(1) The current team want their page in history and they want to be recognised.
(2) However, they may be forgetting one point which is that when history turns a new page , it can't be easily turned back.
(3) Banks aren't just the kind of businesses that we read about on the stock market page of the newspaper.
(4) You get panicky and page your friend who's capable of tackling such problems.
(5) We'd literally walk into a store and have the manager page the forklift guy.
(6) He also handles the obituary page on the local newspaper.
(7) The reason his name leaped out from the fine print of the obit page was the cover art of his Columbia records, which I never forgot.
(8) You see, in the Tools section there is a page that allows you to look for firmware updates and the like.
(9) A rare book store which was nearly destroyed in an arson attack has turned a new page in its history.
(10) In a way it is perhaps disappointing to think that the only small mark one has made on the fragile page of history is to have danced on a table.
(11) This is, therefore, a new page in the history of world empires.
(12) A text file reader enables you to page through the authors text file using indexes
(13) It was over now, a page in history ending almost two years ago.
(14) Apart from rounding off a page in history, does it matter any more?
(15) I'll read the letters page of any newspaper within reach.
(16) They are, essentially, just an extended version of a newspaper editorial page with many varied, individual voices.
(17) The help section on the admin page gives detailed descriptions on how to use the web interface.
(18) He hadn't considered this, and a page attending a feast as anything but a servant for his master was highly irregular.
(19) The vote will form a page in the world's history
(20) Born in Holland, Keppel attended William of Orange to England in 1688 as a page of honour.