It's an amalgamation of makeshift shelters and temporary wooden structures, and it's populated by folks who cannot find affordable housing. |
|
Interestingly, amalgamation turned out to be good for public health service in Toronto. |
|
Those small states were worried that amalgamation into a superstate would sacrifice their interests to those of the large states. |
|
Ore treatment at the Tomboy mill was by amalgamation and concentration until 1912, when cyanidization was added to the processes utilized. |
|
An amalgamation and concentration mill was built at the mouth of the basin, and the concentrate was packed by mule down to Telluride. |
|
The initial shock and disbelief at the news was replaced by a gut-wrenching amalgamation of loss, tears and anger. |
|
In 1865 The Cambrian Railway company was formed through an amalgamation of smaller companies. |
|
As we leave Oban, we begin to find our way around this curious amalgamation of comfortable hotel and Daedalian cruise ship. |
|
It was an amalgamation of independent German kingdoms, fiefdoms, and statelets, lightly bound together with no revenue, army, courts, or police. |
|
Kant's moral philosophy emerges from the amalgamation of the idea of transcendental freedom with that of an imperative of reason. |
|
The following Kent schools have either recently undergone amalgamation or are due to amalgamate. |
|
And all of us want to know if your hair is real, or it's a toupee or if it's comb-over, died amalgamation or mix of one of the above? |
|
This scheme contains a number of amendments, including the amalgamation of some smaller polling districts and their polling stations. |
|
While there was a grudging acceptance that amalgamation would proceed, there were two troubling outcomes. |
|
Prior to amalgamation, five of the six municipalities that would make up the megacity ran their own shelters. |
|
As far as I can tell, the concept is an amalgamation of ideas from Judaism, Zoroastrianism, and other sources which I am not as familiar. |
|
The songs return and gone is the half-baked amalgamation of in-jokes and dubwise meanderings. |
|
The plans were a mainstay of the amalgamation process and the beacon to guide sustainable development. |
|
The inclusion of amalgamation in an assignment would constitute a further restriction on the tenants' common law right to assign without consent. |
|
The amalgamation, which involves resiting some of the departments between the two hospitals, is expected to cost about R35 million. |
|
|
In post-Independence India, Sourashtra was formed by the amalgamation of the 202 native states of Kathiawar in 1947. |
|
The logic would be the potential for an amalgamation and rationalisation of costs regardless of whether the two papers were formally merged. |
|
Hopefully you can see that these cults were an amalgamation of Hebrew monotheism and Egyptian and Sumerian polytheism. |
|
Thistle were at a particularly low ebb on and off the field by the time amalgamation talk turned serious. |
|
Prior to the utility amalgamation each of the former utilities had different design standards. |
|
The amalgamation will have no impact on CIBC's consolidated financial statements. |
|
This sparkly amalgamation of sailor suit and negligee lives forever in infamy. |
|
The GOP today is a rump amalgamation of plutocrats and the people who service their air conditioning. |
|
The rough field margins, which hold the mice and voles on which the owls feed, were ploughed up, while the amalgamation of fields through hedge removal reduced them even more. |
|
The history of human beings is not one of separate and permanent cultures, but one of continual migration, amalgamation, fission and disintegration. |
|
The resulting amalgamation of sleek new blocks and bustling malls is worlds away from the conventional image of porticoes, pediments and municipal chest puffing. |
|
There is a national procedure for amalgamations involving a joint managerial body and provision for a set of discussions leading to preferences for amalgamation. |
|
These were sort of sober witnesses to the madness, so it was an amalgamation of thoughts of different women from the time. |
|
The amalgamation of zero-day threats, compliance demands, and still more problems pushes corporations to address the most pressing challenges first. |
|
The Gore Vidal character is an amalgamation of Gore Vidal and Edmund White. |
|
The unfolding of a transition period to ensure that the amalgamation of the three organizations takes place under the best possible conditions. |
|
On 3 June 1997, the Commission authorised the takeover of Vallourec by MRW and the amalgamation of their seamless pipe and tube production. |
|
The introduction of a code of conduct during hospital amalgamation had a very positive effect on the organization. |
|
Wynn was keen to abolish the separate judicature for Wales, though he resisted associated proposals for the amalgamation and partitioning of the Welsh counties. |
|
The Local Government forced amalgamation juggernaut is on its way. |
|
|
All this militates against the perfect pancake, which should be a cashmere-smooth amalgamation of ingredients. |
|
The ore was processed by a small stamp mill with pan amalgamation recovery. |
|
York College is an amalgamation of York Technical College and York Sixth Form College. |
|
West Indies cricket team does not represent one country instead an amalgamation of over 20 countries from the Caribbean. |
|
The school was formed in 1972 as a result of the amalgamation of the former grammar school and secondary modern school. |
|
It is true that they found a golden opportunity in the unfortunate words of Bishop Williamson, which enabled them by an unjust amalgamation to ill-use our Society, considered as a scapegoat. |
|
From an operational perspective, amalgamation was met with trepidation. |
|
But the pale safari and bomber jackets, the amalgamation of Asian textiles with herringbone and houndstooth and the subtleness of the soft shades made a fine collection. |
|
The partition of the tank prevents the amalgamation the new prepared with the repining solutions, enabled the constant withdrawal and guaranteed the compliance of the repining time. |
|
Due to the dearth of more rigorous evaluations of the experimental type, the analysis did not lend itself to the tallying of research findings or the amalgamation of research findings in the form of a meta-analysis. |
|
Prior to amalgamation, it was common for Vanier's residents to engage elected and appointed municipal officials in casual conversation, heading off small issues before they became big ones. |
|
A world first, this amalgamation of technology, innovation and aestheticism is inspired by traditional regulator watches and displays the hours by means of a geometrically openworked square wheel at twelve o'clock. |
|
The answer, in former leader John Anderson's mind and others, was amalgamation with the Liberal party to overcome changing bush demographics and a party funding crisis. |
|
It is also very difficult for a Chrysler dealer to secure a mortgage to construct a new facility or to finance an amalgamation with another dealer. |
|
Library and Archives Canada has recently been formed through the amalgamation of the former National Library of Canada and the former National Archives. |
|
Education opportunities are a key form of support during amalgamation. |
|
Karen credits their amalgamation success, and their ability to maintain clean member data, to her staff's tireless efforts during that transition period. |
|
The amalgamation should result in a better eating experience for consumers and better prices for higher quality fruit says Jim Elliot, president of the co-operative's interim board. |
|
It is difficult to envisage why, in these circumstances, provincial judges would be entitled to the same election rights as employees who lose their jobs as a result of the closing, sale or amalgamation of their employer. |
|
It was formed in 1989 following the amalgamation of the faculties of Arts, Music and Theology. |
|
|
Whether through division or amalgamation, the formation of a separate ethnic identity is referred to as ethnogenesis. |
|
Twelve of the smallest counties were paired to form sheriffdoms, a process of amalgamation that was to continue until the twentieth century. |
|
The Scottish Division was formed on 1 July 1968 with the amalgamation of the Lowland Brigade and Highland Brigade. |
|
This was formed in 2006 by the amalgamation of two former divisional bands, the Highland Band and the Lowland Band. |
|
He was originally the regimental mascot of the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders prior to the amalgamation. |
|
The Aberystwith and Welsh Coast Railway was not included in the amalgamation because it was still under construction. |
|
It was formed in 1967 by the amalgamation of Monmouthshire Constabulary and Newport Borough Police. |
|
Since the amalgamation of Brighton and Hove, economic and retail data has been produced at a citywide level only. |
|
This arrangement remained in place until 1889, when the harsh terms of the Local Government Act 1888 mandated amalgamation with the county. |
|
The Devon and Cornwall RFC was formed in 1967 following the amalgamation of the Devon, Cornwall and Plymouth Constabularies clubs. |
|
Belizean cuisine is an amalgamation of all ethnicity in the nation, and their respectively wide variety of foods. |
|
Tolls were reduced to retain the traffic, wages were increased to retain the workforce, and they sought amalgamation with a railway company. |
|
It is now thought that this was in fact Celtic, built by the Brigantes, the largest amalgamation of tribes in Iron Age Britain. |
|
Following an amalgamation of local hockey clubs in 2011, the Isle of Wight Hockey Club now runs two men's senior and two ladies' senior teams. |
|
An amalgamation 4-head stamp mill was built on Victoria Gulch and a gravity tramway connected this to the mine. |
|
The reported casualties from this amalgamation are to include Barbee, Weiger, Yanni, Chalmers, Cerezini, White, Goo-Goo, and Wagner. |
|
After the constabulary's amalgamation with the Newport Borough Police,he became chief constable of Gwent. |
|
The Inca Empire was an amalgamation of languages, cultures and peoples. |
|
The two companies had always worked together, in a bid to maintain their profits against competition from the railways, and amalgamation seemed to be a logical step. |
|
Gwynedd Constabulary was formed in 1967 by the amalgamation of the previous Denbighshire Constabulary, Flintshire Constabulary and Gwynedd Constabulary. |
|
|
The entire network was brought under government control during the First World War and a number of advantages of amalgamation and planning were revealed. |
|
In Pembroke town, Golden Grove CP School is a dual stream school established in 2002 following the amalgamation of Golden Manor Infants School and Grove Junior School. |
|
A further amalgamation took place in the 1960s when Gwynedd Constabulary was merged with the Flintshire and Denbighshire county forces, retaining the name Gwynedd. |
|
It was hoped that the reforms could be carried out quickly, with existing authorities agreeing to amalgamation and boundary alterations prior to legislation being passed. |
|
The IRFU was formed in 1879 as an amalgamation of these two organisations and branches of the new IRFU were formed in Leinster, Munster and Ulster. |
|
The group also owns ITV Studios, the production arm of the company and formed from an amalgamation of all the production departments of the regional licences they own. |
|
Fisherman's Wife Syndrome is an amalgamation of the deadly sins of envy, avarice and pride, with a little anger and ingratitude thrown in for good measure. |
|
After the war, the government considered permanent nationalisation but decided instead on a compulsory amalgamation of the railways into four large groups. |
|
The only waterproof plan and the one increasingly adopted by leading trades is the consolidation of the interests of all parties in a scheme of amalgamation. |
|
Some political activists were apprehensive lest the amalgamation of jurisdictive and executive powers should revive or induce authoritarian practices. |
|
The company was formed on 16 July 1846 by the amalgamation of the Grand Junction Railway, London and Birmingham Railway and the Manchester and Birmingham Railway. |
|
Much of the infrastructure converges at Manchester city centre with the Manchester Inner Ring Road, an amalgamation of several major roads, circulating the city centre. |
|