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51 Sentences With "crematories"

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

Before leaving, they blew up the gas chambers and crematories.
Later, four other gas chambers with connecting crematories were built.
The streets and crematories of the death camp were filled with corpses.
Though it had no gas chambers or crematories, he said, nearly everybody there died.
Let's not turn the stench of the Nazi crematories into a come-hither scent.
As crematories were demolished, there were whispers within the camp that the Soviets were advancing.
Artifacts from the gas chambers and crematories are some of the most charged in the exhibition.
In some parts of the country, the deceased ended up in garbage bags delivered directly to crematories.
They dig and fill the graves for us and drive our loved ones, alone, to the crematories.
Founded by her father in 20133, the company manufactures aquamation equipment for funeral homes and crematories throughout North America.
On their set date, Mr. Wisnia went as planned to meet at the barracks between crematories 723 and 5.
While Japan has an estimated 5,100 crematories, Tokyo, with a population of more than 13 million, has just 2690.
The retreating Nazis had blown up its crematories, dismantled its gas chambers; the prisoners had been marched west, in the freezing cold.
Venezuelans have shifted toward cremations, which cost about a third of burials, but growing demand has crematories struggling to obtain natural gas.
Over the weekend, trucks from the Italian army were seen transporting coffins from there to other regions because local crematories can't keep up.
Experienced in bartending patter, Prien reminded the three of us on the stools that there are only two recession-proof businesses: bars and crematories.
They were sent directly from sealed boxcars to the complex's gas chambers and crematories, ovens with a combined daily capacity of incinerating precisely 4,6463 corpses.
Six men would sleep crowded onto one bunk, in a barracks not far from the gas chambers and crematories that incinerated corpses day and night.
"We can say the supply doesn't meet the demand," mainly in urban areas, said Hiroshi Ota, an official at the Japan Society of Environmental Crematories.
Nearly 30% of funeral homes in the United States operate their own crematories, and another 240% intend to open a crematory within the next five years, according to the report.
Though its gas chambers and crematories were largely demolished, Auschwitz, 45 miles from Krakow, remains one of the best-preserved killing sites and has become a synonym for the Holocaust.
Ms. Glickman Lauder's haunting photographs of death camps — many rendered through the otherworldly glow of infrared film — make visible the mechanics of genocide: the Nazis' gas chambers, dissection tables and crematories.
She said in the interview that she never had access to information about Nazi war crimes or mass killings, and that she learned of the gas chambers and crematories only after her release.
"We came because we could not stand silently by our brother's blood," the rabbis said in a letter from jail, written mainly by Rabbi Borowitz, before invoking the silence that greeted the Nazi crematories.
They watched the Assad regime on their northern border torture people to death and burn the bodies in crematories, and drop barrel bombs on civilian communities and face no justice at the United Nations.
The walls were lined with elegant old niches containing the powdered remains of New Yorkers, many of whom died in the late 1800s when Fresh Pond opened as one of the first crematories in the country.
A spokesman for the Division of Cemeteries said there was no indication that the crematory violated any regulation; crematories cannot open coffins without good cause under state law, relying on funeral directors to provide the identity of the remains.
The Germans, needing slave labor in their drive to gobble up Europe, herded Jews into a constellation of camps — some in urban factories, some at sprawling sites like Auschwitz-Birkenau, known more for their gas chambers and crematories. Mrs.
The report also found that 22 percent of the funeral homes advertised prices for cremation packages that did not include the cost of the actual cremation, apparently because many funeral homes use outside crematories that charge a separate fee of $200 to $400.
Part mortuary, part inn, these hotels serve a growing market of Japanese seeking an alternative to a big, traditional funeral in a country where the population is aging rapidly, community bonds are fraying and crematories are struggling to keep up with the sheer number of people dying.
He's a political neophyte, but that Rabin air feels significant and he has identified something important: The word "moral" has to mean something for a country that gathered Jews bound during the millennial diaspora by a covenant of ethics and that rose from the ashes of the Nazi crematories.
The program expanded to New York six years ago to help organize the burial of 20 unclaimed veterans from New York City in a single ceremony at Calverton, with the help of the Missing in America Project, a volunteer network that contacts funeral homes, morgues and crematories nationwide to identify unclaimed veterans.
Louisville Crematories and Cemetery Corporation was dissolved, and its perpetual care fund lacks functional interest. Maintenance is currently provided by veterans, volunteer groups like the Friends of Eastern Cemetery, and Dismas Charities.
Ferncliff Cemetery has the only crematory in Westchester County, New York, and performs approximately 10% of the cremations in New York state. Because of local ordinances, no additional crematories can be constructed in Westchester County.
Originally known as The Methodist, the 28-acre Eastern Cemetery is located at 641 Baxter Avenue in Louisville, Kentucky, United States, abutting Cave Hill Cemetery. The grounds were purchased by two Methodist Episcopal churches and used for burials by 1844. It hosted Louisville's first crematoriums. Louisville Crematories and Cemetery Corporation owned the cemetery by the late 1980s.
Additional energy is necessary to make up for the heat capacity ("preheating") of the furnace, fuel burned for emissions control, and heat losses through the insulation and in the flue gases. As a result, crematories are most often heated by burners fueled by natural gas. LPG (propane/butane) or fuel oil may be used where natural gas is not available. These burners can range in power from .
In addition, filtration systems (baghouses) are being applied to crematories in many countries. Activated carbon adsorption is being considered for mercury abatement (as a result of dental amalgam). Much of this technology is borrowed from the waste incineration industry on a scaled-down basis. With the rise in the use of cremation in Western nations where amalgam has been used liberally in dental restorations, mercury has been a growing concern.
Crematories heated by electricity also exist in India, where electric heating elements bring about cremation without the direct application of flame to the body. Coal, coke, and wood were used in the past, heating the chambers from below (like a cooking pot). This resulted in an indirect heat and prevented mixing of ash from the fuel with ash from the body. The term retort when applied to cremation furnaces originally referred to this design.
Crypt of Oregon Governor James Withycombe in the cemetery's Mount Crest Abbey Mausoleum The cemetery contains the hilltop Mount Crest Abbey Mausoleum, which opened in 1914. It was built in the Classical Greek/Roman style by the architectural firm of Lawrence & Holford, and was also likely designed by noted Oregon architect Ellis F. Lawrence. An addition to the mausoleum was completed in 1929 by the same firm. The cemetery also has two outdoor mausoleums, and two crematories.
Sometimes these crematories were also used for burials; the ashes were deposited in them, then they were covered with stone blocks, bricks, and tegulae. A stele was placed to indicate their location and the name of the deceased. Catalogo del Museo Arqueologico de Sevilla Publisher: Ministerio de Cultura, Direccion General de Bellas Artes, Archivos y Bibliotecas, Patronato Nacional de Museos; 3a ed. corr. y aum edition (1980) The collective mausoleum formed by an underground familial chamber is the most common in the necropolis.
In the United States, there are more than 19,322 funeral homes, approximately 115,000 cemeteries, 1,155 crematories, and an estimated 300 casket sellers.Hermanson, Sharon. (2000-05-01) The Deathcare Industry. Aarp.org. Retrieved on 2013-07-11. Out of the 115,000 cemeteries, there are four general types: national, public, religious, and commercial, and while some may be more exclusive or expensive, burial is generally more expensive in urban centers. The total revenue produced from the funeral industry in the U.S. alone was $14.2 billion in 2016.
There has been interest, mainly in developing nations, to develop a cremator heated by concentrated solar energy. Another new design starting to find use in India, where wood is traditionally used for cremation, is a cremator based around a wood gas fired process. Due to the manner in which the wood gas is produced, such crematories use only a fraction of the required wood; and according to multiple sources, have far less impact on the environment than traditional natural gas or fuel oil processes.
Although the state of Georgia had pertinent regulations, a loophole in the law allowed crematories like Tri-State who dealt only with funeral homes to operate without a license, allowing them to go without state inspection. The state has since moved to tighten its regulations. The Tri-State incident was representative of a larger regulatory laxity regarding crematoria in the United States. Regulation in some parts of the country had been weak; some states had no regulation at all, and except for EPA emissions regulations, many crematoria had been essentially unregulated.
The time to carry out a cremation can vary from 70 minutes to 210 minutes. Cremators used to run on timers (some still do) and one would have to determine the weight of the body therefore calculating how long the body has to be cremated for and set the timers accordingly. Other types of crematories merely have a start and a stop function for the cremation displayed on the user interface. The end of the cremation must be judged by the operator who in turn stops the cremation process.Cremationprocess.co.
In 1989, a whistleblower working for Louisville Crematories and Cemetery Company made the public aware that graves purchased by families had been reused. Bodies were buried atop other bodies, graves were carelessly excavated for reuse, and medical cadaver body parts from the University of Louisville were buried in-mass rather than intact (as is legally required for donated bodies). Human bones were found in inappropriate areas, including in a tool box, a glove compartment, a fast food bag, and shallow graves. Some of the behavior had been practiced since the 1920s, and records indicate reuse began in 1858.
Challenges faced during those days were insufficient roads and bridges, schools, teachers, wells, sanitary facilities, dispensaries, and health workers. On the other hand, the ongoing fight between the government and the communists became a hindrance to development efforts. Obtaining foreign aid, Keo was able to pull off the Rural Development Plan with the construction of 701 schools; 153 dispensaries, markets, training centers, crematories and warehouses; 203.5 kilometers of roads; 72 bridges and 10 air strips; 14 irrigation systems, 44 water storage and flood control dams; and 15 fishponds. In addition, villagers and soldiers were trained in rural development techniques.
Roman Carmo's early remains are buried in the area extending from the present Ayuntamiento to the Plaza de Abastos, where a late neolithic dolmen was discovered in 1888. Some graves from the Carthaginian period dating to the 5th century have been found as well. The name of a certain Urbanibal, a person of Carthaginian descent who lived during the Roman period, is preserved on a funeral urn discovered in the Roman cemetery and now displayed in the Carmona City Museum (Museo de la Ciudad de Carmona). The bodies were cremated in crematories excavated in the rock, where the funeral pyre stood.
Biography in Context. At his initiative, the Buenos Aires Herald was the first media outlet in Argentina to report that the de facto government was kidnapping people and making them "disappear". As a reporter, Cox went to the public meetings by the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo and, also personally checked that the military authorities were using the crematories at the Chacarita Cemetery to incinerate the bodies of the "disappeared". Cox was detained in 1977: From that moment, Cox and his family lived in a permanent state of threat, suffering an attempt on his life, and his wife a failed attempt at kidnapping.
Devarim (Deuteronomy) 21:23 Some from the generally liberal Conservative Jewish also oppose cremation, some very strongly. During the 19th and early 20th centuries, as the Jewish cemeteries in many European towns had become crowded and were running out of space, in a few cases cremation for the first time became an approved means of corpse disposal among the emerging liberal and Reform Jewish movements in line with their across the board rejection of traditional Torah ritual laws having mandatory standing. Current liberal movements like Reform Judaism still support cremation, although burial remains the preferred option. In Israel, where religious ritual events including free burial and funeral services for all who die in Israel and all citizens including the majority Jewish population including for the secular or non-observant are almost universally facilitated through the Rabinate of Israel which is an Orthodox organization following traditional Jewish law, there were no formal crematories until 2004 when B&L; Cremation Systems Inc.
Solar crematories aim to reduce this type of air pollution and reduce consumption of wood; using the same 60 squasre- meter large parabolic Fixed Focus reflectors, being used at 'India One', the first solar thermal 1 MW power device; SC's Ban on sale of fireworks: Since air pollution spikes in Delhi during festivities for Diwali, on 9 October 2017 the Supreme Court of India banned the sale of fireworks—a main source of the spike—in the city. The Delhi government announced that all schools in the national capital will remain closed from 8 November to 12 November, Sunday in view of the "unbearable" air pollution. Paddy-straw-management '(R)-device' : With European technology, introduced before the rice harvesting season, October (2020), the Paddy-straw-management '(R)-device' will drastically reduce this type of air pollution and bring benefit to the farmers in Punjab and Haryana: 'waste-to-wealth' Pedestrian rules need to be made and enforced strictly among the Delhi population.
Ronan also broke the bizarre story of the Tri-State Crematory scandal in Noble, Georgia, when the owner of that facility, for several years, illegally disposed of hundreds of bodies on his property, rather than cremate the bodies and returning the cremains to the families. As a result of his reporting, the State of Georgia enacted much tougher laws and regulations for funeral homes and crematories, and the owner of the crematory spent more than 13 years in prison. Ronan worked for ten years in public relations, rising to the position of Vice President of Strategic Communications at the Intelligent Transportation Society of American in Washington, D.C. During that time he established himself as one of the transportation industry's experts on crisis communications being interviewed in the Wall Street Journal, New York Times, Washington Post, NBC News, CBS News, and CNN. For nine years, Ronan served on the Board of Directors of Snowball Express, a 501©3 that is “Serving the Children of Our Fallen Military Heroes” raising hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash and in-kind donations for the non-profit, which in 2018 became part of the Gary Sinise Foundation.

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