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Page "Cockatoo Island (New South Wales)" ¶ 15
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One and prisoner
One reason for the writ to be sought by a person other than the prisoner is that the detainee might be held incommunicado.
One of the main provisions of the convention makes it illegal to torture prisoners and states that a prisoner can only be required to give their name, date of birth, rank and service number ( if applicable ).
One prisoner, Julian Ernesto Guevara Castro, a police officer, died of tuberculosis on 28 January 2006.
One thousand prisoner workers were killed.
One former Buchenwald prisoner, Armin Walter, calculated the number of executions by shooting in the back of the head.
One day, Andy hears from another prisoner, Tommy Williams, whose former cellmate had bragged about killing a rich golfer and a lawyer's wife ( Andy latches onto the idea that the word " lawyer " could easily have been mixed up with " banker ," the professions being similarly viewed by the general public ), and framing the lawyer for the crime.
One chapter of the third volume of the book is written by a prisoner named Georg Tenno, whose exploits enraptured Solzhenitsyn to the extent that he offered Tenno a position as co-author of the book ; Tenno declined.
One prisoner, Charles Francois Bourchier, stabbed a civilian Alexander Halliday while attempting to escape on 9 September 1808.
One woman was taken prisoner, and six survivors made it to the fort.
One Urartian army had been completely annihilated, and the general Qaqqadanu taken prisoner.
One prisoner, Zhang Xianliang, wrote that “ the parasites on a single inmate ’ s underpants would be as numerous as the words on the front page of a newspaper .” He also noted fleas would be so numerous that they would “ turn his quilt purplish black with their droppings .” Roundworms are also a common threat to the prisoners health, especially in laogai farms where human excrement is used as fertilizer.
One U. S. unit promptly issued orders that " No SS troops or paratroopers will be taken prisoner but will be shot on sight.
One Mi ’ kmaq was killed and 16 were taken prisoner to Quebec.
One day, Zapotec warriors brought a prisoner, a Mixtec prince named Nucano, to Mitla.
One Royalist officer taken prisoner at Nantwich was Colonel George Monck ( in command of Michael Warren's regiment ), who later changed sides and was to play a prominent part in the Commonwealth of England and the Restoration.
One prisoner was captured, while lines of observation were set up, which maintained a close watch over the country east and south of the town.
One of their notable achievements in Iraq was the rescue of American prisoner of war POW Private First Class Jessica Lynch.
One German guard was killed as he returned fire from an upstairs window, and two more were taken prisoner by the airborne troops ; upon interrogation, the prisoners revealed that the majority of the garrison were stationed further inland.
One prisoner, left with a single good eye, led them into the village as a warning.
One of the islands contains a castle, where Mary, Queen of Scots, was once held prisoner.
One former prisoner, Henryka Ostrowska, testified, " We always said blutige about the fact that she struck until blood showed ," giving her the nickname " Bloody Brigitte " ( Krwawa Brygida in Polish ).
One Australian, who was dazed after having his horse shot from under him, recovered to find his five attackers with their hands up, waiting to be taken prisoner.
One prisoner ( whose name has never been discovered ) escaped, but was recaptured and personally beheaded by Sakaibara.
One of the most frequently utilized tasks on social decision making is the prisoner ’ s dilemma.
One prisoner recalled that Goerdeler was often " groaning aloud from hunger ".

One and on
One false move on his part and he would be a dead man.
One is tempted to say that, on the difference between the concepts of sovereignty in these two preambles, the worst war of the Nineteenth century was fought.
One looked down on a sea of leaves, a breaking wave of flower.
One of the obvious conclusions we can make on the basis of the last election, I suppose, is that we, the majority, were dissatisfied with Eisenhower conservatism.
One is so accustomed to think of men as the privileged who need but ask and receive, and women as submissive and yielding, that our sympathies are usually enlisted on the side of the man whose love is not returned, and we condemn the woman as a coquette.
One of the most distressing of these scenes occurred at Spring Green toward the end of the open warfare, on a beautiful day in June.
One should not, of course, pluck the head off a flower and expect its perfume to linger on.
One was an article on the U.N. by Alice Widener from the Cincinnati Enquirer.
One day in a bar, so the legend goes, someone put a beer stein with too much force on the monacle and broke it.
One finds it difficult to pass censure on the lonely figure who waited for days for a saving word from his zealously served idol, W.R. Hearst.
One shawl was so tremendous that she could not wear it, so she draped it over the banister on the second floor, and it hung over the stairway.
One, a reservation on the point I have just made, is the phenomenon of pseudo-thinking, pseudo-feeling, and pseudo-willing, which Fromm discussed in The Escape From Freedom.
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.
One historical authority presents laborious and circuitous testimony tending to arouse suspicion that Massachusetts was behind the clouds settling down on the embattled Gorton.
One effect of the spirited give-and-take of these discussions was to focus attention on practical applications and the necessity of being armed with the facts: knowledge of the destructive force of even the tiniest `` tactical '' atomic weapon would have a bearing on judgments as to the advisability of its use -- to defend Berlin, for example ; ;
One cannot but wonder whether these doubts about the success of Khrushchev's agricultural policy have not at least something to do with one of the big surprises provided by this Congress -- the obsessive harping on the crimes and misdeeds of the `` anti-party group '' -- Molotov, Malenkov, Kaganovich and others -- including the eighty-year-old Marshal Voroshilov.
One day, Ching had told him ( smiling, patting him on the back ) as they walked to the weekly conference of squad leaders, `` Keep it up, your squad is good, one of the best, keep it up, keep up the good work ''.
One indication of the merits of the new management is found in the fact that during the period 1951-1956, while total annual mileage put on the vehicles increased 35%, the total maintenance cost increased only 11%.
One state, Alabama, closes its fiscal year on September 30, and all cities in the state, with one exception, also close fiscal years on September 30.
One consequence is the occurrence of occasional conflicts because private owners of some inholdings object to public programs of use on neighboring National Forest or other Federal land, or because such ownerships are developed for uses that are not compatible with use for the public of neighboring National Forest land.
The exercise I shall discuss in this -- the first of a new series of articles on muscle definition-specialization of a particular body part -- is the One Leg Lunge.
One female, collected on an island off the coast of Nicaragua, was gravid and measured 4 feet 8 inches from snout to vent ( her tail should be between 6 and 7 inches long ).
One might digress at this point and speculate that if it is `` wise '' to create special sections for special status, then why not a special section for women pregnant before marriage, and one for 44-year-old men with teenage children, and so on.

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