Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "History of Kenya" ¶ 65
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Obstructing and only
Run outs are the only possible conventional dismissal applicable in this case ( batsmen may also be dismissed Obstructing the Field or Handled the Ball, but such cases are very rare ).

Obstructing and .
# Obstructing the communication media between the intended users and the victim so that they can no longer communicate adequately.
" Obstructing Reconstruction: John Archibald Campbell and the Legal Campaign Against Louisiana's Republican Government, 1868-1873.
In 1776-77, he served on the committee that drafted the first New York State Constitution and also was a member of the " Secret Committee for Obstructing Navigation of the Hudson.
( i ) he remains subject to Laws 33 ( Handled the ball ) and 37 ( Obstructing the field ) but is otherwise out of the game.
Michael A. Ross, " Obstructing Reconstruction: John A. Campbell and the Legal Campaign against Reconstruction in New Orleans, 1868-1873 ," Civil War History, 49 ( September 2003 ): 235-253.
Obstructing the field is a rare method of dismissal in the sport of cricket.
If the obstruction is accidental, then it is not wilful, and so the batsman cannot be given out Obstructing the field.
The first known instance of a player being dismissed in a manner equivalent to the modern term ' Obstructing the field ' occurred in a minor match at Sheffield on 27 August 1792, between Sheffield Cricket Club and Bents Green.
Zubin Surkari of Canada was dismissed ' Obstructing the field ' on 3 August 2011, in a 2011 ICC Intercontinental Cup match between Canada and Afghanistan.
Previously, Mark Ramprakash was dismissed ' Obstructing the field ' on 30 July 2011, in a County Championship Division 2 match between Surrey and Gloucestershire.
Obstructing an officer trying to disperse an unlawful assembly may attract further punishment.

press and both
When the news became certain, the French press insisted that the defeat was the result both of an overwhelmingly large British force and unspecified " traitors.
Nicknamed the " godfather " by the tabloid press, he was renowned for his tough, uncompromising style and was feared by both crew and cast alike.
As a pioneer of the local gay press movement, he was one of the founders and former president of both The National Gay Press Association and the National Gay Newspaper Guild.
Appearing at a press conference with Judi Dench and Elton John, he promised both to appear on stage and to bring in big-name talent.
Accordingly Wimsey accompanies " a Royal personage " to a public event, leading the press to carry pictures of both " Bredon " and Wimsey.
At first he wrote leaflets for an underground printing press in Kiev, but soon moved to the capital, Saint Petersburg, where he worked with both Bolsheviks, such as Central Committee member Leonid Krasin, and the local Menshevik committee, which he pushed in a more radical direction.
Before the invention of woodblock printing in China or by moveable type in a printing press in Europe, all written documents had to be both produced and reproduced by hand.
On the occasion of most critical events, tis publishes political documents to support its views, which are distributed both to deciders and to the press.
An article in The Times, reporting on the glowing tributes paid to Scott in the New York press, claimed that both Amundsen and Shackleton were " to hear that such a disaster could overtake a well-organized expedition ".
Spitzer's study has been criticized on numerous ethical and methodological grounds, and " press releases from both NGLTF and HRC sought to undermine Spitzer's credibility by connecting him politically to right-wing groups that had backed the ex-gay movement.
The issue's cover notably featured its first daytime soap stars, Bill Hayes and Susan Seaforth Hayes of Days of our Lives, a couple whose onscreen and real-life romance was widely covered by both the soap opera magazines and the mainstream press.
According to both Roddenberry and an NBC press release, this was the justification for six additional episodes being ordered by the network for the series ' second season.
Leaf wound up having a disappointing career with the Chargers after a great deal of controversy with both the Charger management as well as the press and his teammates.
Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and his Senegalese counterpart Abdoulaye Wade had a joint press conference along with a close meeting in Feb 2008 in the city of Mashhad, both side pledged to expand the bilateral ties in the fields of economy, tourism and politics in addition to increase the efforts for empowering the OIC.
With the introduction of the printing press to Britain by William Caxton in 1476, printed works became both more common and more economically important.
" Papers across the country routinely dismissed the efforts of both sides in the trial, while the European press reacted to the entire affair with amused condescension.
Poor reception of the album both by the public and reviewers led the band to take out a page-sized ad in the local music press declaring " Why Don't You All Get Fu ** ed " ( title of one of their songs ) and they played their last performance on 8 June in Kalgoorlie.
In 1927, Philo Farnsworth made the world's first working television system with electronic scanning of both the pickup and display devices, which he first demonstrated to the press on 1 September 1928.
The Reformers made heavy use of inexpensive pamphlets ( using the relatively new printing press invented by Johannes Gutenberg ) so there was swift movement of both ideas and documents, including The Ninety-Five Theses.
These organized offices and support systems include aides-de-camp, press officers, financial managers, speech writers, trip organizers, event planners, protocol officers, chefs and other kitchen employees, waiters, and various cleaning staff, as well as visitors ' centre staff and tour guides at both official residences.
Adelaide and Matilda, however, were both in Italy and unable to press their objections.
Damp paper is placed on the plate, and both are run through a printing press ; the pressure forces the paper into contact with the ink, transferring the image ( c. f., chine-collé ).
The Committee head for selecting the location, New Jersey Democrat David Wilentz, gave the official reason for choosing Chicago as, “ It is centrally located geographically which will reduce transportation costs and because it has been the site of national conventions for both Parties in the past and is therefore attuned to holding them .” In the end, however, the conversation between Johnson and Daley had been leaked to the press and published in the Chicago Tribune and several other papers.
After December 1916, Lloyd George relied on the support of Conservatives and of the press baron Lord Northcliffe ( who owned both The Times and The Daily Mail ).

press and before
Ironically no president we have had would have regretted more than President Eisenhower the possibility to which his own words, in the press conference held at the beginning of August, testified: that unable as he was himself to say his running was best for the country, unconsciously he had placed his party before his nation.
The I. A. P. A. found itself driven from journalism into politics as it did its best to bring about the downfall of the Castro Government and the return of the Cuban press to the freedom it knew before Batista's dictatorship began in 1952.
sometimes he would be up before dawn, clad as a garbage collector and hurling pails into areaways to exasperate us, and thereafter would hurry to the Bronx Zoo to grimace at the lions and press cigar butts against their paws.
The announcement that the city would sue for recovery on the performance bond was made by City Solicitor David Berger at a press conference following a meeting in the morning with Wagner and other officials of the city and the PTC as well as representatives of an engineering firm that was pulled off the El project before its completion in 1959.
Last two to be added before the book went to press were the marriages of Meredith Jane Cooper, daughter of the Grant B. Coopers, to Robert Knox Worrell, and of Mary Alice Ghormley to Willard Pen Tudor.
He was a cultivated patron of literature and art, and it was in his time that the first printing press authorized to use the Arabic or Turkish languages was set up in Constantinople, operated by Ibrahim Muteferrika ( while the printing press had been introduced to Constantinople in 1480, all works published before 1729 were in Greek, Armenian, or Hebrew ).
News of the signings by the Boston and Philadelphia players leaked to the press before the season ended, and all of them suffered verbal abuse and physical threats from the kranks, as baseball fans were called at the time, in Beantown and the City of Brotherly Love.
Gluck feared that the Parisian critics would denounce the opera by a young composer known mostly for comic pieces and so the opera was originally billed in the press as being a new work by Gluck with some assistance from Antonio Salieri, then shortly before the premiere of the opera the Parisian press reported that the work was to be partly by Gluck and partly by Salieri, and finally after popular and critical success were won on stage the opera was acknowledged in a letter to the public by Gluck as being wholly by the young Antonio.
Lennon and Bardot met in person once, in 1968 at the Mayfair Hotel, introduced by Beatles press agent Derek Taylor ; a nervous Lennon took LSD before arriving, and neither star impressed the other.
They are sensitive to the touch as they have many nerve endings ; and it is common to press or massage them with hands or orally before or during sexual activity.
It seems rarely to have been used in the German military press before 1939.
Just before that, on March 8, 1979 Philips publicly demonstrated a prototype of an optical digital audio disc at a press conference called " Philips Introduce Compact Disc " in Eindhoven, Netherlands.
Tina O ' Brien revealed in the British press on 4 April 2007 that she would be leaving Coronation Street before the end of the year.
In July 1991, Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney, in the context of the outing of his press aide Pete Williams, dismissed the idea that gays posed a security risk as " a bit of an old chestnut " in testimony before the House Budget Committee.
Bowie toured and gave press conferences as Ziggy before a dramatic and abrupt on-stage " retirement " at London's Hammersmith Odeon on 3 July 1973.
Portions of Misskelley's statements to the police were leaked to the press and reported on the front page of the Memphis Commercial Appeal before any of the trials began.
In his research before filming, he was able to stand close to President Roosevelt during a press conference after the recent acts of war by Germany in Europe.
In his first 120 days in office, he held more regular and frequent press conferences than any other President, before or since.
Gunpowder was widely used as early as the 11th century and they were using moveable type printing five hundred years before Gutenberg created his press.
Major kept his economic team unchanged for seven months after Black Wednesday before he replaced Norman Lamont with Kenneth Clarke as Chancellor of the Exchequer, after months of press criticism of Lamont and disastrous defeat at a by-election in Newbury.
Following Kennedy's assassination in November 1963, Peel passed himself off as a reporter for the Liverpool Echo in order to attend the arraignment of Lee Harvey Oswald, and he and a friend can be seen in the footage of the 22 / 23 November midnight press conference at Dallas Police Department when Oswald was paraded before the media.
His attorney claimed to the press that he asked for a lawyer repeatedly before being interviewed but he did not get one, and that " highly coercive " prison conditions forced Lindh to waive his right to remain silent.
He never revised what he had written, remarking with a certain wonder on his brother, Wilhelm, who read his own manuscripts over again before sending them to press.

0.750 seconds.