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Page "Luc Longley" ¶ 12
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Stung and by
Stung by the criticism of his film, Griffith made a new film he had just finished, The Mother and the Law, into one of the strands of an even bigger film with an even bigger theme, Intolerance ( 1916 ).
Stung by this unexpected rebuke, Navy Chief of Staff Nagano rose to defend the policy, assuring the Emperor that this consensus document was not a decision to go to war and that priority would be given to negotiations.
Stung by her words, Dick decides to compete with Biddle as an equal and applies for West Point.
Stung twice by the same source, Gould suggested that Tramiel travel to Japan to learn why they were able to outcompete North Americans in their own local markets.
Stung by the midseason collapse of two of its six franchises, this league disbanded on August 2, 1912.
Stung by the defeat of her land bill, in 1854 and 1855 Dix traveled to England and Europe, where she reconnected with the Rathbones and conducted investigations of Scotland's madhouses that precipitated the Scottish Lunacy Commission.
Stung by the vociferousness of his critics, Kahn softened his tone somewhat, responding to their points in Thinking About the Unthinkable ( 1962 ) and a further work on military strategy, On Escalation ( 1965 ).
Stung by press attacks in February 1917 ( a Smith-Dorrien interview in the “ Weekly Despatch ” “ How the Old Army Died ” and a book “ The Retreat from Mons ” by Major Corbett-Smith – Smith-Dorrien had worked on the proofs ), French published his memoirs “ 1914 ”, ghosted by the journalist Lovat Fraser, in April and May 1919.
Stung and alarmed by Henry's dangerous and peremptory way with them, they proceed to make common cause with the Welsh and Scots, intending to depose " this ingrate and cankered Bolingbroke.
" Stung by the criticism, Gwynn was miserable the rest of the season and became an introvert with his teammates.
Stung by these accusations, Herkimer ordered the column to march on toward Stanwix.
Stung by the criticism, Harry sails to Sudan, disguises himself as an Arab, and looks for the opportunity to redeem his honour.
Stung by criticism that the moon-base project has no real justification — 37 years ago, President Richard Nixon canceled the final planned Apollo moon missions because the program was accomplishing little at great expense ; as early as 1964, the communitarian theorist Amitai Etzioni was calling lunar obsession a “ moondoggle ”— NASA is selling the new plan as a second moon race, this time against Beijing.
" Stung by Moore's criticism, Bolland was mortified by the colouring, and bemused not to have seen proofs pre-publication.
Stung by the article's assertion that Southern was responsible for turning the formerly " serious script " into an " original irreverent satirical film ", George pointed out that he and Kubrick had been working together on the script for ten months, whereas Southern was only " briefly employed ( November 16 to December 28, 1962 ) to do some additional writing.
Stung by this apparent reaffirmation of colonial rule, the Shura-i Islam reunited with Ulema Jemyeti to form the Kokand Autonomous Government.
Stung by Duryodhana's doubts in his abilities, Drona suggests that Abhimanyu could only be killed through illicit means.
Stung by criticism from fans and writers, Brush in January 1905 drafted rules that both leagues adopted that winter.
Stung by the loss of its highly profitable TV station, the Herald-Traveler Corp. was put on the market, and acquired by the Hearst Corporation in June 1972.
Stung by the many accusations in the Soviet press of ' individualism, decadence, pessimism, formalism and complexity ', Myaskovsky wrote to Asafiev in 1940 ' Can it be that the psychological world is so foreign to these people?

by and scorpion
In some versions, he is killed by Artemis, while in others he is killed by a scorpion sent by Gaia.
* Iberiotoxin is produced by the Buthus tamulus ( Eastern Indian scorpion ) and blocks potassium channels.
) is trapped by setae in the pre-oral cavity, which is ejected by the scorpion.
The scorpion then emerges from this split ; the pedipalps and legs are first removed from the old exoskeleton, followed eventually by the metasoma.
Each compound is made and stored in a pair of glandular sacs and is released in a quantity regulated by the scorpion itself.
* One of earliest occurrences of the scorpion in culture is its inclusion, as Scorpio, in the twelve signs of the series of constellations known as the Zodiac by Babylonian astronomers during the Chaldean period.
* The first two pages of Ian Fleming's novel Diamonds Are Forever are told from the point of view of an African scorpion which kills and eats a beetle and is then casually crushed and killed itself, by one of the villains whom James Bond would later confront and eventually crush.
The most dangerous species of scorpion resides in North Africa, and its sting may kill, so Serket was considered a highly important goddess, and was sometimes considered by pharaohs to be their patron.
Longley spent two lackluster seasons with Phoenix, where he gained less attention for his play than for being stung twice by a scorpion while sitting on the floor of his home sorting through his CD collection .< sup > 1 </ sup > ( Longley also had difficulties with bodysurfing-he managed to separate his shoulder and miss 18 games in 1997.
When Coyotito is stung by a scorpion, Kino must find a way to pay the town doctor, to cure Kino's son.
When the horse stops near a dwelling, Trinity gets up, pulls on his boots, gets stung by a scorpion hiding in the boot but is clearly insusceptible to the venom then he drags his Colt 45 in holster and walks inside.
The opening sequence of the film alludes to that interpretation, by Dalí and Buñuel, with an excerpt from a natural science film about the scorpion, which is a predatory arthropod whose tail is composed of five prismatic articulations that culminate in a stinger with which it injects venom to the prey.
The Syria-Thaumasia block is bounded to the west by a highly elevated zone of fractures ( Claritas Fossae ) and mountains ( the Thaumasia Highlands ) that curves south then east to northeast in a wide arc that has been compared to the shape of a scorpion ’ s tail.
During the SEALAB II mission, Carpenter's right index finger was wounded by the toxic spines of a scorpion fish.
Her right shoulder is covered by a large scorpion, and her elbows and knees by spiders.
Less ambiguous than the above ichnogenera, are the traces left behind by invertebrates such as Hibbertopterus, a giant " sea scorpion " or eurypterid of the early Paleozoic era.
The toxicity in some cases could be confirmed by modern research ( i. e., in scorpion ); in some cases it couldn't ( i. e., in curculigo ).
In the course of the show, Steve-O has purposely subjected himself to the relatively mild sting of the Emperor scorpion on more than one occasion, and Chris Pontius has nearly been attacked by a wild jaguar and has been bitten by a Black Bear.
The main type of construction of stings is a sharp organ of offense or defense, especially when connected with a venom gland, and adapted to inflict a wound by piercing ; as the caudal sting of a scorpion.

by and reference
In The Publick Spirit of the Whigs, it may be noted, Swift himself contemptuously dismissed Steele's reference to his friend at court: `` I suppose by the Style of old Friend, and the like, it must be some Body there of his own Level ; ;
One might, indeed, argue that the history of ideas, in so far as it includes the literatures, must center on characterizations of human nature and that the great periods of literary achievement may be distinguished from one another by reference to the images of human nature that they succeed in fashioning.
My discussion with reference to the resolution was that we should commend those citizens who serve as judges of election and who properly discharge their duty and polling place proprietors who make available their private premises, and not by innuendo criticize them.
There was no reference to the incident on the stairs, his powers being absorbed by this more immediate business.
If Af is the change per unit volume in Gibbs function caused by the shear field at constant P and T, and **yr is the density of the fluid, then the total potential energy of the system above the reference height is Af.
The introduction of the United States Pharmacopoeia reference standard in 1952 and the redefinition and equating of the USP and international units of thyroid-stimulating activity have made it possible to compare results published by different investigators since that time.
Another great danger is that the emerging middle class will feel itself increasingly alienated from the political leaders who still justify their dominance by reference to the struggle for independence or the early phase of nationalism.
Thus he may be referring to some concrete thing, or incident, in his immediate environment by some symbolic-sounding, hyperbolic reference to transcendental events on the global scene.
That reference in the Report is `` continuation of the trend toward an all-Negro school system '', a remark apparently occasioned by the increase of Negro school population from 74.1 per cent to 76.7 per cent.
In reference to Brown's raid she wrote, `` though we are non-resistants and religiously believe it better to reform by moral and not by carnal weapons, we know thee was anemated by the most generous and philanthropic motives ''.
Since I have already discussed his moral position, that discussion is incorporated by reference into the following pages, which will focus on the empirical and analytic side of Fromm's treatment.
`` On the hoof '' was a reference to live cattle and was also used in referrin' to cattle travelin' by trail under their own power as against goin' by rail.
His reference to ' discredited carcass ' or ' tattered remains ' of the president's leadership is an insult to the man who led our forces to victory in the greatest war in all history, to the man who was twice elected overwhelmingly by the American people as president of the United States, and who has been the symbol to the world of the peace-loving intentions of the free nations.
Publisher Richardson has updated the Blue Book `` but it still remains the compact reference book used by so many for those ever-changing telephone numbers, addresses, other residences, club affiliations and marriages ''.
Nassau is currently building a central collection of reference materials in its Hempstead headquarters, which will reach its goal of 100,000 volumes by 1965.
Though the reference to race was stricken by the association in 1950, being an agent of such `` detrimental '' influences still appears as the cardinal sin realtors see themselves committed to avoid.
Roman gladiatorial games often referenced classical mythology, and this seems to reference Achilles ' fight with Penthesilea but gives it an extra twist of Achilles ' being " played " by a woman.
The two most common systems are the classification adopted by the website AmphibiaWeb, University of California ( Berkeley ) and the classification by herpetologist Darrel Frost and the American Museum of Natural History, available as the online reference database Amphibian Species of the World.
This wider definition of Anatolia has gained widespread currency outside of Turkey and has, for instance, been adopted by Encyclopedia Britannica and other encyclopedic and general reference publications.
Argon ( αργος, Greek meaning " inactive ", in reference to its chemical inactivity ) was suspected to be present in air by Henry Cavendish in 1785 but was not isolated until 1894 by Lord Rayleigh and Sir William Ramsay in Scotland in an experiment in which they removed all of the oxygen, carbon dioxide, water and nitrogen from a sample of clean air.

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