Word: thrown
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...tightened India's hold on Kashmir. At first India ruled the state through 6-ft. 4-in. Sheik Mohammed Abdullah, a Kash miri Moslem who had long been a friend of Nehru's. But in 1953. when Abdullah showed signs of objecting to Indian domination, he was thrown into jail, and remains there now without trial. So-called "peace brigades" of Indians rigidly suppressed advocates of Kashmiri independence or union with Pakistan. At Indian behest, a hand-picked Kashmiri Constituent Assembly began to draw up a state constitution whose third article read: "Kashmir is and shall...
...grinding train. Six feet out from the last car was mounted a camera on a makeshift brace of 2 by 6 planks and spikes. Behind the camera a 6-ft.-5-in., 250-lb. man trotted along the ties, triggering the camera to catch the brilliant constellations of sparks thrown off by the rail grinders...
...British were keenly aware that the Six offered the fastest-expanding major market in the world. (Since 1950, annual imports of the Six have increased from $11 billion to $19 billion.) The British were also aware that if they stayed out of the Common Market, the tariff wall thrown up by the Six (who now buy one-eighth of Britain's exports) might well exclude many British goods, and that, under these circumstances, commercial and eventually political domination of Western Europe would fall into the hands of Germany...
...under the steely eyes of state troopers and city police spotted through the building to prevent riot. Harried election supervisors filled out certificates of election for both candidates, and waited. And in their seventh-floor chambers of the courthouse, four justices of the Supreme Court mulled over the problem thrown to them three days before the inauguration for an eleventh-hour decision...
...vanquished the Tartars and subdued the Turkish tribes to open the camel caravan route across central Asia. Chinese silk merchants returned bringing exotic wares and gifts-fiery Bactrian stallions and two-humped camels, spices from Arabia, rich embroideries from Persia. The capital city of Ch'ang-an was thrown open to foreign traders, to Buddhists, Christians, Manichaeans and Jews alike. All that was rich and rare T'ang artists converted to bear their own vigorous stamp...