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passage and fired
When fired, the container burst open during passage through the bore or at the muzzle, giving the effect of an over-sized shotgun shell.
Because these are mechanically identical to live rounds, which are intended to be loaded once, fired and then discarded, drill rounds have a tendency to become significantly worn and damaged with repeated passage through magazines and firing mechanisms, and must be frequently inspected to ensure that these are not so degraded as to be unusable — for example the casings can become torn or misshapen and snag on moving parts, or the bullet can become separated and stay in the breech when the case is ejected.
" Some of the men fired on their own comrades to clear a passage for themselves ," wrote Lieutenant Kubitovich.
Peace fired once, the shot striking the lintel of the passage doorway.
Foot persuaded Kimche to return as joint editor in 1946 ( after Mulally's departure to the Sunday Pictorial ) and eventually himself became joint editor with Anderson in 1948 after Kimche was fired for disappearing from the office to Istanbul to negotiate the safe passage of two Jewish refugee ships through the Bosporus and Dardanelles.
As expected, when a naval force attempted the passage on July 17, 1816, it was fired on by the Negro Fort, and four U. S. soldiers were killed.
The 6. 5 × 54 cartridge fell into disfavour with British deer-stalkers after the passage of the 1963 Deer Act because the bullet's muzzle velocity failed to reach the legally required minimum when fired from typically short, carbine-type MS barrels.
This job was short-lived: he was abruptly fired in 1957 when United Press called him for a reaction to the launch of Sputnik 1, and he repeated to them a passage from his just-published book Earth Satellites and the Race for Space Superiority, in which he wrote, " For the first time since the dawn of history, the Earth is going to have more than one moon.
He was identified as the fat officer who had fired hunting weapons at the attackers, and his body was found in a choked tunnel-like passage near the Water Gate.
He was fired from his Tribune job after disappearing from the office in December 1947 to Istanbul to negotiate safe passage with the Turkish authorities for two ships sailing from Bulgaria with thousands of Jews aboard bound for Palestine.

passage and fancy
In 13 he shows some skill in word-painting ; in 16 there is some delicate fancy in the description of his poems as Charites, and a passage at the end, where he foretells the joys of peace after the enemy have been driven out of Sicily, has the true bucolic ring.

passage and wrote
One account suggests that his writings are a prophecy written in about 615 BC, just before the downfall of Assyria, while another account suggests that he wrote this passage as liturgy just after its downfall in 612 BC.
One account suggests that his writings are a prophecy written in about 615 BC, just before the downfall of Assyria, while another account suggests that he wrote this passage as liturgy just after its downfall in 612 BC.
After the passage of the 19th Amendment gave women the vote in 1920, Eastman and three others wrote the Equal Rights Amendment, first introduced in 1923.
The tradition that this was the disciple Matthew begins with the early Christian bishop Papias of Hierapolis ( about 100 – 140 AD ), who, in a passage with several ambiguous phrases, wrote: " Matthew collected the oracles ( logia — sayings of or about Jesus ) in the Hebrew language ( Hebraïdi dialektōi — perhaps alternatively " Hebrew style ") and each one interpreted ( hērmēneusen — or " translated ") them as best he could.
" He then continued by focusing on the manner in which the poem was composed, ' We could have informed Mr. Coleridge of a reverend friend of ours, who actually wrote down two sermons on a passage in the Apocalypse, from the recollection of the spontaneous exercise of his faculties in sleep.
In a letter to his friend Peter Baynes, dated 12 August 1940, Jung wrote a passage: "...
One account suggests that his writings are a prophecy written in about 615 BC, just before the downfall of Assyria, while another account suggests that he wrote this passage as liturgy just after its downfall in 612 BC.
Before the advent of copyright, anonymous and pseudonymous publication was a common practice in the sixteenth century publishing world, and a passage in the Arte of English Poesie ( 1589 ), the leading work of literary criticism of the Elizabethan period and an anonymously published work itself, mentions in passing that literary figures in the court who wrote " commendably well " circulated their poetry only among their friends, " as if it were a discredit for a gentleman to seem learned " ( Book 1, Chapter 8 ).
Redstockings co-founder Ellen Willis wrote in 1984 that radical feminism " got sexual politics recognized as a public issue ", " created the vocabulary … with which the second wave of feminism entered popular culture ", " sparked the drive to legalize abortion ", " were the first to demand total equality in the so-called private sphere " (" housework and child care ,… emotional and sexual needs "), and " created the atmosphere of urgency " that almost led to the passage of the Equal Rights Amendment.
Following the passage of the Intolerable Acts by the British Parliament in 1774, Jefferson wrote a set of resolutions against the acts.
Samuel Eliot Morison wrote that had Marshall carried out his constitutional duties, assumed the presidency, and made the concessions necessary for the passage of the League of Nations treaty in late 1920, the United States would have been much more involved in European affairs and could have helped prevent the rise of Adolf Hitler, which began in the following year.
Lionel Tertis, in his transcription of the Elgar cello concerto, wrote the slow movement with the ' C ' string tuned down to B flat, enabling the viola to play one passage an octave lower.
Gladstone wrote to Herbert Spencer, who contributed the introduction to a collection of anti-socialist essays ( A Plea for Liberty, 1891 ), that " I ask to make reserves, and of one passage, which will be easily guessed, I am unable even to perceive the relevancy.
For over a century and a half after Bradford wrote this passage, there is no record of Pilgrims being used to describe Plymouth ’ s founders, except when quoting Bradford.
" Emily Griesinger wrote that fantasy literature helps children to survive reality for long enough to learn how to deal with it, described Harry's first passage through to Platform 9¾ as an application of faith and hope, and his encounter with the Sorting Hat as the first of many in which Harry is shaped by the choices he makes.
In 1938, he wrote a short passage to be placed in the Westinghouse Time Capsules .< ref >
R. A. Young wrote: " Wiberg suggests that the early Greeks knew of the circulation, and quotes a passage from one of the Hippocratic writings which would bear that interpretation.
Calvinists have long taught that when the apostle Paul wrote, " God hath chosen us in Him before the foundation of the world " ( Ephesians 1: 4 ), that it the passage is meant be understood that God actually choses believers in Christ before the world was founded.
Significant too is, where Jesus heals a man in a process that is slow and involves saliva ; Mark Goodacre suggests both these features make it a passage more likely to be omitted than added, implying Mark wrote first.
Stowe, a Connecticut-born teacher at the Hartford Female Academy and an active abolitionist, wrote the novel as a response to the 1850 passage of the second Fugitive Slave Act.
" A scholiast, commenting on the passage, wrote: " Simonides seems to have been the first to introduce money-grabbing into his songs and to write a song for pay " and, as proof of it, quoted a passage from one of Pindar's odes (" For then the Muse was not yet fond of profit nor mercenary "), which he interpreted as covert criticism of Simonides.
For the limited 1985 edition of Trumps of Doom, Zelazny wrote a prologue which details Merlin's passage through the Logrus.
Possibly the best source, however brief, on Standish's origins and early life is a short passage recorded by Nathaniel Morton, secretary of Plymouth Colony, who wrote in his New England's Memorial, published in 1669, that Standish:
He also wrote that members of the rabbinical court of Jerusalem confirmed that the man was correct in his understanding of Jewish law, and that they backed this assertion by quoting from a passage from a recent compilation of law.

passage and series
By the late Bronze Age, however, a series of treaties had established safe passage for merchants around the Eastern Mediterranean, spreading from Minoan Crete and Mycenae in the northwest to Elam and Bahrain in the southeast.
The Vitagraph company's The Man That Might Have Been ( William Humphrey, 1914 ), is even more complex, with a series of reveries and flash-backs that contrast the protagonist's real passage through life with what might have been, if his son had not died.
European Imperialism in Asia traces its roots back to the late 15th century with a series of voyages that sought a sea passage to India in the hope of establishing direct trade between Europe and Asia in spices.
Pellucidar is accessible to the surface world via a polar opening allowing passage between the inner and outer worlds through which a rigid airship visits in the third book of the series.
The General Maritime Treaty of 1820 between the East India Company and the sheikhs of the coastal area — which became known as the Trucial Coast because of the series of treaties between the sheikhs and the British — was a way of ensuring safe passage.
The instrumental piano passage from the " Nocturne VII " track ( which appeared on the posthumous Beyond The Sun album ) was used in the BBC series Masterchef in November 2009.
Spurred by a series of articles that appeared in the British Medical Journal in 1867, Parliament began to regulate baby farming in 1872 with the passage of the Infant Life Protection Act.
As the camera retreats the lights dim and, in the misterioso passage which follows, Astaire mimes a series of stances, ranging from overt friendliness, wariness, surprise to watchful readiness and jaunty confidence.
To the north of the town are several caves of the Mendip Hills, including Thrupe Lane Swallet which is a geological Site of Special Scientific Interest ( SSSI ), and the St. Dunstan's Well Catchment which is an important cave system including a series of spectacularly-decorated caves which in total extend to about of mapped passage.
Since the great emperor was afraid of death and, " evil spirits ", he had workers build a series of tunnels and passage ways to each of his palaces ( over 200 were owned by him ), because these would keep him safe from the evil spirits, as he traveled unseen.
Stingers were used frequently in the American television series " Friends " ( as one example ) to mark scene transitions involving the passage of time or a change of location.
Flinn was aware that the film would be the last to feature the cast of the original television series, so he wrote an opening that embraced the passage of time.
The passage to Editorial Frontera saw the publication of some of his most important early series.
The sso ritual is much-feared by Beti boys, as it involves a series of tests to mark a boy's passage into manhood.
He used his leverage to win rapid passage of a series of measures to create welfare programs and regulate the banking system, stock market, industry and agriculture.
The climax of liberalism came in the mid-1960s with the success of President Lyndon B. Johnson ( 1963 – 69 ) in securing congressional passage of his Great Society programs, including civil rights, the end of segregation, Medicare, extension of welfare, federal aid to education at all levels, subsidies for the arts and humanities, environmental activism, and a series of programs designed to wipe out poverty.
The Gun Control Act of 1968 was part of President Johnson's Great Society series of programs and was spurred in passage by the assassinations of John F. Kennedy, Malcolm X, Robert F. Kennedy, and Martin Luther King.
The prologue of 2 Return states that that play had been written for the preceding year, and also, in a passage of which the reading is somewhat doubtful, implies that the whole series had extended over four years.
In 1972 Grey began a series of art actions that bear resemblance to rites of passage, in that they present stages of a developing psyche.
With the passage of the Native American $ 1 Coin Act on September 20, 2007, the U. S. Mint began designing a series of Sacagawea dollars with modified reverses to further commemorate " Native Americans and the important contributions made by Indian tribes and individual Native Americans to the development of the United States and the history of the United States ".
The series had a huge impact and led to the passage of the 1906 Pure Food and Drug Act.
On the Armed Services Committee, he opposed a new series of military base closures and won passage of a bill that would assure that universities would provide access to their facilities for military recruitment purposes and ROTC.
In the decades following the passage of the Licinio-Sextian law of 367 BC, a series of laws were passed which ultimately granted Plebeians political equality with Patricians.
In episode 4 of the Adult Saga in the official Ocarina of Time manga series, " Link Vs. Link ", Impa gives Link earrings, describing it as a " rite of passage for young Sheikah men "; these later became default aspects of Link's design, starting with Twilight Princess and in Skyward Sword.

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