No, only medieval castles have balls. Or do you mean the soccer ball and Basketball kind of balls?
Dragon Ball Z Duh!! they have all these powers to make them invincible and things like that an army only have guns. I'd say have them both meet in a field somewhere. Somehow I think that the Army would show up and the Dragon Ball Z army would be missing.
they suck ball
do you wear unit awards on the dress blues for a military ball
Dragon Ball - 1986 Confront the Red Ribbon Army 3-12 was released on: USA: 8 November 2002
1959 army b ball foster
Do a search on the "Ruger Old Army User Manual". It is a free download and will answer all your questions.
Officially, the Red Ribbon Army in the Dragon Ball series is not a reference to the former Soviet Union, a Communist country. However, some may interpret it as such, because Communists were colloquially known as reds.
The Minié ball, or Minie ball, is a type of muzzle-loading spin-stabilizing rifle bullet named after its co-developer, Claude-Étienne Minié. The precursor to the Minié ball was created in 1848 by the French Army captains Montgomery and Henri-Gustave Delvigne.
First version about 1848. Changes were made to the design, and adopted by the US Army about 1855.
Badminton isn't played with a ball. It's played with a shuttlecock a feathered projectile. The game was invented in the mid eighteenth century by British army officer serving in India.
The national and Army flag is the red ball (the sun); the Naval flag is the "Rising Sun", a red ball with red rays extending from the red ball. Both flags are still used today.
The Minié ball. It was invented in 1849 by the French Army officer Claude-Etienne MInié. He designed the Minié ball, a cylindrical bullet with a conical point. An iron cup was inserted in the hollow base so that when the ball was fired, the cup was forced forward, expanding the base to fit snugly against the rifling grooves. Indeed the American Army adopted a simplified version of Minié ball. It had no iron cup in the hollow base. The gas pressure on the base was sufficient to force the bullet on the rifling grooves.