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So would radar picket ships.
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So and would
So as to not influence the funding of the archaeological excavations, Christie would always pay for her own board and lodging and her travel expenses, and supported excavations as an anonymous sponsor.
So if they were to be extended far enough they would seem to merge, at least as far as the eye could discern.
' So we'd come up with these shots that were really, really difficult, and sometimes they would take thirty-seven takes ".
So the amount of solar radiation that it receive is much lower than it would if it had without the Island's relief which intercepts much of the sun.
So if a capoeirista was captured by the police, he would be unable to identify his fellow capoeiristas, even when tortured.
So a map made in English may use the name Germany for that country, while a German map would use Deutschland and a French map Allemagne.
So, due to the above mentioned, especially in the consecutive sequences of events, the Hierarchs of Alexandria were considered holding too much of power from one hand, and on the other hand, due to the conflict of the Schools of Theology, there would be an impasse and a scapegoat, i. e. Pope Dioscorus.
So rapid correction of sodium in hyponatremia would cause the extracellular fluid to be relatively hypertonic.
So that no one would be unaware of them, they were posted on wooden tablets (-axones ), where they were preserved for almost two centuries, on steles of the shape of three-sided pyramids (-kyrbeis ).
So that the minimum state would consist of four or five men ...." ( The Republic, Page 103, Penguin Classics edition.
So we ask what the genus, or general category, of the species is ; the Greeks ( but not the biologists ) would say that the genus is animal.
So George just told David he would not work any longer if the script was not better and he wanted the Howard script back ... he would not let his name go out over a lousy picture ... And bull-headed David said ' OK get out!
So and radar
So, the data are not necessarily representative of the ground surface, but the top of whatever is first encountered by the radar.
So, while these radars use a highly specialized form of doppler radar, the term is much broader in its meaning and its applications.
So he took a camera crew to the U. S. Weather Bureau ( National Weather Service ) office with a WSR-57 radar console located on the 5th floor of the Post Office Building on 25th Street in downtown Galveston ( the antenna and its radome housing were located above the 7th floor, on the roof ).
So and ships
So many ships from both sides were sunk in the many engagements in and around the Solomon Island chain that the nearby waters were referred to as Ironbottom Sound.
So in 869 he made alliance with the eastern emperor, Basil I, who sent him ships to assist in the capture of Bari, capital of a local Islamic emirate, which succumbed in 871.
So, while first rates and second rates were both larger and more powerful, the third-rate ships were in a real sense the optimal configuration.
So many ships have been lost off Cape Hatteras that the area is known as the " Graveyard of the Atlantic.
So close was the action that the British ships found themselves at risk of firing into one another in the high seas, heavy rain and poor visibility.
So, when the deadline arrived, he announced that no ships were available for those who refused conversion-the vast majority-and had men, women and children dragged to churches for a forced mass baptism.
So only after the cities, led by Lübeck's burgomaster Hinrich Westhof, had liaised the Treaty of Skanör ( 1395 ), Albert's defeat manifested, so that Prussia finally sent out its ships, led by Danzig's city councillor Conrad Letzkau .< ref name =" Dollinger 1998 114 "> Philippe Dollinger, Die Hanse Hanse ( XII < sup > e </ sup >- XVII < sup > e </ sup > siècles ); German, see references for bibliographical details, p. 114.
So that day and night the king lodged on the sands, and in the meantime discharged the ships of their horses and other baggages: there the king made two marshals of his host, the one the lord Godfrey of Harcourt and the other the Earl of Warwick, and the Earl of Arundel constable.
So many South Vietnamese helicopters landed on the TF76 ships that some 45 UH-1 Hueys and at least one CH-47 Chinook were pushed overboard to make room for more helicopters to land.
So from time to time even full-size cruise ships or naval vessels will stop next to Shad Thames, usually for a day or so, often then proceeding through Tower Bridge ( though they can go no further than the next crossing, London Bridge ).
So with some ships in bad condition, tired crews and scarce victuals, the combined fleet sighted land near Cape Finisterre on 22 July.
So it began to lose importance, suffering further losses at the hands of Arab ships, until totally impoverished in the 11th century AD.
So this became Van Wassenaer's favorite method: damage the enemy ships from a safe distance and then disengage.
So, on May 12 Wingfield vetoed Archer's Hope, the first site proposed, as too visible ( thus easily bombarded by foreign ships ' guns ).
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