Coastal voyages between U.S. seaports and inland navigation along its rivers and canals are governed by state and federal laws. |
|
Bush spoke at the terminal to highlight administration efforts to beef up security at seaports. |
|
Somalia has hundreds of unmonitored airports and seaports where weapons and people can pass easily if enough financial incentive is applied. |
|
Though these drive-through detectors are good for quick scans at busy seaports and border crossings, they don't convey much specific information. |
|
The prisoners were filed off to the seaports and crowded into cattle-wagons, the awnings of which, hermetically closed, let in no breath of air. |
|
Others tramped their way to towns and seaports where they worked their passage to some foreign port and were never heard of again. |
|
So the first 125 pages are Alice and Jack schlepping around Northern European seaports and tattoo parlors in search of William. |
|
The result was a defeat for China and the establishment of Western settlements at numerous seaports. |
|
Their inhabitants were outnumbered by the numbers living in seaports, dockyard towns, and regional centres. |
|
The emphasis on infrastructure, airports, seaports and tourism will benefit the industry in general. |
|
The animals first arrived in North America in the late 18th century on-board sailing ships that frequented East Coast seaports. |
|
Most scholarship has focused on the nature of poor relief in colonial cities and seaports, and not in rural and interior towns. |
|
Seaports asked for three times the amount of money that the Congress appropriated for port security. |
|
Sicilian seaports that will facilitate the shipment have already stepped up security measures, especially on incoming vessels. |
|
The Coast Guard patrolled waterways and seaports with more vessels. |
|
Instead of the Wehrmacht attacking the French, the Luftwaffe with naval assistance was to block imports to Britain and attack seaports. |
|
While objecting to requirements that biohazard detectors be installed at major seaports by 2007, the White House generally supports the measure. |
|
The largest seaports in the world were in China and included Guangzhou, Quanzhou, and Xiamen. |
|
Before the advent of rail transport, the seaports of Hull and Whitby played an important role in transporting goods. |
|
External border controls are located at roads crossing a border, at airports, at seaports and on board trains. |
|
|
Possessing the longest coastline on the continent, Somalia has several major seaports. |
|
With dredging, the Sacramento and the San Joaquin Rivers have remained deep enough for several inland cities to be seaports. |
|
For the purposes of border control, airports and seaports are also classed as borders. |
|
During the 17th and the 18th centuries, the main seaports and towns obtained a typical French look, with baroque and neoclassical buildings. |
|
Many colonists who survived rushed to the seaports and went back to Great Britain. |
|
The busiest seaports are Manila, Batangas, Subic, Cebu, Iloilo, Davao, Cagayan de Oro, and Zamboanga. |
|
According to Jiri Samek, the firm s managing director, it gives excellent conditions for extending Austrian traffic to and from the European seaports that Metrans serves. |
|
However, some identification is required at airports and seaports. |
|
San Marino and the Vatican City do not perform border checks for arrivals from outside Schengen, but these are not needed since neither of them have any airports or seaports. |
|
The blockade shut down the ten Confederate seaports with railheads that moved almost all the cotton, especially New Orleans, Mobile, and Charleston. |
|
This had grave effects on trade and the economy of the region since former overland trade routes were switched to newly opened Mediterranean and Atlantic seaports. |
|
Many of the world's goods are moved by ship between the world's seaports. |
|
Seaports that expanded from wheat trade had more social classes than anywhere else in the Middle Colonies. |
|