"People who hijack a religion and make out of it an implement of war will not be free from our interest, " he declared as officials took to the Sunday news shows to debate America's new anti-terrorism police powers.
12.
One shape alone is normally reserved for a specific purpose : the lozenge, a diamond-shaped escutcheon, was traditionally used to display the arms of women, on the grounds that shields, as implements of war, were inappropriate for this purpose.
13.
Penning said that in Houston, the planes go through U . S . Customs and, since they are considered " implements of war, " are inspected by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, which make sure the armaments are disabled.
14.
My son also would be alarmed to see what the budget-cutters, while voting to spend more on the military than the Pentagon requested, want to do in the area of research that has nothing to do with the implements of war.
15.
But for so-called terrorists to gather over themselves some robe of clericism . . . and claim immunity from being observed, people who hijack a religion and make out of it an implement of war will not be free from our interest.
16.
And while it is undeniable that many of the implements of war will be utilized in this struggle, the battle that lies ahead will require what President Bush described this week as a " new thought process, " upending any expectations Americans have for war.
17.
In Portugal, which like Switzerland was a wartime neutral, trade with Nazi Germany netted up to 100 tons of gold _ much of it looted, all of it routed through Switzerland _ in return for Portuguese textiles, food and, most important, tungsten, used in the manufacture of steel for the implements of war.
18.
It was registered in " League of Nations Treaty Series " on 7 September 1929 . The Geneva Protocol is a protocol to the Convention for the Supervision of the International Trade in Arms and Ammunition and in Implements of War signed on the same date, and followed the Hague Conventions of 1899 and 1907.
19.
An article in the July 12, 1862 " Boston Pilot " described the flag, stating that on one side the flag featured the : " Irish harp, guarded by a savage-looking wolf dog, surrounded by a wreath of shamrocks, surmounted by an American eagle, and supported on either side by flags and other implements of war.