Any remaining doubt vanished as we rowed out towards the center of the lake.
Ms Fontenoy, 31, rowed across the Atlantic in 2003 and then across the Pacific in 2005.
Ms Pryce said the couple rowed for weeks about the issue, but then it "went quiet".
Within days Silvio Berlusconi had rowed back on his promises to make savings and introduce reforms.
They rowed toward shore, urging the raft through whitecaps with a strong wind at their backs.
Another strange encounter: the same couple that rowed me to the island also appear in Columbia.
In two sessions they rowed in complete isolation and in the others in groups of six, perfectly synchronised.
She carried on and became only the fourth women in history ever to have rowed an ocean solo.
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They rowed on the lake every day and competed on the local rivers.
Grace Darling and her father rowed out to rescue the crew of the SS Forfarshire in a violent storm.
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Exeter Crown Court heard that the couple rowed after Mr Doyle got drunk.
St Albans Crown Court was told they had rowed about compensation owed to him after an accident at work.
One of the study's co-authors, Robin Ejsmond-Frey, rowed for Oxford and thought it would be a good activity to study.
But in March they rowed back on the plan, citing what they said were inconsistencies in the U.S. negotiating position.
The prime minister and the governor of Bangkok have even rowed in public over which of them has authority to open particular sluice gates.
She set the pace while I rowed in unison with her so the other six crew members could follow in rhythm.
"We're absolutely delighted with what we've achieved and the final few hours as we rowed into Barbados were particularly emotional, " she said.
Grace Darling received national attention in 1838 when she rowed out to help survivors of the shipwrecked SS Forfarshire during a storm.
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Perhaps realising this, the president had rowed back a bit by mid-week.
He promised to help the Venetian Navy, at the Arsenale, regain its primacy, by using physics to improve the placement of oars on the convict-rowed galleys.
We rowed through the rain to a jetty, where an older woman waited beside a man in a suit wearing a wreath of roses on his head.
The sailors, stooped with hunger, curly haired from scurvy, rowed ashore, dragged themselves through shallow water and on up the sand where they entered the shade of the trees.
Mr Chubais had pushed for Mr Berezovsky to be ejected from his job as deputy head of the presidential security council after the two had rowed over privatisation policy.
MPs on the committee had rowed about a press release announcing a new inquiry into the "costs of separation" - an attempt to assess the costs and benefits of an independent Scotland.
Outlining his policy Mr Cameron said it was "a mistake" to think the government could "borrow without limit" and he believed the government had rowed back on publicised plans for a Keynesian-style "spending splurge".
Dick Dreissingacker, who rowed with the men's U.S. team in the 1972 games, and his brother Pete (who tried out for the team but didn't make it) built a business around their Olympic dreams.
"It wasn't that we rowed badly, " said Williams.
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Like a Roman arena, conflicting speakers - Peter Mandelson, Irvine Welsh, Naomi Klein, Michael O'Leary and Sebastian Barry have already rowed in - are thrown to the pit to try to convince the largely attentive audience of their beliefs.
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