope they would ever agree on anything.
The Mercers took up residence in Brooklyn, and Mercer found a regular job in Wall Street `` misplacing stocks and bonds ''.
but unfortunately the rabbit, on no grounds at all, took up toward this neutral object an attitude of disapproval and that made it for the first time, and in the only intelligible sense, bad.
Another force flanked the company and took up a position on a hill to the rear.
She took refuge on a tongue of land extending into a gully, crouched at the base of a thorn tree, and waited for them to come up.
My man, he won't be around a little while, he just fixed me up with this stuff they took out of the Elite.
Madden took up this point with Garth, who shrugged it off.
He took several large swallows, recollected that Docherty had gone up another flight, and decided he would be wise to cover himself by finding him.
He took up a white sheet of paper, dark with single-spaced data.
Meanwhile, fishermen took advantage of them to pull up whoppers.
Kimmell ordered the driver to back up, watched the children safely across and was approaching the car when it suddenly `` took off at high speed '', he said, narrowly missing him.
And it was clear that Adrien was not mistaken, for both Small and Cromwell took no step toward aiding in the sending up of the new topgallant mast till Philip Spencer had given the signal to obey.
Sometimes she took the path that winds up around my cottage to the walk at the edge of the cliff.
In Tokyo Richard took up a life similar to that which he had lived in New York, except that he had replaced his biwa with a friend.
It took him a few seconds to put his thoughts in order, and then he got up from the bunk where he had been resting, sleeplessly.
Under Lincoln's leadership, the Union set up a naval blockade that shut down the South's normal trade, took control of the border slave states at the start of the war, gained control of communications with gunboats on the southern river systems, and tried repeatedly to capture the Confederate capital at Richmond, Virginia.
It seems that the Greeks took advantage of the observations of some older civilizations in the East and managed to work them up rationally.
In April 1834, Johnston took up farming in Texas, but enlisted as a private in the Texas Army during the Texas War of Independence against the Republic of Mexico in 1836.
Pillow took up a position at nearby Clarksville, Tennessee and did not move into the fort itself until February 7, 1862.
Like many other cross-channel linguistic acquisitions, many Britons readily took this up and followed this rule themselves, while the Americans took a simpler rule and applied it rigorously.

took and rowing
To this end, he exercised regularly and took up boxing, tennis, hiking, rowing, polo, and horseback riding.
She and her father determined that the weather was too rough for the lifeboat to put out from Seahouses ( then North Sunderland ), so they took a rowing boat ( a 21 ft, 4-man Northumberland coble ) across to the survivors, taking a long route that kept to the lee side of the islands, a distance of nearly a mile.
In 1696 he took out a patent for a machine for polishing glass or marble and another for " rowing of ships with greater ease and expedicion than hitherto beene done by any other " which involved paddle-wheels driven by a capstan and which was dismissed by the Admiralty following a negative report by the Surveyor of the Navy, Edmund Dummer.
The rowing competition took place as scheduled on July 16, with no altercations between the estimated 650 spectators and 15 protesters.
His elder daughter Natalie took up rowing in 2009 and started competing for Oxford University Women's Boat Club in 2010, and competed in the 2011 women's boat race, which Oxford won.
At 46 and as captain, he took part in inter-ship rowing competitions.
He also took part in fencing, horse-riding and rowing, although circumstances did not allow him to keep these up.
Carathéodory managed to save books from the library and was only rescued at the last moment by a journalist who took him by rowing boat to the battleship Naxos which was standing by.
He also took up rowing at the senior level with the Sydney Rowing Club.
A football injury took him out of that sport and into the sport of rowing.
When Durham University took responsibility of the campus in 1994 Tees Rowing Club was asked to help develop rowing at the campus.
After winning silver in the 2004 Olympic Games in the women's pair with Grainger, she retired from rowing and took up a career with the Foreign Office, for whom she worked in Sarajevo and Basra.
While studying engineering at Brown University he took up rowing and went on to represent the United States at the 1972 Summer Olympics.
Following his Olympic victory, Müller took a year off from rowing.
He represented the school at rowing and rugby-he was a fast and aggressive open side wing forward-and took part in the thriving amateur dramatics society with leading roles in Gilbert and Sullivan operettas and straight plays ( Rope ).
The naval Battle of Swally took place on 29 – 30 November 1612 off the coast of Suvali ( anglicised to Swally ), a village near the city of Surat, Gujarat, India, and was a victory for four English East India Company galleons over four Portuguese naus and 26 barks ( rowing vessels with no armament ).
An early robbery took place when James Coffee and Tommy Shay forced a local eight-man rowing club at gunpoint to row the boat to the Brooklyn shore.
The creation of these organizations set the stage for the first intercollegiate sporting event in the U. S. This event took place in 1852, when the rowing team from Yale competed against the rowing team from Harvard at Lake Winnipesaukee, New Hampshire.
The open water swimming events took place in the Olympic rowing basin, legacy of Montreal's 1976 Summer Olympics, on the neighbouring Île Notre-Dame.

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