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22 Sentences With "guiders"

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

Leaders used to be titanic and individual; now they're faceless guiders of processes.
Guiders will have to come up with a plan to put the mind of Nigerians at ease.
She was one of the three trainers at the first International Training Course for Guiders in 1932.
After the Hungarian Revolution in 1956 she worked with Austrian Ranger and Guiders in the refugee camp in Traiskirchen.
Dec. 16 – Feb. 28 During winter hours, the park is open to self- guiders, but guided tours are only available on the weekend from 8:30 a.m.
Foxlease was opened on 2 June 1922. The Second International Conference was in session in Cambridge at that time, so 24 Guiders from the conference visited for a short training course.
The first meeting of the Girl Guides was held at the Saint Ann's Church hall on Oxford Street, Port-of-Spain on 8 June 1914 by Mrs. Havelock, wife of a Methodist minister. By Christmas of that year there were four companies with a total of 100 Guides and nine Guiders.
AVIGuk, a UK 'association of supervisors', manages 18 month training programmes in the UK. Most research results have involved guiders who have undertaken such training. In the United States, SPINUSA, the national training institute for VIG trains agency staff and supervisors in applying the model for parent education, family therapy, staff training and development and leadership development.
In 1651 he became count of East Frisia. Quickly after this he tried and executed the favourite and lover of his mother, the geheimrat Johann von Marenholz. He was executed in Wittmund on July 21, 1651. He attempted to become Reichsfürst (Prince) and with the help of the East Frisian scholar Hermann Conring and 15,000 guiders he succeeded in this goal in 1654.
Staff dealt with a range of problems from minor cuts, burns and sprains to fractures and head injuries. Two Guiders ran a dispensary providing both prescription and non- prescription medicines. There was also a dental clinic and an operating theatre. The hospital canteen provided meals for patients and the 50 members of staff, including many special diets, all cooked on open fires.
Guide is a village on the edge of Blackburn, in Lancashire, England. It is located south of the town centre, and the M65 motorway passes around the south and east of the village, with junction five situated immediately to the southwest of the village. People who were born and lived in Guide all of their lives are known as 'Guiders'. The traditional village pub, The King Edward, remains there.
There "they called upon the mother of Dindymon, mistress of all, the dweller in Phrygia, and with her Titias and Kyllenos who alone of the many Cretan Daktyls of Ida are called 'guiders of destiny' and 'those who sit beside the Idaean Mother'." They leapt and danced in their armour: "For this reason the Phrygians still worship Rhea with tambourines and drums".(Apollonius of Rhodes), Richard Hunter, tr., 1993.
Wilson's sole journey outside Rangoon was to fly to Myaungmya in the Irrawaddy Delta. Scouting in that district was due to the enthusiasm of a Gurkha Preventive Officer, who formed all the official and influential men in the town into a Local Association. Many of those auxiliary leaders were given preliminary Scout training. Scouters and Guiders received more intensive training, while he apprenticed a successor as District Commissioner.
140px Girls from age 5 through 17 are served by the Yukon District of Girl Guides of Canada-Guides du Canada.Local information is available online at yukonguides.wordpress.com. Yukon District is part of the Aurora Adventures Area Council and Alberta Council.(www.albertagirlguides.com) Through financial support from YRAC, Yukon District can provide administrative support to Guiders and girls through the Guide Office (102-302 Steele Street, Whitehorse, Y1A 2C5, 667-2455).
On returning to Dornoch and resuming her teaching career, Davidson and her friend became Guiders (leaders of the Girl Guides movement) in the burgh. Davidson and Hacon later took part in a 1928 tercentary Dornoch Pageant marking the granting of the Royal Charter to the Burgh of Dornoch by Charles I in 1628. Davidson continued to be active in the local community after her retirement in 1945, and she died in 1978, aged 98.
Because of her father and uncle she soon got involved in Girl Guides. In 1945 she was an important figure in the rebirth of Guiding first in Salzburg and later throughout Austria. In November 1945 she took part in the 1st World Youth Conference in London, where she met several Scout and Guide leaders. In August 1946 she was the leader of the first Austrian Guiders training after World War II in Vorarlberg.
The Guide International Service (G.I.S.) was an organisation set up by the Girl Guides Association in Britain in 1942 with the aim of sending to Europe after World War II teams of adult Girl Guides to do relief work. It is described in two books: All Things Uncertain by Phyllis Stewart Brown and Guides Can Do Anything by Nancy Eastick. A total of 198 Guiders and 60 Scouts, drawn from Britain, Australia, Canada, Ireland and Kenya, served in teams.
The Palestinian Director of Education, Humphrey Bowman, described the association as "side by side with the Boy Scouts but under an independent body and organized under strictly harim conditions." Like the Boy Scouts, it was confined to the Arab community. The Guiders were recruited from among teachers in the government and private schools. Some Girl Guide troops participated in demonstrations during the 1930s, paralleling the activities of the Palestinian Boy Scouts, a politically active group in the 1930s.
Smith had been a staff member at Our Chalet since 1973 and worked with four different Guiders-in-Charge as a secretary and ski instructor. Katharina Kalscics, of Austria, took over as Guider-in-Charge in 1997 and served until 2000. After Katharina departed, Ellie Duis was Acting Centre Manager, ensuring the smooth running of the centre until the arrival of Peter Neurauter, from the United Kingdom, who served as Guider-in-Charge from the end of 2000 to 2005. He was followed by Lars Bo Petersen from Denmark who served as Guider-in-Charge from 2006.
In April 1923 she was involved in another rescue, transporting the crew of the barquentine Clitha, which had been abandoned and set on fire, to England after they had been rescued by the schooner Jean Campbell. In 1925, Dean James E. Lough of the Extra-Mural Division of the New York University chartered Orduna for the transport of 213 students to France, with lectures taking place on board. In 1938 the Orduna was used for the third and final 'Peace Cruise', carrying 460 Scouters and Guiders, including Robert and Olave Baden-Powell, and their daughter Heather, on a cruise to Iceland, Norway, Denmark and Belgium. Orduna left Liverpool on 8 August, returning on 25 August via Dover.
Yet I have known Christian Guiders as > well as Scouters do exactly the same thing with Jews or Hindoos or people of > other beliefs present, and these on their part have sat under it, too polite > to raise objections but none the less made uncomfortable by it. Once, at a > mixed gathering at a 'Scout's Own' a speaker carefully avoided much > reference to Christ and was accused by some there of 'denying Him'. His > defence was that he was rather following Christ in that he was showing > Christian deference to the feelings of others who, equally with himself, > were sons of one Father, under whatever form they rendered homage to God. Baden-Powell's gravestone bears no cross or other religious symbol.
Some time after the marriage in 1906 of Armar Dayrolles Saunderson (1872–1952) from Ireland to the American Anne Archbold (1886–1968), they bought Foxlease. But the marriage turned sour, and in 1921, Foxlease was put up for sale. Hampshire Girl Guides asked for and received permission to camp there and several training weeks were held there during 1921. In January 1922, upon her divorce, Anne Saunderson née Archbold, now the owner of Foxlease, fled the country with their children, wishing to sever all ties with Britain lest her husband obtain custody of their children, so she wrote to the Executive Committee of the Girl Guides Association, offering to give them the house and to be a training centre for Guiders.

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