A few aid agencies, charter airlines and the national carrier rattled around the dimly lit concourse. |
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He said importers could charter ships with their own cranes on board at short notice. |
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The company on Saturday said it would cut its flights by 20 percent and charter five more aircraft to cope with mounting delays. |
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Dive charter skipper John Walker looked over the trio's dive plan and planned his own search. |
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He said sanctions which could feature in such a charter would range from detention to permanent exclusion. |
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Sorry, but even in summer it feels a bit chilly there, like a threadbare university club that only charter members find cozy. |
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The ship's mates would be here at any minute, and I would lose my charter to Antwerp if I was caught. |
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There is nothing more enjoyable and exhilarating than bareboating on a charter yacht. |
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At one time, there was even roller skating here, but it's been years since there's been an Odd Fellows ' charter here. |
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His career in government was that of a charter member of the internationalist consensus. |
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Anyone who notifies the Foundation with appropriate documentation within the next year will become a charter member of this society. |
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King John's charter of 1201 empowered the lord warden of the stannaries to try all cases except land, life, or limb. |
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In 1950, she became a charter member of the first American Civil Liberties Union chapter organized in the South. |
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On his return to France, the Marquis de Lafayette became a charter member of a society called The Friends of the Blacks. |
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One possibility initially envisaged was a bareboat charter to its existing Estonian subsidiary, which would then become the employer of the crew. |
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It is a re-issue of the 71-page 2nd edition of 1714, with a different half-title and titlepage, p.71 reset, and the charter added. |
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Voucherize education, but let the charter schools cherry-pick who they admit. |
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The U.S. State Department says they'll wait to see a full draft of the constitutional charter before responding. |
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Packing for a bareboat charter is made even easier by Australia's famous informality. |
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Last year, Bahrainis overwhelmingly endorsed a national charter that spelled out the reform programme. |
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To the credit of many charter diving operations, the buddy system is usually enforced. |
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It makes money by teaching children with special needs and by running charter public schools. |
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On the second day, the gathering was broken up by the police, but not before the charter was adopted as a guiding document. |
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The airport is used by holiday charter airlines and has scheduled flights to Aberdeen and Amsterdam in the Netherlands. |
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Scores of scheduled flights were cancelled and charter services were delayed up to 18 hours, as reported last night. |
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He forever excommunicates and accurses every one who should dare violate that great charter of Anglo-Saxon freedom! |
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It started by operating Fokker 100 aircraft on wet leases and on charter operations in various countries. |
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Has a new phase begun, one in which we will see the organization actually take on the decisive role that its charter sets out for it? |
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Finally, several national organizations have begun to help their local affiliates start charter schools. |
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To demonstrate parental support within the school district, the charter must receive the affirmative support of parents or legal guardians. |
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Always check that the boat you hire or charter has safety equipment on board. |
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He opposed the treaty, arguing that it went against the UN charter and would accelerate the arms race. |
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The agrobiologist wine growers follow a vinification charter where some methods and equipment which improve quality are accepted. |
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In 1932, Carfano helped Scalise get a charter for a local union of window washers. |
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It is worth checking, too, for seasonal charter flights from Scottish airports. |
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Permanent moorings have been established for charter and recreational boats. |
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And its holiday charter business has mushroomed, showing an amazing 600 per cent increase on outbound flights to sun destinations. |
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Lest anyone think his is a luvvie's philosophy, a charter for air kissers, then think again. |
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China's efforts to cool the economy have led charter rates for dry cargo bulk cargo carriers to more fairly reflect supply and demand. |
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Furthermore, it was under continuous charter and, therefore, I infer properly certificated. |
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Sailing is particularly popular around the reef and the Whitsunday Islands, and there are many live-aboard boats and charter yachts. |
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You may recall I told you about Lil who quit his job here to start a charter yacht business. |
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You can, of course, charter sail or power yachts in the Bahamas, but the real kick is arriving in your own small vessel. |
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Les Pompiers were out in force, and alongside the dock a bareboat charter yacht was half sunk. |
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While the charter served a treaty-like function during the baronial wars, its reissue in time of peace established it as a basis of government. |
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The present charter expires in three years' time and must be the last in the present form. |
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One of the charter boats had to be replaced at the last minute because of a broken bilge pump. |
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We have no charter defining the scope of the powers of the legislative, executive and judicial branches of government. |
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Barber has served as a trustee of the Chesapeake Bay Foundation and as a charter member of the American Society of Marine Artists. |
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He wanted to create an ideal city, an urban utopia, and wrote the charter for it. |
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The members hope to adopt an organisational charter and a theological platform for the group based on a strict reading of the Scriptures. |
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Instead, they buy oil from producers, line up buyers to refine it, and charter tankers to ship it. |
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His aim was to get enough people to charter a ship, and so good was his talking that he got enough names for not one ship, but three. |
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He added that mainland companies should also take part in arranging charter flights to ensure that business is shared fairly. |
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After a rousing locker room speech by Coach, we went to speak with the media for a few minutes, and then made our way back to the charter bus. |
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We received an offer from a third-party organisation to charter the ship, and we therefore took the decision to cancel. |
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The auditors have also informed the council they will be arriving to go through the accounts of the charter celebrations. |
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First of all, we establish a charter under which the organisation operates. |
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Shipping companies agree to charter their ships at an agreed rate at a certain time in the future. |
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The charter puts in place self-imposed rules by which the organisers will run rehabilitation courses at the centre. |
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Over 70 charter skippers and a few dedicated anglers took part in the 2004 Marine Sport fish Tagging Programme. |
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By 1782, Smith convinced the Maryland General Assembly to charter a college in Chestertown. |
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We should charter a similar body with the power and authority to make critical policy recommendations to the president. |
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Trip includes air charter from Anchorage and three nights at a scenic mountain lodge located in Alaska's largest mining ghost town. |
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Firstly, you need to consider the type of yacht charter that is suitable for you. |
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Paddy also works at the airport and they have included new routes to Waterford and a private charter to Weston airport near Celbridge. |
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He has worked as a dive charter skipper in Australia and knows why missing divers are so hard to spot. |
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The aircraft was on a charter and transporting building materials to the Brough of Birsay lighthouse. |
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It's only really a practical destination from a charter or from a trip based in Normandy. |
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Ken had never been to this area which is difficult to reach except by a private charter which is very expensive for anyone travelling alone. |
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The commissioner said last night that they cannot prevent the owners of an aircraft providing a charter for an unlicensed operator. |
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In its old slot, TVNZ is currently celebrating its commitment to the charter by screening the report. |
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The charter will remain in effect until a permanent constitution is drafted and ratified next year. |
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At present, there are about 7 licensed sea-going passenger boats available for charter in Mayo, based as far apart as Achill and Killala. |
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From its base at Leeds Bradford Airport the aircraft will be available for charter to customers across the world. |
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In some places, though, a town charter must be granted by vote of the state legislature. |
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The Ministry of Defence currently has two such ships on charter and may continue to operate these. |
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Going from real estate to on-demand business jet charter seems a bit of a stretch. |
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You need to charter catamarans, not monohulls, to explore these incredible seas. |
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Before 1999, Milwaukee authorized one charter school, with only 70 students. |
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The main innovation was the charter that provided a parliamentary framework to restrain monarchical authority. |
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The company has publicised a customer charter to make the euro conversion process as transparent and easy as possible for its customers. |
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Later in the month, it will also launch a citizens' charter and formally announce its already operational online complaint management system. |
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In September 1920 the state of Illinois granted a charter and authorized the awarding of diplomas, degrees and teaching certificates. |
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Expensive charter vacations now regularly shuttle wealthy Japanese tourists to Anne Shirley's Prince Edward Island. |
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To serve residents in the south of the country, it has cooperated with a travel agency to open the charter service. |
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He demands that the UN back their decisions on Iraq with the threat of force, or else the US will overrule the UN charter and attack anyway. |
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There's no coherent national voice explaining the charter school idea to Congress, the media, or other educators. |
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At press time, only charter helicopter operations had access to the Manhattan heliports. |
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Author and educator Marvin Hoffman teaches in a charter school affiliated with the University of Chicago. |
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The school we worked in was a charter school, which provided a bit more flexibility for teachers and students alike. |
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A royal charter of 1447 was acquired by the townsmen in order to try to overcome local disputes. |
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If you charter a boat in Miami, you can pick and choose among spacious trawlers, luxurious motor yachts, or swift catamarans. |
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In addition, by serving multiple charter schools, a trust wouldn't be crippled by the closure of a single charter school. |
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They publish handbooks, newsletters, and websites that seek to address charter schools' concerns, from soup to nuts. |
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Unlike in proposed voucher systems, a charter school cannot charge the parents extra or promote a religion. |
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Its charter granted monopoly rights to trade in lands whose waters drained into Hudson Bay. |
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On this evidence, it appears the excision of oral health from national health policy, contravenes the international health charter on all counts. |
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One of the tenets in the chamber of commerce charter states that employees should be able to handle complaints. |
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If two-thirds of voters in any three provinces reject the charter in the referendum, the constitution will be defeated. |
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His foundation also had funded a shelter for abused children and a charter school, the Andre Agassi College Preparatory Academy. |
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This includes amendments to the charter of the Arab organisation that should facilitate the rules of voting and decision-making. |
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Back at the harbour side I spied the Braveheart, our charter boat for the day, skippered by Dougie Ferguson. |
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In short, there do not appear to be large discrepancies between charter school and public school demographics. |
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Picture the modern university as a charter school, and you can glimpse some of the possibilities. |
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Sixty-two participants were students at a charter school, and 87 were enrolled at an alternative school. |
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You can also charter a yacht through a sailing-holiday company. |
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The plan is to charter buses to shuttle attendees back and forth. |
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If you have booked with a charter airline, contact the travel agent or tour operator through which you booked the flight to find out if it is still operating. |
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As the toll of dead seals increased, charter boat skippers around Oban who make their money from nature-loving tourists, demanded immediate action to stop the slaughter. |
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They had planned to charter a helicopter to fly over the wreckage. |
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The relevant charter made between the time charterers and the ship owners will be signed before the end of the current year as well as the commencement of the conversion work. |
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A fair number of crewed charter boats, both power and sail, are based in the marinas, but no bareboat firms were to be found when I visited a few months ago. |
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In neighborhoods such as Harlem, 33 percent of students attend charter schools, a majority of them black or Latino. |
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It is very difficult, if not impossible, to compare the rates earned by ships under charter to the Navy Board with those of merchant ships carrying civilian cargoes. |
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Those behind the site claim it's the first time we've been able to compare the flight information of airline websites against flight aggregator sites and charter companies. |
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In other words, high-quality pre-K is a much more powerful political issue than public charter schools. |
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Under his plans, a passenger's charter outlining the service customers should expect containing easy-to-read bullet points will be displayed in taxis. |
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He is a charter member of the Oswegoland Heritage Association, a member of its board of directors, and the director of the Little White School Museum. |
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Its nominal charter was publishing, more or less quarterly, a humor magazine. |
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In 2013, the state legislature passed a sweeping charter school bill pushed by Mitchell that loosened oversight and regulation. |
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Klein paints a rosy picture of the charter schools, while admitting that not all outperformed traditional public schools. |
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For another, it is obvious that much of the protestation is just token outrage, going through the motions to validate the charter of certain organisations. |
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He is a charter member of the Society of Logistics Engineers. |
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They argue that the charter is un-democratic because it supposedly takes power away from the democratically elected representatives and gives it to unaccountable judges. |
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He traveled on a private air charter arranged by fellow driver Butch Leitzinger, which made the commute easier than solo efforts in previous years. |
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They see proposals for a constitutional charter of rights as a frontal attack on their very notion of the rule of law and of the legitimate judicial method, as they see it. |
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Whether becoming a charter school is a blessing or a curse remains to be seen. |
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And still another 13 percent of families has a choice among public schools, such as magnet schools, charter schools, and interdistrict choice programs. |
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The Company lost its monopoly on Indian trade in 1813, and its charter for Chinese trade was removed in 1833, after which it ceased to be a trading concern. |
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JetBlue has been flying charter jets to Cuba for three years, and others are sure to follow. |
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The charter class consisted of nineteen students and five faculty members. |
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It is a pity that it is not 1976, because we could then make a big thing about it being the 300th anniversary of being granted a charter to be a market town. |
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Republicans took control of the state legislature and swiftly eliminated the cap on charter schools. |
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North Carolina, like many states, had been cautious when it first allowed charter schools and had placed a cap on their growth. |
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She laughed and joked with well-wishers during a walkabout after signing a charter to mark the official launch of the city's new super-university. |
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This is a charter for the rich who don't care, for firms blithe enough to bung it on to their fees, for unions powerful enough to make the employer stump up. |
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Today's white paper will set out a 10-point customer commitment charter aimed at recruiting the public in the battle against crime and anti social behaviour in their area. |
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No one would mistake Chris Christie for a charter member of the kumbaya caucus. |
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As a Teach For America 2011 corps member, I spent the last two years teaching 5th grade at a charter school in Harlem. |
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His father, Matt Halberg, became a charter member of the American Communist Party in 1919, and recruited his 17-year-old son into the party eight years later. |
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Several years ago, its founder and principal, Kara Bobroff decided to start a charter school. |
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If the customer charter is to be believed it would appear that those passengers who travelled to Dublin that morning are entitled to a refund on their fare. |
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Research on the outcomes of teacher merit pay programs and charter school expansion, for example, remains mixed. |
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The tourists took matters a step further and agreed to delay their departure to Zimbabwe provided a charter plane could be laid on for them to fly out on Monday night. |
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So far, charter schools have brought to California a scattershot of educational options that have undeniably benefited certain clienteles in certain places. |
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The club was granted a charter in 1926 and by May 1932 sufficient funds had been raised to build a club hall in Kimberley Road on ground granted by the municipality. |
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It has a charter to which participating organisations must adhere. |
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It appears that within a given geographical area lives a limited supply of entrepreneurs willing to undertake starting a charter school, a supply that peters out over time. |
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I worked for 4 years as a teacher at Benjamin Carson Academy, which is a charter school that is housed inside of the Wayne County Juvenile Detention Facility. |
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Washington's friend Samuel Powel was mayor of Philadelphia and, with John Beale Bordley and others, a charter member of the Philadelphia Society for Promoting Agriculture. |
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The city gave the telco an interim revocable permit earlier this year, but officials insisted a city charter requires that the franchise be voted on by residents. |
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First, congressionally charter Blue Cross-Blue Shield as a monopoly to provide basic coverage to all Americans, except retirees. |
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Under state law, charter schools must have at least 65 students enrolled, but Douglass Academy was well below that. |
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It is a sad state of affairs when anglers board a charter boat and you know before they hook their first fish that they are going to have a problem with landing fish. |
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If you are visiting Ocean City, take a birdwatching trip on a charter boat to see shearwaters, skuas, Wilson's storm-petrels, and Atlantic puffins. |
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Italy was a charter member of NATO and the European Economic Community. |
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About 130 Norwegians flew to the North Pole and cheered and drank champagne on a charter flight as they passed the top of the globe on a round trip from Oslo. |
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The barge was being towed by a tug registered in Azerbaijan and owned by C on time charter to U. The towage contract between B and U contained an EJC to the English Court. |
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When King John granted the town its charter during the 13th century, the rent was set as one sparrowhawk per year. |
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Broadmoor didn't want the same old-same old, and so the idea, through the education committee, was to have a charter school here in Broadmoor. |
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Yet on January 10th, only weeks before the charter was due to come into force, the prime minister said his government was tweaking the draft. |
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Gaborone International Airport was the APOD of choice for all of the Air Mobility Command's commercial charter passenger carriers. |
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On February 13, 2015, the company consolidated its three subsidiary banks into a single charter forming Bear State Bank. |
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AeroMechanical Services Ltd on Thursday announced that it has signed a contract with a Canadian charter carrier. |
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If a charter was pulled in New York, say, couldn't a company just recharter in Delaware and operate without interruption? |
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In school year 2002-03, some states reported that they provided charter schools flexibility by allowing them to choose their authorizer. |
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Ten years into the charter school movement, founders of successful charters have begun replicating their schools in the communities they serve. |
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An 1898 coal-fired steam launch is available by private charter and you can also hire rowing boats, punts and electric motor boats. |
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The major advantage of booking with these bicoastal biggies is that they charter the entire ship or resort. |
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One of Daniels' customers on his mackinaw trout charter boat at Lake Tahoe got pulled over for speeding. |
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Operations under time charter and spot charter contributed the largest to the BLT and its subsidiaries. |
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Program charter participants include popular solution providers Boxfish, mPortal, and Muzu. |
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The time charter of a ship chandler and a chemical tanker as part of the prevention and fight against marine pollution in the Mediterranean. |
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Sweden's Laurin Maritime will be granted an option to purchase the chemical tankers at the end of the charter period. |
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The charter is a codified catalogue of fundamental rights against which the EU's legal acts can be judged. |
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King John granted the city's first charter in 1212, confirming trading rights in England and Europe. |
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However, the charter is now believed to have been a 10th or early 11th century forgery. |
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Earlier in the same year he witnessed a charter of King Ethelred the Unready as Eaduuine dux. |
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A charter from the reign of his son Edward the Elder depicts Alfred as hearing one such appeal in his chamber, while washing his hands. |
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In 935 a charter was attested by Constantine, Owain of Strathclyde, Hywel Dda, Idwal Foel, and Morgan ap Owain. |
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Neither side stood behind their commitments, and the charter was annulled by Pope Innocent III, leading to the First Barons' War. |
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Disputes began to emerge between those rebels who had expected the charter to return lands that had been confiscated and the royalist faction. |
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Despite this, the King appealed to Pope Innocent for help in July, arguing that the charter compromised the Pope's rights as John's feudal lord. |
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The 800th anniversary of the original charter occurred on 15 June 2015, and organisations and institutions planned celebratory events. |
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There were no signatures on the charter of 1215, and the barons present did not attach their own seals to it. |
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Only one exemplification of the 1216 charter survives, held in Durham Cathedral. |
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Most of the 1215 charter and later versions sought to govern the feudal rights of the Crown over the barons. |
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She granted a royal charter to the Muscovy Company, whose first governor was Sebastian Cabot, and commissioned a world atlas from Diogo Homem. |
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This charter specified that Raleigh had seven years in which to establish a settlement, or else lose his right to do so. |
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In 1583, Queen Elizabeth I of England granted Walter Raleigh a charter to plant a colony north of Spanish Florida. |
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On March 25, 1584, Queen Elizabeth I granted Raleigh a charter for the colonization of the area of North America. |
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This charter specified that Raleigh needed to establish a colony in North America, or lose his right to colonization. |
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In 1657, Oliver Cromwell renewed the charter of 1609, and brought about minor changes in the holding of the company. |
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Within a century of the charter Birmingham had grown into a prosperous urban centre of merchants and craftsmen. |
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The two ancient universities opposed giving a charter to the new London University in the 1830s because it had no such restriction. |
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It was agreed to develop a charter of values for the Commonwealth without any decision on how compliance with its principles would be enforced. |
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The charter trustees for the City of Bath make up the majority of the councillors on Bath and North East Somerset Council. |
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The royal forest was granted a charter in the 13th century, however foresters who managed the area were identified in the Domesday Book. |
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In April 1980 a parish council was created for Lichfield, and the charter trustees established six years earlier were dissolved. |
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The city was unique, as it had no council or charter trustees and no mayor or civic head. |
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The request was not granted, partly because it would draw attention to the lack of any charter granting the title to existing cities. |
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Apart from that recognition, it became accepted that such a charter could make a town into a city. |
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It was granted its city charter in 1897 as part of Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee celebrations. |
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Reginald FitzRoy confirmed c1170 in a charter to the burgesses of Truro the privileges which had been granted by Richard de Lucy. |
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Later in the century Falmouth was awarded its own charter giving it rights to its harbour, starting a long rivalry between the two towns. |
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Rugby obtained a charter to hold a market in 1255, and soon developed into a small country market town. |
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Schools often hire charter bus services on regular basis for transportation of children to and from their homes. |
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Working buses will often be exhibited at rallies and events, and they are also used as charter buses. |
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Terminal 1 is used by airlines with scheduled and charter operations, flying to European and other worldwide destinations. |
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Terminal 2 is used by a variety of airlines, operating both charter and scheduled flights to many European and worldwide destinations. |
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The Ministry of Civil Aviation finally took control of Stansted in 1949 and the airport was then used as a base by several UK charter airlines. |
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Stansted also had scheduled and charter flights to Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver, but these flights to Canada have now ceased. |
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In 2017 Antonov Airlines opened a UK office at Stansted for cargo charter flights, generally of outsize loads. |
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This has led to the growth in companies offering charter trains, and to the railtour. |
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The researchers found strong, positive effects of the charter school experience for younger children. |
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A charter was a written document from a king or other authority confirming a grant either of land or some other valuable right. |
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The actual charter was written in the Parliamentary Assembly based on the Congress' Recommendations. |
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Williams argues that it is possible that Augustine introduced the charter into Kent. |
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In 1836 UCL became one of the two founding colleges of the University of London, which was granted a royal charter in the same year. |
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In 1836, London University was incorporated by royal charter under the name University College, London. |
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In 1878, the University of London gained a supplemental charter making it the first British university to be allowed to award degrees to women. |
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In 1976, a new charter restored UCL's legal independence, although still without the power to award its own degrees. |
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King's was established in 1829 by King George IV and the Duke of Wellington and received its royal charter in the same year. |
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The council is the supreme governing body of King's College London established under the charter and statutes, comprising 21 members. |
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A Royal charter granted by Queen Elizabeth I in 1590 confirmed city status. |
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The province of Georgia, founded by royal charter in 1732, was named after him. |
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The American Darts Organization began operation January 1, 1976 with 30 charter member clubs and a membership of 7,500 players. |
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These US certificates are often required to charter a boat, but are not required by any federal or state law. |
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Private air charter services operated by Island Birds Air Charter fly directly to all three islands from any major airport in the Caribbean. |
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However its official name remains the University of Ulster as its charter remains unchanged. |
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In the rejected Treaty establishing a Constitution for Europe the charter was integrated as a part of the treaty itself. |
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In the Lisbon Treaty, however, the charter is incorporated by reference and given legal status without forming part of the treaties. |
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The charter gave Swansea the status of a borough, granting the townsmen, called burgesses certain rights to develop the area. |
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The petition was refused as, unlike St Davids, there was no evidence of any charter or letters patent in the past conferring the status. |
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Services connect to various other Caribbean islands via regional carrier LIAT, local charter airlines and others. |
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At that time, the company's charter was revoked, and the English Crown took over administration. |
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The group of islands were claimed for the English Crown, and the charter of the Virginia Company was later extended to include them. |
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This interference led to the islanders demanding, and receiving, the revocation of the Company's charter in 1684, and the Company was dissolved. |
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An annual return charter flight to Malta is operated by Maltese national airline, Air Malta. |
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In 1754, Columbia University was founded under charter by King George II as King's College in Lower Manhattan. |
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The New York City Charter School Center assists the setup of new charter schools. |
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In November 2008, a new build main line steam locomotive, 60163 Tornado, was tested on UK mainlines for eventual charter and tour use. |
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Where did you get the idea to open a charter school on your own? |
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From here both scheduled and charter operators provide regular passengers services. |
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The charter normally confers a constitution with perpetual succession and the right to sue or be sued independently of the members. |
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The charter also usually provide for rights of recourse to the Queen in Council. |
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The 2017 charter abolished the BBC Trust and replaced it with external regulation by Ofcom, with governance by the BBC Board. |
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The charter would remove many of the barriers and simplify the administration of the club. |
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Municipalities incorporated in the 19th century tend to be charter municipalities. |
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Robert's first appearance in history is on a witness list of a charter issued by Alexander Og MacDonald, Lord of Islay. |
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Massachusetts, Providence Plantation, Rhode Island, Warwick, and Connecticut were charter colonies. |
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In the 12th century a Gilchrist, son of Eruini, witnessed a charter in Galloway and this is the earliest use of the name so far discovered. |
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A 1587 charter granted to Hector Maclean of Duart requires feu duty on land paid as 60 ells of cloth of white, black and green colours. |
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The airport has one main passenger terminal, serving scheduled and charter holiday flights. |
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Some air charter companies offer a large variety of aircraft, such as helicopters and business jets. |
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There are an estimated 15,000 business jets available for charter in the worldwide fleet. |
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States also have the power to charter corporations that they own, control, or are responsible for the regulation and finance of. |
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From 1964 the type was used on charter flights to Rimini, Palma, Nice, Valencia and Barcelona. |
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It was fitting that the National Museum of Wales was granted its foundation charter in 1907, the year of Romilly Allen's death. |
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A charter might record the names of both a subject king and his overlord on the witness list appended to the grant. |
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One of the earliest written references to Machynlleth is the Royal charter granted in 1291 by Edward I to Owen de la Pole, Lord of Powys. |
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The other remaining charter franchise, the Chicago Cardinals, also started out in the city, but is now known as the Arizona Cardinals. |
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Public schools are run by the San Francisco Unified School District as well as the State Board of Education for some charter schools. |
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This charter was granted to the new University of Wales in 1893, allowing the colleges to award degrees as members of this institution. |
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The two ancient universities opposed giving a charter to the new London University in the 1830s, because it had no such restriction. |
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Reference to a market at Abergavenny is found in a charter granted to the Prior by William de Braose. |
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In 1639, Abergavenny received a charter of incorporation under the title of bailiff and burgesses. |
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A charter with extended privileges was drafted in 1657, but appears never to have been enrolled or to have come into effect. |
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A royal charter is a formal document issued by a monarch as letters patent, granting a right or power to an individual or a body corporate. |
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This city status was never officially recognised, largely because the community did not possess a charter of incorporation. |
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In a royal charter of 13 April 1330, Edward III granted the priory further rights. |
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There is a lobby for recognising the Zeelandic regional language under the European charter for minority languages. |
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In a voyage charter the charterer rents the vessel from the loading port to the discharge port. |
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In a time charter the vessel is hired for a set period of time, to perform voyages as the charterer directs. |
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One of the key aspects of any charter party is the freight rate, or the price specified for carriage of cargo. |
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Time charter arrangements specify a daily rate, and port costs and voyage expenses are also generally paid by the charterer. |
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A limited number of charter flights are provided by London Ashford Airport at Lydd. |
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In the summer there are many charter flights to Spain, Germany, Tunisia, Morocco and Algeria. |
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In 1552, Edward VI granted a royal charter to the Merchant Venturers to manage the port. |
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In April of that same year, a new charter was adopted for the college, still in use today, granting power to a private board of 24 Trustees. |
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The date and new name in the charter has presented historians with a puzzle. |
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Nearly every harbor on Cape Cod hosts sport fishing charter boats, which run from May through October. |
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The airport offers a range of scheduled flights to British and Irish regional airports and charter flights. |
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In accordance with English tradition and in a bid to legitimise his rule, Henry issued a coronation charter laying out various commitments. |
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Like many cities at the time, in 1215 Bayonne obtained the award of a municipal charter and was emancipated from feudal powers. |
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It would serve you right if I left you to deal with Annie and your pennyante charter service. |
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The airport offers both scheduled and holiday charter flights within the United Kingdom and Europe. |
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Scheduled services to the Channel Islands began in 1952 and charter flights to various locations followed. |
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Oil companies charter helicopters to move workers and parts quickly to remote drilling sites located at sea or in remote locations. |
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Private and charter helicopter flights to Tresco are still welcomed by the owner. |
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He was clearly respectful of the church, with charter evidence showing multiple grants to churches and for religious buildings. |
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One of Edward's favourite servants, Walter Langton, rushed to her and wrote a charter to confirm the sale of the Isle of Wight to the king. |
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However, the civic traditions of many boroughs were continued by the grant of a charter to their successor district councils. |
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Districts that do not contain a former borough can apply for a charter in a similar manner to English districts. |
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These two craft were disposed of in June 1982 and the charter subsequently operated by the augmented hydrofoil fleet. |
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The new Archbishop revoked the city charter of Mainz and put the city under his direct rule. |
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In 1517 King Manuel I of Portugal handed Lopo Homem a charter gaving him the privilege to certify and amend all compass needles in vessels. |
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In 1517 King Manuel I of Portugal handed Lopo Homem a charter giving him the privilege to certify and amend all compass needles in vessels. |
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The English gave the city a garrison and a charter which made it equal to English towns. |
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