Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Operation Slapstick" ¶ 24
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

When and airborne
When the rider rides up the wake the energy of the wake launches him airborne.
When the French left Vietnam in 1954, all airborne battalions were upgraded to regiments over the next two years.
When airborne spores settle on a plant, weak hydrophobic interactions are formed with the cutin on the plant cell surface, securing it.
When the airborne divisions were conceived early in World War II, the Army's senior commanders decided that the glider regiments would have only two battalions each.
When British scientists in Antarctica performed airborne ice-penetrating radar surveys in the early 1970s, they detected unusual radar readings at the site which suggested the presence of a liquid, freshwater lake below the ice.
When Schmidt informed the divisional commander of his intentions, he was warned to expect a sea or airborne landing that night.
When the aircraft was nearing the end of the runway, the crew commanded nose-up sharply, causing its tail to scrape along the runway as it became airborne, during which smoke was observed in the cabin.
When officials at the War Office examined the equipment that would be required for a British airborne division, they decided that gliders would be an integral component of such a force.
When the humidity rises above 70 percent, however, the pollen tends to clump and is not so likely to become airborne.
When he found that the 2nd Battalion, 503rd Parachute Infantry, was to take part, Browning argued that a larger airborne force should be utilised, as the vast distances and comparatively light opposition would provide a number of opportunities for airborne operations.
When Ayub Khan recognised his mistake, Khan commenced the Gibraltar, a failed airborne operation.
When the airborne establishment was expanded, No. 11 Special Air Service Battalion was renamed 1st Parachute Battalion, and eventually formed the nucleus of 1st Parachute Brigade when it was created in September 1941.
When the division arrived in France, it came under the command of First Allied Airborne Army, which controlled all Allied airborne formations.
When the division arrived in Britain, it came under the command of XVIII Airborne Corps, part of the First Allied Airborne Army, but was not chosen to participate in Operation Market-Garden, the airborne landings in the Netherlands, as Allied planners believed it had arrived too late and could not be " trained up " in time for the operation.
When people or animals are present in buildings, ventilation air is necessary to dilute odors and limit the concentration of carbon dioxide and airborne pollutants such as dust, smoke and volatile organic compounds ( VOCs ).
When the Soviet war in Afghanistan broke out the Soviet forces operated BMP-1 IFVs and BMD-1 airborne IFVs.
When the Mountaintop removal blasts ignite, dust particulates of materials in the soil become airborne and are having a negative impact on human health.
When cars do go airborne, the wings frequently break off or absorb some of the impact of the flip, lessening the impact on the driver.
When the U. S. President and Cabinet become aware the attack is underway, they assist the Soviet defense interception of the USAF bombers ; to little effect, because the Soviets destroy only two bombers and damage one, the Alabama Angel, that remains airborne and en route to target.
When an aircraft is airborne the ground speed does not determine when the aircraft will stall, and it doesn't influence the actual aircraft performance such as rate of climb.
When the bulk of the class went on to begin the Florida phase, the airborne qualified members of Ranger Class 13-71 ( Desert ) donned MC1-1 parachutes, boarded a C-130 aircraft and parachuted into the White Sands Missile Range.
When the transmitters were based on klystron tubes this was generally true, and radars, especially airborne ones, had only a few frequencies to choose among.
When the cannon is fired at northern target E, the target moves more slowly to the east than the cannon and the airborne ball, because the ground moves more slowly at more northern latitudes ( the ground hardly moves at all near the pole ).

When and division
When he came to Baltimore, he was leaving a team which was supposed to win the National League pennant, and he was joining what seemed to be a second division American League club.
When solving an equation that involves division as well as other steps, do all the division steps first to reduce those parts of the equation to their numerical value.
When the Greek army entered Thessaloniki in the First Balkan War ahead of the Bulgarian 7th division by only a day, they were asked to allow a Bulgarian battalion to enter the city.
When Costas was first hired by NBC, Don Ohlmeyer, who at the time ran the network's sports division, told the then 28-year-old Costas that he looked like a 14-year-old ( a story that Costas would recite during an appearance on Late Night with Conan O ' Brien when O ' Brien commented about Costas ' apparent inability to " age " normally ).
When Michael S. Swavely retired as president of Compaq's North American division on July 12, 1991, Eckhard Pfeiffer was named to succeed him.
When Sholes took over pop production in 1957 — a result of his success with Elvis Presley — he put Atkins in charge of RCA Victor's Nashville division.
When Cleisthenes divided the ancient Athenians into new demes for voting, he consulted the Oracle of Delphi about what heroes he should name each division after.
When Babylon fell to the Persian Cyrus the Great in 539 BCE, Judah ( or Yehud medinata, the " province of Yehud ") became an administrative division within the Persian empire.
When working with modular arithmetic, each equivalence class is usually represented by its common residue, for example which can be found using long division.
When the NFL and AFL merged in 1970, the Patriots were placed in the AFC East division, where they still play today.
When p21 ( WAF1 ) is complexed with CDK2 the cell cannot continue to the next stage of cell division.
When the semiconductor division of DEC was sold to Intel, many engineers from the Palo Alto design group moved to SiByte, a start-up company designing MIPS system-on-a-chip ( SoC ) products for the networking market.
When the U. S. entered the war in 1917, Roosevelt sought to raise a volunteer infantry division, but Wilson refused.
When it began, North and South Korea existed as provisional governments competing for control over the Korean peninsula, due to the division of Korea by outside powers.
When the Constituent Assembly, on 26 February 1790, decreed the division of France into départments, Anjou and the Saumurois, with the exception of certain territories, formed the départment of Maine-et-Loire, as at present constituted.
When he attempted to attack the main spine at Tunnel Hill, his troops were repeatedly repulsed by Patrick Cleburne's heavy division, the best unit in Braxton Bragg's army.
When volunteers were not forthcoming Burnside selected a replacement white division by having the three commanders draw lots.
The conflict between the evolved organic division of labour and the homogeneous mechanical type was such that one could not long exist in the presence of the other: and When solidarity is organic, anomie is « impossible whenever solidary organs are sufficiently in contact or sufficiently prolonged.
When there was a redistribution of Parliamentary seats to take effect at the 1885 general election, a new county division of Bridgwater was created.
When GE left the mainframe business the line was sold to Honeywell, who built similar systems into the 1990s as the division moved to Groupe Bull and then NEC.
When a division vote in the House occurs, members in the Federation Chamber must return to the House to vote.
When the war ended Bristol set up a separate helicopter division in the Weston-super-Mare factory, under helicopter pioneer Raoul Hafner.
When they died, the holding normally passed to their next heir-who might be the eldest son / daughter ( primogeniture ); or youngest son / daughter ( Borough English or ultimogeniture ); or a division between children ( partible inheritance ), depending upon the custom of that particular manor.
When delineating the division between civil and religious laws, most would agree that laws against murdering and stealing are obvious.

0.256 seconds.