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The African slave trade was closely tied to the imports of war horses, and as the prevalence of slaving decreased, fewer horses were needed for raiding.
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By many accounts, there had been a contentious White House fight over whether to impose sweeping sanctions on US steel and aluminium imports - a tug-of-war that was settled, precipitously, by the president himself last week.
It's a terrified counterfactual self-portrait, set in the London music-hall scene of 1914 (a date of double import — the year of war, and the year that he started making movies), in which he plays a charming stage comedian trapped in a tradition that he practiced skillfully and lovingly but unoriginally.
The next lab meeting we had was very awkward, because I was constantly thinking that indeed a lot of the words we were using to communicate our science were directly imported from the language of war.
Raeymaekers argues that these negotiated processes have produced identities that are new, not purely indigenous or imported, not of peace or of war, not of state, but of a constantly transforming and innovative society in which individuals find ways to accomplish goals against all odds.
Sea power may also be exerted to apply military and economic pressure on an enemy by preventing the import of commodities necessary for prosecution of war.
A new army has turned up in southern villages of England, where 116,000 German prisoners of war have been imported in a desperate effort to beat the labor problem in the battle of food.
The Labour manifesto was explained to English and foreign journalists at a prepublication conference last Tuesday by R.A. Butler, the bright boy of… A new army has turned up in southern villages of England, where 116,000 German prisoners of war have been imported in a desperate effort to… Letter from England.
The New Yorker, May 4, 1946 P. 101 A new army has turned up in southern villages of England, where 116,000 German prisoners of war have been imported in a desperate effort to beat the labor problem in the battle of food.
By Mollie Panter-Downes The New Yorker, May 4, 1946 P. 101 A new army has turned up in southern villages of England, where 116,000 German prisoners of war have been imported in a desperate effort to beat the labor problem in the battle of food.
Iraq banned all imports of blood during its long war with Iran last decade and forbade its citizens to travel abroad.
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