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toll and road
Whilst a reasonable road infrastructure has existed within Angola, time and the war have taken their toll on the road surfaces, leaving many severely potholed, littered with broken asphalt.
* the section of the Via Blanca from Matanzas to Varadero ( toll road )
Loan repayments will be from concessions for raw materials which China desperately needs: copper, cobalt, gold and nickel, as well as by toll revenues from the road and railway.
In the past few decades, much of the freight traffic shifted from rail to road, which led the Federal Government to introduce a motor toll for trucks in 2005.
Hoover's chief objective was to address the growing casualty toll of traffic accidents, but the scope grew and soon embraced motor vehicle standards, rules of the road, and urban traffic control.
All the freeways are tolled ( toll road ).
* See Trans-Java toll road
* Medan-Kuala Namu International Airport-Tebing Tinggi, 80 percent of the land needed for the toll road construction is owned by state plantation which it is easy to take over, whether the remaining 20 percent is owned by local residents which it is difficult to take over due to unreasonably high prices.
The toll road between Tanjung Benoa to Airport and from Airport to Serangan, all in direct line ( not curve ).
Although some sections of road have been built using private or public-private funds, and are operated as toll roads, they are owned by the Government of Ireland.
* 1975 – Dibbles Bridge Coach Crash near Grassington, North Yorkshire, England kills 33 – the highest ever death toll in a road accident in the United Kingdom.
The road toll has decreased over the 5 years from 421 in 2007 to 284 in 2011
In addition, the track was opened to the public in the evenings and on weekends, as a one-way toll road.
For purposes of international statistical comparison, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development ( OECD ) defines a road as " a line of communication ( travelled way ) using a stabilized base other than rails or air strips open to public traffic, primarily for the use of road motor vehicles running on their own wheels ," which includes " bridges, tunnels, supporting structures, junctions, crossings, interchanges, and toll roads, but not cycle paths.
Thailand uses the expressway term for the toll road or highway network.
By this time, Waits was drinking heavily, and life on the road was starting to take its toll.
( Eventually, the highway system grew to include a parallel toll road to handle commuter traffic and an extension to connect to I-66 ).
* May 27 – The Dibbles Bridge Coach Crash near Grassington, North Yorkshire, England results in 32 deaths ( the highest ever toll in a United Kingdom road accident ).
In the summer of 1860, a local miner, Daniel Strong, had surveyed a route over the Sierras for a wagon toll road, a route he realized would also suit a railroad.
* Pike ( road ) or toll road, a course in which fees are collected.
Sometimes a historical name of what once was a toll road.
The Roman road was followed for centuries until, in the late 18th century, it became a toll road.

toll and was
The Essex bridge was a toll crossing until 1868, when the County Commissioners laid out all the Merrimack bridges as highways.
Those attacks combined with Maxime Weygand's Hedgehog tactic would become the major basis for responding to blitzkrieg attacks in the future: deployment in depth, permitting enemyor “ shoulders ” of a penetration was essential to channeling the enemy attack, and artillery, properly employed at the shoulders, could take a heavy toll of attackers.
The dynasty was in a position of power for around a decade until the Napoleonic Wars began to take their toll.
Researcher Craig Etcheson of the Documentation Center of Cambodia suggests that the death toll was between 2 and 2. 5 million, with a " most likely " figure of 2. 2 million.
With the smallpox epidemic catching speed and racking up a staggering death toll, a solution to the crisis was becoming more urgently needed by the day.
In 1970 the movie Harold and Maude was filmed at the toll plaza and showed Maude speeding and disobeying a police officer.
In 2008, the West-Link toll bridge was replaced by the eFlow barrier-free tolling system, with a three-tiered charge system based on electronic tags and car pre-registration.
Even so, although the Foreign Legion distinguished itself, it also took a heavy toll during the war: constantly being deployed in operations, it even reached the point that whole units were annihilated in combat, in what was a traditional Foreign Legion battlefield.
From mid 1998 toll revenue has been credited to the account of the DHB and not to the Government of Guyana, as it was until then.
By late autumn, the death toll began to slow until, in February 1666, it was considered safe enough for the King and his entourage to return to the city.
However, taking into account that it was common practice to release prisoners who were either suffering from incurable diseases or on the point of death, the actual Gulag death toll was somewhat higher, amounting to 1, 258, 537 in 1934-53, or 1. 6 million casualties during the whole period from 1929 to 1953.
Saxony was in economically good shape, although its government was seriously mismanaged, and numerous wars had taken their toll.
By that time the Guelph Henry the Lion, Duke of Saxony and Bavaria, had built a bridge over the river Isar next to a settlement of Benedictine monks — this was on the Salt Route and a toll bridge.
Numerous governors were appointed, but continuous hardships such as cyclones, droughts, pest infestations, lack of food and illnesses finally took their toll, and the island was definitively abandoned in 1710.
By, age was taking its toll on the Vikings, but they still made the playoffs with an 8 – 7 – 1 record.
What was originally a self-standing village ( which has now been subsumed within the city ) lies to the north of the toll bridge, originally built by Sir Piers Edgcumbe in 1525, that crossed what used to be the Deadlake or Stonehouse Creek, to the west of Pennycomequick, the south of Stoke village and to the east of Stoke Church.
The official death toll was 16, 000-however, at most it is now believed that between 2000-4000 citizens were killed.
Recently, the Radio Cab was introduced in Pakistan, which offers riders to call a toll free number to get in touch with the closest taxi stand.
Because it was built of clay / mud like the Deffufa of Nubia, time has taken its toll requiring periodic reconstruction.
The damage toll from this tornado was estimated at 50 million USD in 1982.
Though the group continued to tour around the world, over a decade of living a rap superstar lifestyle was beginning to take a toll on McDaniels.

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