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Page "Battle of Camperdown" ¶ 14
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flurry and was
The " Carnage " mix was, by comparison, altogether more conventional, featuring enhanced string treatments, a percussive midpoint flurry of vocal samples ( from Allen and the group's B-side interview ), but broadly following the prevailing instrumental-vocal 12-inch structural paradigm.
His reasoning behind this was that the public was not in a position to deconstruct the growing and complex flurry of information present in modern society, and so an intermediary was needed to filter news for the masses.
From Einstein's simple postulation was born a flurry of debating, theorizing, and testing.
As the Rabbis were required to face a new reality — mainly Judaism without a Temple ( to serve as the center of teaching and study ) and Judea without at least partial autonomy — there was a flurry of legal discourse and the old system of oral scholarship could not be maintained.
The French reaction to this flurry of reforms was mixed, however.
It was one of the first musicals to feature a Technicolor sequence, which sparked the trend of color being used in a flurry of musicals that would hit the screens in 1929-1930.
A bullet struck Boone's leg, shattering his kneecap, but he was carried back inside the fort amid a flurry of bullets by Simon Kenton, a recent arrival at Boonesborough.
A flurry of litigation ensued, all of which was settled in 2008.
Mucha produced a flurry of paintings, posters, advertisements, and book illustrations, as well as designs for jewelry, carpets, wallpaper, and theatre sets in what was termed initially The Mucha Style but became known as Art Nouveau ( French for " new art ").
To keep order in the midst of the flurry, it was decreed that all dwellings be kept off the middle of streets.
Originally called the Bartak Depression after the owners of the land, it was redubbed the Merna Crater by University of Kansas geology professor Wakefield Dort, Jr. Further research showed the crater to be more likely formed by wind and water erosion, but memories of the flurry of importance in the small town remain.
Though the group was short-lived and separated later in the same year, the school was the center of a flurry of activity in contemporary art.
Radar results from the Arecibo Observatory indicated that the comet nucleus was about across, and surrounded by a flurry of pebble-sized particles ejected at a few metres per second.
Suddenly Chávez stepped around Taylor, positioning him so that Taylor was trapped in the corner, with no way to escape from Chávez ' desperate final flurry.
Internationally, it was important for Spanish prestige for her to receive at least a proportionate, and ideally greater, share of new saints than other Catholic kingdoms, and Philip sponsored a flurry of texts and books supporting Spain's candidates, particularly in competition with Catholic France.
Capitol was the only company that had missed out on signing a San Francisco “ hippie ” band during the first flurry of record company interest and, consequently, Quicksilver Messenger Service was able to negotiate a better deal than many of their peers.
Lane's vehement response to this infringement on her right of free speech resulted in a flurry of newspaper articles and the publishing of a pamphlet, " What is this, the Gestapo ?," that was meant to remind Americans to be watchful of their rights, despite the wartime exigencies.
The story was picked up by Time Magazine and other national media, and led to a flurry of reported rapes and attempted rapes.
The judgement in CFPH's applications was the first in a flurry of UK court cases since 2005 involving re-consideration by the High Court of patent applications refused by the UK Patent Office.
The Bowden Brake was launched amidst a flurry of enthusiasm in the cycle press in 1896.
By March 2000 Giuliani and Nathan were appearing together at public events ; in May 2000 Giuliani publicly acknowledged her as his " very good friend " and, amidst a flurry of press scrutiny about Nathan, announced he was separating from Hanover.

flurry and so
From February 1965 through mid-1966 he convened the NSC almost exclusively to discuss Vietnam, doing so irregularly and, following a flurry of meetings in February 1965, infrequently.
Her death had led to a flurry of media interest and speculation, with various sources erroneously claiming that she had done so under the influence of the hallucinogen LSD.
Bradshaw of the Guardian wrote that the film " uses up all its energy, wit and ideas in the first 20 or so minutes, before collapsing into a flurry of boring violence.
Rybczynski ( 2000 ) describes a flurry of patents for alternative drive types in the 1860s through 1890s in the US, which are confirmed to include internal-wrenching square and triangle types ( that is, square and triangular sockets ) (), but he explains that these were patented but not manufactured due to the difficulties and expense of doing so at the time.
It is especially used in the last ten or so overs as variation in speed, in addition to line and length, is the key in preventing a late flurry of runs from the batsmen.

flurry and quick
This painting also demonstrated Whistler's ongoing work pattern, especially with portraits: a quick start, major adjustments, a period of neglect, then a final flurry to the finish.
Because of the fixed time limit, Iron Man matches have a tendency to lose their audience in the middle of a match, with a quick flurry of action near the end.
The end of World War II marked a flurry of activity in the Italian comic press: many titles that were forced to suspend publication during the war come back to saturate the newsstands, joined by new publications often backed by improvised publishers looking for a quick buck.

flurry and at
Drawing on the work of a number of string theorists ( including Ashoke Sen, Chris Hull, Paul Townsend, Michael Duff and John Schwarz ), Edward Witten of the Institute for Advanced Study suggested its existence at a conference at USC in 1995, and used M-theory to explain a number of previously observed dualities, initiating a flurry of new research in string theory called the second superstring revolution.
The French general Louis-Joseph de Montcalm, who had only arrived at Carillon in late June, engaged his troops in a flurry of work to improve the fort's outer defenses.
After hurting Vargas at the end of round 10, De La Hoya dropped Vargas in the next round with a left hook to the head, and stopped him moments later with a flurry at the 1: 48 mark of the round.
Moments later, Mosley unleashed another flurry as Vargas could only protect his face, and the referee stopped the fight at 2: 38 as a beaten and disoriented Vargas staggered back to his corner.
In one episode, foreigners would appear on stage one by one, hurling a flurry of insults at Letterman in their native languages.
The French general Louis-Joseph de Montcalm, who had only arrived at Carillon in late June, engaged his troops in a flurry of work to improve the fort's outer defenses.
She began offering us all kinds of behavior that we hadn't seen in such a mad flurry that finally we could hardly choose what to throw fish at ".
This feature gave Eternal Champions an added element of strategy that made it unique among similar titles of its genre at the time, though it was not without its critics: while its intention was to keep the action fast-paced by preventing fighters from trading endless projectiles from opposite ends of the screen and barring players from cheap wins due to repeated hits on opponents trapped at the edge of the screen, players found they could exploit the game's controls to achieve wins by retreating into a defensive shell to constantly recharge their meter or by circumventing special moves altogether and blitzing their opponent with a flurry of simple button presses.
A flurry of research activity ensued, and by 1990 the International Telecommunication Union had published modem standards for the first trellis-modulated modem at 14. 4 kilobits / s ( 2, 400 baud and 6 bits per symbol ).
On the pitch, Portsmouth's late transfer of funds called for a flurry of transfers at the end of the window, including the loan signing of Ivory Coast international Aruna Dindane who would go on to score a hat trick against Wigan Athletic.
His resignation at the end of the 1987 season lead to a flurry of moves as then-manager Lou Piniella was promoted to general manager, and ( for the fifth time ) Billy Martin was named Yankees manager.
( signed Joh Connolly ) The George Washington Papers at the Library of Congress, 1741-1799 The Washington Papers .</ ref > A flurry of correspondence resulted, first, with the group saying they would wait for further word from Connolly.
The flurry of activity to cover up their considerable misdeeds is interrupted by the report that a suspicious person has arrived two weeks previously from Saint Petersburg and is staying at the inn.
Aware that the escape of the Dutch fleet into the North Sea at such a vulnerable time could be disastrous for Britain, Duncan maintained position off the Texel for three days during which the wind was ideal for a Dutch foray, and he disguised his two vessels as different ships on each day and ordered the frigate HMS Circe to make a flurry of nonsensical signals to a fictitious British fleet beyond the horizon.
The first single was " Twist And Shout " b / w " There's A Place " ( Tollie 9001 ), which was released in February 1964, amid the flurry of Beatlemania that was sweeping the United States at that time.

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