Children can turn the pull cords _ as well as the inner cords that adjust the slats _ into nooses around their necks, said the commission and an industry group, Window Covering Safety Council.
32.
When pictures revealed possible problems with an air bag obstruction, flight controllers sent commands to Pathfinder to lift the petal holding the rover and operate an electric motor to pull cords attached to the air bag.
33.
Released hostages have said the guerrillas told them the roof of the home and the area immediately around it is mined, and that the rebels carry backpacks with explosives rigged to detonate if they pull cords.
34.
Children can turn the pull cords _ as well as the inner cords that adjust the slats _ into nooses around their necks, the commission and an industry group, Window Covering Safety Council, said Wednesday.
35.
Steam whistles were almost always actuated with a pull cord ( or sometimes a lever ) that permitted proportional ( tracker ) action, so that some form of " expression " could be put into the sound.
36.
Since 1991, 114 children have died, strangled by pull cords that ended in loops, while 16 children were strangled by pulling the inner cords that thread through the blind slats into loops, according to the commission.
37.
Children can turn the pull cords _ as well as the inner cords that adjust the slats _ into nooses around their necks, the Consumer Product Safety Commission and an industry group, Window Covering Safety Council, said Wednesday.
38.
Her parents, Eric and Elizabeth Beller, had placed her crib in a room they had checked for safety, even making sure the pull cords from a nearby window blind were out of reach, said Mrs . Beller.
39.
I used to have a similar problem with an old lawnmower-it was pull cord start, so not an electrical issue; wouldn't start when hot, but leave it ten minutes and it was no problem to get going.
40.
A "'bell pull "'is a woven textile, pull cord, Victorian times involved a range of bell pulls in different rooms; moreover, these bell connections link to a central bank of bells in a room where servants would await commands.