Snarling traffic in the morning rush hour, the accident, in an area known for drag racing, hurled bodies around the car, pinioned a victim beneath the wreckage, and ripped the engine of the white 1986 Volvo from its mounting.
32.
Illuminated by flashes of lightning, the slave Cinque ( Djimon Hounsou ), chained in the stinking hold of the slave ship La Amistad ( " friendship " in Spanish ), struggles to loosen the spike to which he is pinioned.
33.
On the Sunday in April when South Africa was counting the votes of its first free elections, residents of this town with the self-effacing name accosted Sinna Mankwane in front of her home and pinioned her arms with three gasoline-splashed tires.
34.
Over this simple throne, the artist set an oval target of yellow glass, with the dove symbolic of the Holy Spirit pinioned at the bull's eye; rays of light painted on the glass and swirls of gilded putti form the outer rings.
35.
People who have seen the movie say it adopts standard Christian imagery in excruciating detail : Jesus being pinioned to a Latin cross _ a T-shaped device with a short upper extension _ with one nail driven through both feet and one through each palm.
36.
This pamphlet, in Latin, was printed in a clandestine press at Stonor Park, George Eliot and taken to London with his arms pinioned and bearing on his hat a paper with the inscription " " Campion, the Seditious Jesuit " ."
37.
Which is the case with " Perilous Night, " with its attached casts of three arms, seemingly a boy's, a young man's and an adult's, each one blotched as if diseased and pinioned against a turbulently painted backdrop.
38.
Saturday night, until Tyson landed that vintage KO punch, the only time he had Botha hurt was when he pinioned the South African's left forearm at the end of round one and, using his own forearm for leverage, literally tried to break the bone.
39.
THE ` SHOE BOMBER': The tall, scraggly fellow pinioned and sedated by passengers after he tried to ignite his black suede basketball sneakers aboard an American Airlines flight from Paris to Miami turned out to be Richard C . Reid, 28, a British jailhouse convert to Islam.
40.
Such memories of the harsh world of the interned Japanese-Americans of World War II will soon have a focus near the Capitol in a sculptured pair of graceful flying cranes _ one pinioned by the barbed wire of internment, the other soaring like Ms . Tsutsumida's faith in America.