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65 Sentences With "camps out"

How to use camps out in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "camps out" and check conjugation/comparative form for "camps out". Mastering all the usages of "camps out" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Here he is hitting Iguodala with a skip as Dejounte Murray camps out in the lane.
There is one for Larry the Cat, the political mouser who camps out on Downing Street.
The pain camps out, throbs there for at least 30 minutes and as long as two hours.
To make a clean kill with his bow and arrow, he sometimes camps out in the forest for a week.
Cookie camps out inside his home just to beat him with a broomstick — in an echo of the show's pilot.
She camps out in the office of a small Connecticut newspaper with a stack of reasons why they should hire her.
For Father's Day, the Swiss Army knife of kitchen tools might please the gadget-minded cook, especially one who travels or camps out.
"The imaginary situation where a political candidate goes to Los Angeles and Chicago and just camps out, is belied by the arithmetic," Schatz said.
Dance's Renaissance woman, Twyla Tharp, camps out at the Joyce for three weeks this fall, packing an eclectic collection of old and new works.
During World War II, America forcibly put Japanese Americans into internment camps out of racist fears that they were all traitors in the war against Japan.
On the show, Jessica camps out on fire escapes with her DSLR camera and a thermos of booze to snap sneaky photos of people behaving badly.
Sometimes, he camps out there for weeks at a …Read more ReadThe Lightsabers of Star Wars, RankedWhen you think of Star Wars, you think of lightsabers.
Isolated in camps out of sight from any paved road, usually without television and spotty cell service, many workers didn't know the severity of the approaching storm.
Along with dozens of other petitioners, he camps out in a park and tunnel behind Yongdingmen -- once the front gate on Beijing's now mostly destroyed ancient city wall.
After he's done shooting for the day, we head up to one of the posh suites on the top floor of the Cité, where Besson camps out during filming.
Hotels and lodges are out of the question; he camps out at night and lugs 25 pounds of equipment — including his tent, sleeping bag and food — on his back.
The "home team" camps out at its headquarters, while a teardown engineer, a photographer, and a coordinator are dispatched to far-flung locales like Tokyo, Sydney, or, in earlier years, London.
Like everyone else at the squalid, trash-ridden ranch where he camps out, she admires his overwhelming charisma, and when the others tell her he can do anything, she believes them.
It was during a visit to Unoppressive Non-Imperialist Bargain Books, one recent Wednesday, that I found myself having my palm read by a psychic who camps out in a nook there.
Senhor Jaime camps out in a beach hut at Lagoa de Albufeira, a nearby beauty spot where a beach-ringed lake is separated from the Atlantic ocean by a thin strip of sand.
KeySmart Flex (set of two) — $225.50 See Details If you're the kind of person who camps out for the latest Apple devices, you definitely need to invest in this 225.50-port universal charging station.
But that wasn't particularly remarkable, what was interesting was that despite working a full time job with the FAA, and training far from any top camps out in Alaska, Cannonier outstruck Teixeira on the feet.
There are at least a half-dozen such moments in "Parasite," perhaps the most thrilling of which involves three people hiding under a living-room coffee table while another camps out in a tent in the backyard.
This month I saw a pair of magic shows in unusual sites, the high-drama "At the Illusionist's Table," staged in the Heath, the restaurant at the McKittrick Hotel, and the agreeably low-key "Magic After Hours," which camps out at Tannen's Magic after the register has closed.
I've seen the singer-songwriter's work described as "murder folk" in more than a few places, which is both delightful and apt, since his output camps out at the crossroads of Devil Makes Three, 16 Horsepower, and Danzig, and his lyrics concern themselves with murder as often as they do love, libations, and self-loathing.
A man runs away from his wife's bad cooking, camps out on Santa Catalina Island, and attempts to do his own cooking.
He camps out for the night. Junior wakes up and finds himself face- to-face with a western diamondback rattlesnake. He attempts to flee but gets bitten on the leg. He manages to ride to Travis and Moses' camp.
It is one of the few surviving camps (out of what was once a large number) established in Alaska during the 1920s. The camp, comprising 7 contributing buildings, was listed as an historical district on the National Register of Historic Places in 1988.
Istoriya SSSR., 1990, No.4 Russian historian G.F. Krivosheev gives slightly different numbers based on documents provided by the KGB: 233,400 were found guilty of collaborating with the enemy and sent to Gulag camps out of 1,836,562 Soviet soldiers who returned from captivity.
Jewish refugees from Europe and Japanese-Americans who had been in the detention camps out west attended the picnic. Zev Aelony was shocked to meet kids who came out of concentration camps in the United States, a place where he believed things like that did not occur.
Players build camps out of blocks; the camp gains levels based on how much it has been built up. Monsters such as Slime and Dragon from the original Dragon Quest appear in the game. The player has a health bar, and must eat food over time, similar to Minecraft.
That winter the company ran three logging camps out in their forests. In 1884 the mill employed 50 to 75 men and shipped out as many as five railcars of lumber a day. The town had added a hotel named the Bad River House, and in 1887 a schoolhouse.
Puzhal camp is one of the Sri Lankan refugee camps out of 115 camps were found in Tamil Nadu. According to Indian census Thiruvallur districts has second highest Sri Lankan refugee population. It has 1,646 households with a total of 5,387 refugees. Particularly Puzhal camp has second highest refugee population in Thiruvallur district.
1,700 members of the ancient Jewish community of Rhodes, out of a population of about 2,000, were rounded up and transported to mainland Europe. Only some 160 of them survived the camps. Out of 6,000 Ladino-speaking Jews in the Dodecanese as a whole, some 1,200 survived by escaping to the nearby coast of Turkey.
They appeared in several Fox fairytale movies for children. She transitioned to speaking roles in B-movies during the 1930s continuing her career into the 1950s. He featured in a series of "Edgar" films including Edgar's Sunday Courtship, Edgar Camps Out, and Edgar's Little Saw in 1920 and 1921. He appeared in a series of comedy films for Century Film Corporation.
He appeared as a freegan in the Bones season six episode "The Body and the Bounty". He also played a man who camps out in Roseanne's yard in her series Roseanne's Nuts. From 2009 to 2018, he appeared in a recurring role as Chuck, Mike Heck's freewheeling co- worker, in the ABC television series, The Middle. Cipes is the front man for the reggae/hip-hop band Cipes and the People.
In 2010 a statue was erected to honour the man dubbed the "British Schindler" for his work saving Jewish children from Nazi invasion. Sir Nicholas Winton was 29 when he smuggled 669 boys and girls, destined for concentration camps, out of Czechoslovakia in 1939. The statue, on platform three, depicts Winton sitting on a bench reading his famous scrapbook, which contained lists of all the children he helped to save.
Frustrated and unable to hobble back to civilization, he camps out on Eric's land and engages in more imaginary conversations with the police. Further flashbacks reveal that Bruce caught Paul stealing; he was pursuing Paul when he accidentally struck him. Paul seemingly smiles as the snowplow hits him, which causes Bruce to wonder if it was a second suicide attempt. Bruce also implicates the snowplow itself in the accident and becomes increasingly hostile toward it.
Meanwhile, a drunken tourist dies of a heart attack during an airboat ride with Sammy Tigertail, a young half-Seminole. Misconstruing his uncle's advice, he dumps the body in a river and camps out on the Ten Thousand Islands. Sammy's solitude is interrupted by a group of college students having a drunken party. He is about to steal one of their canoes and find another island when one of the students, Gillian, pressures him to take her along.
Marder, Diana: "Christmas village camps out at City Hall", The Philadelphia Inquirer, 5 December 2008.Rupp, Jacqueline: "Only a Scrooge Would Say Bah Humbug to this X-mas Village", NBC Philadelphia, 22 December 2008. Besides local vendors and artists there are German vendors selling genuine Christmas decorations, pewter ornaments, candles, nativity sets, glass ornaments, toys, woollens, wooden ornaments, lace, spices and jewelry. Sachs, Andrea: "In Baltimore and Philadelphia, two German-inspired Christmas villages", The Washington Post, 5 December 2013.
Mamoun Hassan was born in Jeddah, in Saudi Arabia. He was head of production of the British Film Institute from 1971, in which post he continued the BFI's "radical" policy of supporting low- budget experimental films; he assisted the director Bill Douglas by securing crew and funding to make The Bill Douglas Trilogy (1972–78), and financially supported the production of Winstanley (1975).Tibbetts, John C., ""Winstanley"; or, Kevin Brownlow Camps out on St. George's Hill.". Literature/Film Quarterly.
As of 7 March, there was still no effective rescue effort. The Red Cross was barred from entering the blast zone because of risk of further explosions, and soldiers allowed in were concentrating on extinguishing the still burning flames. After inspection, unexploded munitions were found spread over a huge area around the depot. As a result of the accident, the government decided to move all military camps out of the capital, a promise which had also been made after an explosion in 2009.
She camps out nearby with her gun, but one of the monsters sneaks up on Chenne and kills her before mauling Greg. Hamilton runs across Seth during the chaos and knocks him unconscious after listening to his complaints. Hamilton locates the two remaining students, Dani and Amy, and continues his venture, ordering Dani to document everything with her video camera. Believing themselves to be the only survivors, both girls have little choice other than to follow the professor in hopes of being rescued.
Soon afterwards she begins to try to clear the trail. In her grief, the trail becomes an obsession, as she decides to clear and travel the entire length of it. Thinking clearing the trail is the only way to be forgiven by God, Zinny camps out on the trail to clear the trail before the end of the summer. At the same time Zinny learns to cope with her grief, her guilt, and a boy named Jake Boone, who she starts to have feelings for.
After the internment of his Japanese American clients, James Purcell decided to file suit against the detention of over 120,000 persons of Japanese ancestry, seeking to challenge the Administration and close the detention camps out west. Purcell sought an ‘ideal plaintiff’ to represent the lawsuit, and from the meager responses to his queries, selected Mitsuye's. A Methodist, Endo had never left the United States, was a Sacramento public school graduate and did not have ties to Japan. Her brother was an active duty Army serviceman.
Ragnvold Anderson Nestos was a native of Voss, Norway. He was the son of Andres R. Nestos and Herborg [Saue] Nestos. One of ten children, he was sixteen and spoke no English when he came to the United StatesA passenger on board the S.S. British Prince, which sailed from Liverpool, and arrived at the Port of Philadelphia, May 31, 1893 to live with his aunt and uncle at Buxton, North Dakota. He entered the first grade at Buxton and attended school in between working odd jobs and working at lumber camps out of state.
The chapter, titled ″Interlude of the Gods,″ reveals the Turkish point of view vis-à-vis the Armenians and the West. Werfel intended his depiction, almost entirely drawn verbatim from Lepsius's published account, to be sympathetic and damning, especially when Enver consults with Talaat on the progress of the deportations. The remainder of Book One describes which Armenians decide on resistance and which on cooperating with the deportation order. Bagradian camps out with his family and friends on Musa Dagh, to ensure that it is the right place to make a stand.
To do this, it designed and constructed a mobile gallery, which, in the spirit of a circus, will make camp for a few months at a time in towns throughout the country.Morrison, Lennox.(October 14, 2011), Ladies and Gentlemen... Cirque Pompidou The Wall Street Journal However, in 2013, the Centre Pompidou halted its mobile-museum project because of the cost.Harris, Gareth (July 9, 2013), Pompidou camps out in Dhahran In 2014, plans were released for a temporary satellite of the Centre Pompidou in the northern French town of Maubeuge close to the Belgian border.
After Don embarrasses Ted and Peggy in front of a client, Ted decides that he cannot be around Peggy anymore. However, seeing her dressed provocatively to go on a date with another man, Ted camps out at her door until she returns. He professes his love for her, they sleep together, and he makes plans to leave his family for her. However, by the next morning he changes his mind and pleads with Don to send him to California to work the new Sunkist account for SC&P.
She later learns this is Aurelius Love, a harmless man who occasionally camps out at the house. When Vida asks her about her own life, Margaret breaks down and admits that she herself had a twin who was fatally struck by a car as a child, a tragic accident for which Margaret has always blamed herself. Margaret hears noises and weeping in the house at night and sees a woman in white roaming the garden, Margaret confronts her and asks what she wants, but her speech is unintelligible. She then sees Vida go to the woman's room and feed her.
After the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, the United States government proposed the internment of all west coast Japanese and Japanese Americans in inland camps out of fear of espionage. Ava Helen Pauling vigorously opposed this decision by joining the American Civil Liberties Union and working to raise awareness about the government action. When asked by the ACLU, she and her husband provided employment for a Japanese-American man recently released from an American internment camp. Subsequently, the Pauling family was plied with criticism for what were seen as pro-Japanese actions.
Morgan then camps out in the forest where he lives with his illness and kills any walkers or humans that intrude upon his marked territory, including a father and son who cross his path. While further exploring the forest, Morgan follows the bleating of a goat, named Tabitha, and finds the remote cabin of Eastman who calls out to him, offering to talk and feed him despite Morgan's attempts to shoot him, eventually knocking Morgan out with a bō stick. Morgan awakens in a cell in the cabin, behind bars, and orders Eastman to kill him. Eastman instead feeds Morgan and gives him a tract, The Art of Peace.
The group camps out for the night, and the following morning, Velma witnesses several trucks of cowboys enter the town, carrying espresso machines with them. Much to the dismay of Velma, who insists they keep a low profile and leave, the three men enter the town, which is now full of townspeople, and go back to the bar. There, they are confronted by a gang of cowboys addicted to coffee, and a shoot-out ensues, but they are ultimately welcomed by the townspeople. The bizarre townspeople include a couple who own a store full of piñatas, a man running a hot dog stand, and countless cowboys and prostitutes.
A Henry Fellow at Harvard (1960–61), he was elected a Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford in 1959, but resigned in 1965. From 1966 to 1985 Caute held various academic positions, including Reader at Brunel University, and Visiting Professor at New York University, Columbia University, University of California, Irvine, and Bristol University. He was Literary Editor of the New Statesman 1979–80, and Co-Chairman of the Writers' Guild of Great Britain, 1982. Caute's historical novel Comrade Jacob (1961), about the 17th century Digger movement, was adapted as the film Winstanley (1975).Tibbetts, John C. “‘Winstanley’; or, Kevin Brownlow Camps Out on St. George's Hill.” Literature/Film Quarterly, vol.
Lager Borkum was a labour camp on Alderney, in the Channel Islands, named after the East Frisian Island of Borkum. The Germans built four camps, two of which became concentration camps on the island, subcamps of the Neuengamme concentration camp (located in Hamburg, Germany). Each camp was named after one of the Frisian Islands: Lager Norderney located at Saye, Lager Borkum at Platte Saline, Lager Sylt near the old telegraph tower at La Foulère and Lager Helgoland, situated in the northwest corner of the island. Over 700 workers died in the Alderney camps (out of a total inmate population of about 6,000) and in ships moving them to and from the Island.
A young woman named Madeline begins climbing Celeste Mountain, ignoring a warning from an old woman, named Granny (or Celia in the final chapter), who lives at the base. Madeline makes her way through a deserted city, where she can meet with a fellow traveler named Theo. Madeline camps out for the night and has a dream in which a dark reflection of herself, named Badeline, breaks out of a mirror, and attempts to stop Madeline's climb, but Madeline escapes from her and wakes up from her nightmare. Madeline continues into an old hotel on the mountain, where the hotel's ghostly concierge, Mr. Oshiro, tries to persuade Madeline to stay despite the dingy condition of the hotel.
Holding the Colonel hostage, Buffy gets Riley and Oz free, Riley leaving the Initiative for good. Now that his life is in danger, Riley camps out at the remains of Sunnydale High with Buffy at his side. He confesses that he was wrong about Oz and that he was a bigot when thinking about Willow and Oz's relationship and couldn't see past the 'humans good, demons bad' idea, but Buffy reassures him he wasn't being a bigot but was just shocked when faced with an unconventional relationship (due to the fact she had a similar reaction when finding out about Willow and Tara). Buffy then volunteers to tell him about her past, and warns him that it's not stuff he's going to like.
4, p. 2 Ricksen, pictured in February 1920 alongside Edward Peil, Jr. Ricksen in 1920. She is seen here in a still from the short film Edgar Camps Out From 1920 to 1925, Ricksen starred opposite some of the most popular actors of the silent era, including Conrad Nagel, James Kirkwood, Sr., Jack Pickford, Louise Fazenda, Laura La Plante, Anna Q. Nilsson, Blanche Sweet, Bessie Love, Cullen Landis and Patsy Ruth Miller, although the number of contracts and thus the required hours to be devoted to her career increased dramatically, with Ricksen completing no fewer than ten films within a seven-month period within 1924 alone. Many of these roles again saw Ricksen portraying characters who were much older than herself.
Himmler wanted to keep a separation of power, so Eicke remained in command of the SS-TV and camp operations. This kept control of the camps out of the hands of the Gestapo or the SD. By April 1938, the SS- TV had four regiments of three storm battalions with three infantry companies, one machine gun company and medical, communication and transportation units. On 17 August 1938 Hitler decreed, at Himmler's request, the SS-TV to be the official reserve for the SS-VT; this would over the course of the war lead to a constant flux of men between the Waffen-SS and the concentration camps. Himmler's intention was simply to expand his private army by using the SS-TV (as well as the police, which he also controlled) as a manpower pool.
Canadian/Swiss filmmaker Peter Mettler's goal of filming the Aurora Borealis, commonly known as the northern lights, is both a quest, a visual symphony and an extended metaphor. The journey begins with an train trip through the blustery snow scape from Winnipeg to Churchill, a community only accessible by rail or plane on the shores of Hudson Bay. A five-member crew, including Mettler, who appears in the film and provides the voice-over commentary, along with eccentric Swiss meteorologist, Andreas Zuest, who financed the film, camps out in a local motel run by a Croat immigrant populated by an odd collection of rugged Churchillian residents while they wait for the conditions to be right to capture the notoriously difficult lights on film. An intellectual travelogue, the film examines the gulf between the knowable and ineffable.
On the other hand, Carmen awakens to find herself deep within the mountain and is held prisoner. The group camps out, and are attacked by a fish-like monster (Piranha Man), which kills GT. The creature is then tranquilized by a mysterious man in a white suit. He introduces himself as Dr. Harryhausen, who leads them to an abandoned United States military base and tells them that he has been on the island for many years while he reveals that the island was once home to a tribe of prehistoric humans that disappeared and the military attempted to claim this land but to no avail. The doctor also says that the monsters that the gang has encountered have been transformed thanks to radioactive bombs dropped on the island, and warns them that the island, polluted and dumped with toxic waste, will soon sink to the bottom of the ocean.
During times of military crisis, the Jewish Agency for Israel provides a comprehensive range of services that, for the sake of efficiency and to avoid duplicating resources, are coordinated fully with the Government of Israel and other major organizations. Among them are: Respite camping for children in the line of fire: For example, During the 2006 Lebanon War, the Jewish Agency moved 50,000 children from northern Israel to 50 residential camps out of the rocket range. 12,000 children went to Jewish Agency-equipped camp-style day care held in community centers. During the 2014 Israel-Gaza conflict (Operation Protective Edge) the Jewish Agency arranged for children from Israeli areas in the line of fire to enjoy "days of respite" for fun activities in regions less likely to experience air raids. According to the organization's Annual Report for 2014-15, they provided 73,500 such experiences.
The 3rd Marquess of Salisbury, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, under whom Lord Kitchener served. However, to Lord Kitchener and the British Command "the life or death of the 154,000 Boer and African civilians in the camps rated as an abysmally low priority" against military objectives. As the Fawcett Commission was delivering its recommendations, Kitchener wrote to St John Brodrick defending his policy of sweeps, and emphasising that no new Boer families were being brought in unless they were in danger of starving. This was disingenuous as the countryside had by then been devastated under the "Scorched Earth" policy (the Fawcett Commission in December 1901 in its recommendations commented that: "to turn 100,000 people now being held in the concentration camps out on the veldt to take care of themselves would be cruelty") and now that the New Model counter insurgency tactics were in full swing, it made cynical military sense to leave the Boer families in desperate conditions in the countryside.
Dan Johnstone (born July 31, 1987 in Edmonton, Alberta), also known as "Can Man Dan," is a Canadian anti-poverty activist, philanthropist, community organizer, and social activist. Alongside his non-profit organization, the Can Man Dan Foundation, Dan works to alleviate poverty, assist vulnerable populations, and strengthen communities in Alberta by working closely with local community members, various levels of the Canadian government, and other non-profit groups and charities. While Johnstone hosts many community events around Alberta, he is perhaps best known for his annual Christmas campaign, where every December, Dan camps out for weeks in the back of a tractor-trailer aiming to fill it with food and toy donations for children and families in need. Due to the severity of the winters commonly found in Alberta, and the freezing cold temperatures that go along with them, these campouts have become highly publicized and staple events for many charities and other grassroots programs.
The Dudley Do Right And Friends syndicated episode number follows each title in parentheses. # Introducing Mr. Mad (2701) # Falling Asleep (2702) # Hup-2-3-Hike (2703) # Spring Along With Itch (2704) # Left Alone Leonardo (2705) # A Tour de Farce (2706) # Get 'Em Up Scout (2707) # The King Camps Out (2708) # Offensive Defensive (2709) # A Long Long Trail A-Binding (2710) # Treasure Train (2711) # Handcar Heroes (2712) # Honey Hungry (2713) (misidentified as "Honey Business" on Tennessee Tuxedo and His Tales: The Complete Collection DVD case and booklet) # Bye Bye Bees (2714) # The Royal Race (2715) # The Shifty Sail (2716) # Asleep on the Deep (2717) # An Ace for a King (2718) # Odie Takes a Dive (2719) # Go and Catch a Falling King (2720) # Royal Rodeo (2721) # Ride 'em Cowboy (2722) # S.O. Essex Calling (Part 1 of 4) (2723) # The Big Falling Out (Part 2 of 4) (2724) # Long Days Journey Into Fright (Part 3 of 4) (2725) # Making A Monkey Shine (Part 4 of 4) (2726) (The Columbia Pictures theatrical cartoons Midnight Frolics, Tito's Guitar, Fiesta Time, The Carpenter, Cat-Nipped and Dog, Cat And Canary have been erroneously included in previous episode lists. A selection of Columbia cartoons appeared in early NBC telecasts of King Leonardo And His Short Subjects, and were a holdover from the network's run of Hanna-Barbera's Ruff And Reddy.

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