
Damage By Jettison And Sacrifice For The Common Safety Damage done to a ship and cargo, or either of them, by or in consequence of a sacrifice made for the common safety, and by water which goes down a ship's hatches opened, or other opening made for the purpose of making a jettison for the common safety, shall be made good as G.

Jettisoned the idea of socialist planning. Some rules that Paul regarded as sacrosanct we have now jettisoned. jettison verb To let go or get rid of as being useless or defective discard. jettison verb To eject from a boat, submarine, aircraft, spaceship or hot-air balloon, so as to lighten the load. 2 : to drop (cargo) to lighten a ship's load in time of distress. jettison noun The action of jettisoning items. 1 : to get rid of as superfluous or encumbering : omit or forgo as part of a plan or as the result of some other decision must be prepared to jettison many romantic notions Christopher Catling. Jettison Of Deck Cargo No jettison of deck cargo shall be made good as G. jettison noun Collectively, items that have been or are about to be ejected from a boat or balloon. , as to jettison of deck cargo, a change is made from the common law rule, for the jettison is not allowed as G. Speedferries will, in addition, have an absolute discretion to jettison, land, destroy or render innocuous any goods such as those described above. Of course some work is made with that in mind, to be chewed till the sugar's gone, then jettisoned. Powell also jettisoned 75 percent of a separate report on al-Qaida, said the official. Sixteen seconds after liftoff, the escape rocket and the tower jettison rocket both fired prematurely.

Fuel dumping (or a fuel jettison) is a procedure used by aircraft in certain emergency situations before a return to the airport shortly after takeoff. Jettison the notion of selling transactions and focus on relationship building.įor many centuries Egypt was famous as a wheat raiser it was a cargo of wheat from Alexandria which St Paul helped to jettison on one of his shipwrecks, as was also, in all probability, that of the "ship of Alexandria whose sign was Castor and Pollux," named in the same narrative. Generally, ' jettison ing' connotes the action of throwing goods overboard to lighten the load.
