In fact, just last month, the province came very close to experiencing a blackout of its own. |
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The final excitement for my week was the several hour long blackout at work yesterday. |
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Nine months after the blackout the city was said to enjoy a baby boom, with a small surge in the birth rate. |
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If they thought that there would be a news blackout on their actions they must now think again. |
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The Secretary General of the United Nations had called for an emergency United Nations Security Council caucus due to the blackout. |
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In those days, I could pull back the blackout curtains in the morning and tell instantly whether I was going to have a good or a bad day. |
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The blackout curtain was cracked on the side and allowed just enough light in to barely see by. |
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He threw open the blackout curtains of heavy, dark velvet, letting the rosy light of dawn seep into the room. |
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The blackout system must incorporate an automatic shut off if there is an open hatch, door, or ramp. |
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Slowly, I got up and lifted the blackout curtain on the right side of my room. |
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The lab is a windowless room with a blackout curtain puffed over the closed door, and when the lights are turned off, it's completely dark. |
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Use blackout curtains, eye covers, earplugs, extra blankets, a fan, a humidifier or other devices to create an environment that suits your needs. |
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I like taking part in something that is here and now, like when we covered the blackout this past summer. |
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As soon as the blackout hit, it started dumping waste directly into the East River and continued doing so for the next 29 hours. |
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The island was plunged into a power blackout as electricity pylons and light poles crashed to the ground and telephone lines were ripped out. |
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Last weekend was the first anniversary of the big blackout that shut down large parts of northeastern North America last summer. |
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Well, the lights are back on in Detroit now after a partial blackout that shut down a major border crossing. |
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On a dilapidated black-and-white television sits an old kerosene lamp which he lights when a blackout plunges him into darkness. |
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She becomes the victim of the Glue Man, a mysterious prankster who uses the cover of a blackout to put glue in girls' hair. |
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The remaining 15 were used by 9 p.m. that evening long before the blackout ended. |
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The government, however, maintains tough media censorship including a virtual blackout on military operations. |
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The government has imposed a censorship blackout on the media and no journalists are permitted in the war zone. |
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Sorry to tease but I can't give any more details at the moment as there's a news blackout. |
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Despite a media blackout on the province, reports continued to filter out of extra judicial murders, arbitrary arrest and torture. |
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I know you will have a big problem with the media blackout on your campaign, but it is important for you to soldier on. |
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The country's dictators remain so terrified of the lure of democracy and its defenders that they ordered a total blackout on the news. |
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An information blackout imposed on the government's actions was indicative of a disturbed conscience. |
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Because the government and the media have imposed a blackout on the protest, it is not known how many are still refusing food and water. |
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During the first Persian Gulf War, there was a media blackout from the moment the ground war began. |
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Any such action would probably involve a TV blackout, but the matches themselves are likely to still take place. |
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He couldn't explain how it happened but he thought he must have had a blackout. |
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I have a distinct memory of being seven and working myself up pretty badly because I realised it was possible to have a blackout at any moment. |
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While thousands were hit by the blackout at City Hall yesterday, 18 couples carried on in blissful ignorance on the happiest day of their lives. |
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The blackout victim is in an extremely dangerous position at the point of unconsciousness. |
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Researchers hope other smart grid innovations would prevent something like the 2003 blackout that left 50 million people in the dark. |
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Most news media have conducted a blackout of the attacks, which some said have spilled over into the streets. |
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The protests have been met with a virtual blackout by the media in Detroit, which has reacted generally with fear and confusion. |
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Before it goes to a blackout, you're left with a black screen and a pair of white eyes staring out of it, forever awake. |
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Despite several generically nondescript musical numbers, the movie has the energy of a halogen lamp during a blackout. |
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After the blackout of August 14, 2003, all of us in Ontario seemed suitably chastened in our attitudes towards electricity usage. |
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No matter who deserves the blame for the blackout, the reality is people suffered, and so did the economy. |
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Pennypinching local businesses have been blamed for a festive blackout which will leave Ongar High Street in the dark this Christmas. |
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It is part owner of one of the transmission lines that failed early on the day of the blackout. |
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At issue are those 15 days and whether the media was too compliant and trusting in generally agreeing to government blackout requests. |
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This in turn instigated a slight blackout in our collective fashion senses, meaning that paisley will be back for a short while. |
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The power cut came two weeks after a massive blackout brought the north east coast of America to its knees. |
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The piece suggested that London was in line for an electricity blackout due to the construction of power-hungry data centers in the capital. |
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Immediately rumours began to circulate that the blackout was part of a putsch against Estrada. |
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This is big news, but I am diarising as there appears to be a blackout on reporting it in the Western media. |
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Total up the total wattage of appliances and lights you need running during a blackout. |
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But the blackout has refocused attention on the government's muddle over electricity. |
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The radio announcers were trying to act encouraging as they informed the listeners that all of Toronto was in a blackout situation. |
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If there is a blackout of league football next season, even armchair viewers will have to find a new occupation. |
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All parties were supposed to be observing a strict media blackout. |
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Home Depot suggests a blackout survival kit for such emergencies. |
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There will be a complete blackout tonight at eleven o'clock. |
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A failed actor with a history of alcoholism, Treadwell bummed around California until, he claims, he awoke from a blackout to discover a bear looming over him. |
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A theater on the 2nd and 3rd floors will have back and side walls of glass allowing a backdrop of a clear view of the harbor or controlled filtering down to complete blackout. |
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A blackout at night might seem strange especially when the consumption of electricity during nights is half of the total national electricity production. |
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It comes less than two weeks after the worst blackout in US history, a social disaster that had its roots in the decay of the electrical transmission grid. |
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Water treatment officials reeling from the unexpected blackout in Cleveland say they now are planning to hire consulting engineers to study additional power options. |
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I guess they figure, as the recent blackout demonstrated, that the only thing separating humanity from unbridled, rampant hedonism is the electricity grid. |
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But the captain had ordered a blackout of all lights on the ship. |
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One woman told of how her older sister did her rounds of the wards wearing a tin hat and with a small low light torch to pick her way in the blackout. |
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Erroneous public perception of a massive cost-overrun was never addressed and as the project advanced, a publicity blackout added commensurate mystery. |
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Due to a press blackout imposed by both sides in the dispute, no details have been released as to what contractual disagreements caused the breakdown in the negotiations. |
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They had imposed a strict blackout on media coverage of the coffins returning to Dover, claiming that it is was meant to protect the privacy of the slain soldiers' families. |
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So draw the blackout curtains and drown out the roar of the passing airplanes while you contemplate your email by the light of this cheery bit of decor. |
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The interesting thing about the BNP brouhaha is the media blackout. |
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After the 1965 blackout, which covered much of the same territory as the August 2003 event, steps were taken to prevent a recurrence of the problem. |
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The main media outlets have imposed their own, more far-reaching blackout on the case, despite its implications for civil liberties and free speech. |
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New council wardens brought in to enforce parking restrictions have been accused of being over-zealous following Witham's recent electricity blackout. |
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I can't believe the feebs who are calling in to discuss the blackout. |
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They completed everything from engines-running offloads to blackout night-vision airdrops, with results exceeding the expectations of even the most enthusiastic crew members. |
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Students were also asked to provide a narrative of what transpired during their last blackout based upon what they could recall on their own and what others told them. |
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Will the blackout prove to be a boon or a boondoggle for business owners? |
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To keep the room looking modern, she suggests fuss-free window treatments with a blackout lining or neat options such as a roller blind, Roman blind or wooden shutters. |
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The two docudramas refer to real women with initial symptoms of headache, blackout spells, and emotional distress. |
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The blackout curtains make a super 'bommie', which is lit as soon as it's dark enough on this wonderful day. |
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A trial blackout was held on 10 August 1939 and when Germany invaded Poland on 1 September a blackout began at sunset. |
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His visit to say goodbye to BBC producer Philip Burton, a few days before he left for New York, was interrupted by a blackout. |
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A news blackout in Britain increased the effectiveness of the deception operations. |
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A power surge at that generator created a blackout across the whole district. |
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There was a blackout on Gambian state radio and TV and the capital city of Banjul was in lockdown. |
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Carnival stripe blackout roller Carnival stripe blackout roller blind, John Lewis, PS15 Decora vitra envy blind, www. |
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Roller blinds are available dark as possible is to cover your windows with blackout blinds or curtains. |
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A blackout can also be a first symptom of a fatal irregular heart rhythm, which causes over 100,000 deaths every year in Britain. |
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Any sort of blackout in a major metropolitan city is just not what we call a fun time,'' said Elissa Glickman, the theater's marketing director. |
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These requirements would help to ensure that such a blackout does not happen again. |
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New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg said it the blackout probably started in the Niagara Falls area and quickly spread. |
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Some other netizens commented snarkily on the continued foreign media blackout in China, and how it has hampered updates about Sandy. |
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No, when an alky blacks out, he keeps doing things. An alky in a blackout is a busy little devil. |
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The Gori 1 nuclear power plant's operations were suspended in March over safety concerns following a blackout event. |
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She keeps flashlights and candles handy in case of a blackout. |
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All Tourers feature alloy wheels,dual zone climate control,outside temperature indicator, 6-speakerCD audio systems and blackout 3D dashboard illumination. |
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The rules are effective for blackout periods beginning after Jan. |
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Electricity is usually provided from two transformer stations in Nerima and Nakai in Shinjuku Ward but power was sent only from the Nakai facility at the time of the blackout. |
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I have a blackout roller blind in my bedroom, but it's driving me crazy. |
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A story is told that one evening in Chelsea, during the war time blackout, they were walking along and Vernon tripped over something and fell to the ground. |
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FlashForward is packed with incident as a blackout across the Earth means people get a flashforward, allowing them to see a vision of their lives six months into the future. |
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Lights would not be allowed after dark for almost six years, and the blackout became by far the most unpopular aspect of the war for civilians, more than rationing. |
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