Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Imperialism in Asia" ¶ 7
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

chartering and routes
Part of the reason was that the airline was not able to compensate for the revenue loss after the Norwegian Military stopped chartering flights and instead used scheduled routes to transport its personnel.

chartering and between
The railroad brotherhoods, the unions formed in the latter half of the nineteenth century, made minute distinctions between groups that worked alongside each other ; as an example, more than twenty years passed between the original chartering of the International Brotherhood of Stationary Firemen and the amendment of its charter to permit the union to represent the oilers and helpers who worked with them.
Joosten is reported to have made a fortune in trade between Japan and Southeast Asia, chartering several Red Seal Ships under license from Tokugawa Ieyasu.

chartering and East
Public Laws of North Carolina, 1907, Chapter 820 titled An Act to Stimulate High School Instruction in the Public Schools of the State and Teacher Training is the official law chartering East Carolina Teachers Training School ( ECTTS ) on March 8, 1907 by the North Carolina General Assembly.

chartering and West
ACA met its deadline of having an air mail service operating by October 19, 1927 by chartering a Fairchild FC-2 floatplane from a small Dominican Republic carrier, West Indian Aerial Express.
The ILA renewed its efforts to reestablish itself on the West Coast, chartering a new local in San Francisco in 1933.
The earliest roots of the American Baptist Seminary of the West lie in the chartering of California College, Vacaville, in 1871.

chartering and began
In the United States, government chartering began to fall out of vogue in the mid-19th century.
The German colonisation and the chartering of new towns and villages began into largely Slav-inhabited territories east of the Elbe, such as Bohemia, Silesia, Pomerania, and Livonia.
Shortly afterward, the company began chartering passenger aircraft for group travel as well ; its Lockheed Super Constellation, Douglas DC-4 and DC-6 fleet comprised the largest trans-Atlantic charter operation through the 1950s.
The original main line began with the chartering of the Baltimore, Carroll and Frederick Railroad in 1852, with the intent of building a rail line from Baltimore west to Washington County, Maryland.
Greek life began at Schreiner with the chartering of the sorority Delta Phi Epsilon established its Gamma Gamma chapter on January 25, 2003.

chartering and with
Diplomatic relations were also established with the Ottoman Empire with the chartering of the Levant Company and the dispatch of the first English ambassador to the Porte, William Harborne, in 1578.
As the absence of a national bank made war with Britain very difficult to finance, in 1814 Congress passed a bill chartering a second national bank.
The passengers could be a group of college students off on a holiday or any grouping of persons with a common interest to support chartering a non-scheduled flight.
The Lodge at Melrose, claiming an antiquity at least as great as Kilwinning, simply ignored the Grand Lodge of Scotland, again chartering daughter lodges, with the Master being addressed as " Grand Master ".
FHA also was tasked with chartering and regulating a national mortgage association that would buy and sell FHA-insured mortgages.
Its historical lineage begins in the earliest days of railroading with the chartering in 1848 of the Chicago and Aurora Railroad, a direct ancestor line of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad, which lends Burlington to the names of various merger-produced successors.
In 1805 Bentham returned to Russia, this time on government business, and remained there for two years with his family, chartering an entire ship to take his establishment, his servants, and his companions.
It is also the only fraternity to have chapters simultaneously at all eight Ivy League schools with the chartering of Eta at Yale University in 1889 ( though this claim lasted only a few years, owing to burgeoning faculty opposition to the Princeton chapter ).
The fraternity became bi-continental on May 3, 2008 with the chartering of Iota Omicron at the University of Oxford.
Due to the venality and cutthroat tactics of the party chartering his one-man trading vessel, Tuf inadvertently becomes master of Ark, an ancient, 30-kilometer-long " seedship ," a very powerful warship with advanced ecological engineering capabilities.
Their " Colony Development Consultants " have been able to work with colonies on the road to chartering and have developed a formula for success that has been instrumental in the establishment of many new chapters.
In 1949, the fraternity became an international organization with the chartering of the Beta Upsilon Sigma graduate chapter and the Gamma Nu Sigma graduate chapter in Monrovia, Liberia.
The fraternity would extend its international chapters into Geneva, Switzerland, with the chartering of the Gamma Nu Sigma graduate chapter in 1955.
Instead, he favored opening a number of state banks, but faced with a Whig majority in the legislature, he succeeded only in chartering the Louisville Bank of Kentucky.
The " Old Republicans ," led by John Randolph of Roanoke, refused to form a coalition with the Federalists and instead set up a separate opposition, since the main Republican leaders ( notably James Madison, Albert Gallatin, James Monroe, John C. Calhoun and Henry Clay ) had in effect adopted Federalist principles by chartering the Second Bank of the United States, promoting internal improvements for transportation, raising tariffs to protect factories, and promoting a strong army and navy after the failures of the War of 1812.
Dry cargo brokers are typically specialists in the chartering of Bulk carriers, and are appointed to act either for a shipowner looking for employment for a ship, or a charterer with a cargo to be shipped.
Container brokers specialise in the chartering of container ships and provide container ship owners and charterers with market-related information.
In commercial demise chartering, the charter period may last for many years ; and may end with the charterer acquiring title ( ownership ) of the ship.
* Ferdinand Waldo Demara-known as " The Great Imposter ", credited with founding and chartering LaMennais College in Alfred, Maine ( now Walsh University ), while impersonating a Brother of Christian Instruction

chartering and Spanish
In recent years, ISA has assumed a more global orientation, hiring multilingual staff and a director of global operations, chartering new sections in several countries outside the United States and Canada, issuing publications in Spanish, and in 2002 ISA elected its first president from outside North America, ISA EXPO.

chartering and sea
A development called Wickham's Cay, consisting of two areas that were reclaimed from the sea and a marina have enabled Road Town to emerge as a haven for yacht chartering and a centre of tourism.

chartering and .
" Nonetheless, Edwards joined several others as an original fellow or trustee for the chartering of the College in the English Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations ( the former name for Brown University ), the first Baptist college in the original thirteen colonies, and now one of the Ivy League universities.
During the chartering of new teams, organizational enabling resources are first identified.
Also identified during team chartering are team-specific resources ( e. g., budgetary resources, human resources ).
They were often granted monopolies as part of the chartering process.
Although the Federal government has from time to time chartered corporations, the general chartering of corporations has been left to the states.
In the past, he has opted to fly on commercial flights instead of chartering private jets, he owns an electric Tesla Roadster, Fisker Karma plug in hybrid, and a Toyota Prius.
The political climate – dubbed the Era of Good Feelings – favored the development of national programs and institutions, including a protective tariff, internal improvements and the revival of a Bank of the United States Southern and western support for the Bank, led by Republican nationalists John C. Calhoun of South Carolina and Henry Clay of Kentucky was decisive in the successful chartering effort.
Like most of the Southern members of Congress, neither Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson nor Representative James Madison had any particular interest in two of Hamilton's tripartite recommendations: the establishing of an official government Mint, and the chartering of the Bank of the United States.
In 1821, he introduced legislation chartering Columbian College ( later The George Washington University ) in Washington, D. C.
At the root of the question is the fact that none of the chartering monarchs – Elizabeth I, Charles I, or George III – created a university distinct from Trinity College.
In the same time frame, in 1557 the English Crown aimed to stem the flow of dissent by chartering the Stationers ' Company.
This designation currently reflects no formal chartering process or official standing within the Order.
Other traditional uses of private bills include chartering corporations, changing the charters of existing corporations, granting monopolies, approving of public infrastructure and seizure of property for those, as well as enclosure of commons and similar redistributions of property.
After the closing of banks nationwide in early March 1933, press reports and public statements by Congressional leaders suggested banks might be nationalized or the existing system of “ dual banking ” might be eliminated through federal legislation, or even a Constitutional amendment, to prohibit state chartering of banks.
In return, Beebe would pay for other expenses such as chartering a ship to raise and lower the sphere, and as the owner of the sphere Barton would accompany Beebe on his expeditions in it.

0.177 seconds.