A champion at school, he never failed to join his friends for a game of kabaddi, even if it scared his teachers. |
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On September 23 1942 he took off from an airfield near Alexandria on a solo reconnaissance over the Aegean. |
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Regis also took the opportunity to advertise the quality of the police department that he headed. |
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Congress modified the law to meet Lincoln's objections, whereupon he signed it. |
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The only whiff of scandal about him is whether he was involved in illegal fund raising for the President's re-election campaign. |
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He said he had not known at first whether or not to sign the petition, as people might think he was biased. |
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He doesn't take it out on her, he takes it out on the lower ranking officers! |
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The old man eyed me suspiciously and limped forward as he wheezed and gasped for breath. |
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During the war he rose through the ranks from an officer school cadet to a major in command of a rifle battalion. |
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The right honourable gentleman opposite is a very naughty man, and he will laugh on the other side of his face when my ship comes in. |
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The guard outside turned his head to look at the aerial battle as he finished up. |
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He constantly whines about his lot in life without doing anything to change it or realize he has done this to himself. |
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A plasma blast tore past him, close enough that he caught a whiff of burnt feathers. |
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She poured the milk into a mug, enquiring as to whether he would like some as well. |
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Now he goes to bed late because he is frightened of nightmares when he sleeps. |
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A few days before the arrival of the news of peace, he received private advices from the Continent which led him to anticipate it. |
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The questions were legitimate but they rankled with Murray, who can be as delicate off-court as he is destructively powerful on it. |
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After working in advertising for 19 years, he became a full-time artist, creating wildlife watercolors. |
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Padlin felt cool, wet air against his cheeks and he caught the rankness of the East River. |
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The chairman pulled rank, as they so often do in such open and shut cases, and persuaded his underlings he was entitled to enter his court. |
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In the 1970s he left the ranks to become a commissioned officer, serving in Germany and the Falkland Islands. |
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Holding a doctorate degree from MIT, he also had pioneered instrument flying and precision aerobatics. |
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Sometimes he goes to watch birds in the suburban marshes, where more rare species can be found. |
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In one smooth motion he then aerials to a lower landing, then hurdles onto another. |
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Gradually he overcame his natural shyness and established a rapport with his audience. |
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That spooked the horse because his head and ears picked up and he let out a shrill whinny. |
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She caught a whiff of alcohol on him as he passed her to throw himself on her couch. |
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He hadn't decided which film to make, he added, but whichever story he chose he'd cast me. |
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In rapid succession he won Auldearn, Alford, and Kilsyth, and occupied Edinburgh. |
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If he did, he ought then to have made enquiries as to whether it was possible to claim damages. |
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Mr Clark was preparing Sunday lunch when he opened the oven door and a fireball leapt into the air. |
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His father took him to Tynecastle when he was five, to see a Hearts and Hibs game. |
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He whined the whole way home, complaining that he was old enough to walk home by himself. |
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With his pipe, gentleman-thief fashion sense and a rap sheet that includes armed robbery, fraud and burglary, he seems the perfect subject. |
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Inside he was greeted by Admiral Hawkinson and several other high ranking officers that Jack knew of and was friendly towards. |
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I chat to one guy on the phone whose voice is so husky and his chest sounds wheezy if he talks for long. |
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Michael began to whine when he dropped his stuffed animal and she quickly moved to placate him. |
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There is a constant feeling of suppressed impatience from him, although every so often he breaks into a wheezy, rumbustious, infectious laugh. |
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At his peak, he was ranked fourth in the British rankings for the 5,000 metres. |
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He has a great rapport with the other players and he and his wife socialise with them. |
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It was nighttime outside, dark and cloudy, so the sewers were pitch black, and he landed knee deep in rank stinking water. |
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Judging by the rankness of the floor and the roughness of the shadows, Peter suspected that he was in some sort of cave. |
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Grand Boulevard is about grand homes and this is where big houses should be, he said. |
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He is a man who has had to face up to adversity and he has done so with determination and dignity. |
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Though not quite gifted enough to enter the ranks of the elite, he wasn't through with sports. |
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Like all the graduating cadets, he was assigned to a unit as a platoon lieutenant, commanding the ranks of the enlisted men. |
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It was enough to prompt a lady of a certain age to enquire whether he was wearing a vest. |
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Despite predictable whinges from Spain's intellectual elite, he supported Aznar's crackdown on ETA terrorists and their political allies. |
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People have argued that Einstein grew up as a scientist while he was developing the general theory. |
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Kala Krishna Dance was not in his blood neither did he know anything about it. |
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Police are investigating whether he was the victim of a racially motivated attack. |
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It's like a 65-year-old man still whingeing about how his mother treated him when he was a baby. |
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Witty and engaging, he was very well informed on local matters and had a special rapport with young folk. |
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In his 14-year career, he whiffed only 114 times, fewer times than many of today's hitters strike out in one season. |
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A friend asked him why he went so far, and told him that there were plenty of others just as good nearer his home. |
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Walking up the road he caught the whiff of heaven drifting out of a small restaurant. |
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I don't know the reason why he has said all this but it puts him in a bad light. |
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Demetriou said he wondered day and night why his friend ended his life so brutally. |
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Kit's voice whined sharply, reminding Alan that he still hadn't answered Kit's question. |
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Billy Whizz, named for the rapid speed at which he could move, escaped on July 16 last year. |
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With a small whinny, he pranced over to, nuzzling my hand in search of an apple. |
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The whetstone would have been a important possession for the woodworker as, without it, he could not have sharpened any of his tools. |
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I look up at the sign listening when the next bus was coming as he begins whining like a child at me. |
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It is fantastic to even consider him when he has not been a pupil for two years. |
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He still couldn't tell her how he felt because she was still one of his undergraduate advisees. |
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In retrospect, I wish I'd got someone at the other end of the room to call me when he set off. |
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In particular the feeling that he would no longer do duty for India, which he had served with distinction, rankles him. |
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What really seemed to rankle with her was his statement that he was ashamed of the affair. |
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His dad left when he was very young, although he patched things up before he died. |
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There were times when he crossed the finish line and found himself hanging out the side, unaware of where he was. |
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He whined the whole time and said he didn't want any, then we get home and he is all whiny and says he doesn't even want to go swimming. |
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He was taken from his mother and sent to a Church of England boys' home whence he was adopted by a white family who loved him dearly. |
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He's ranked 13, but for six consecutive years he was untouchable at the top of the rankings. |
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As ranking officer on the afternoon of 1 July 1863 at the Battle of Gettysburg, he briefly commanded all Federal forces on the field. |
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Picture my surprise when I read the suggestion that he could have been a health adviser to the Blair government. |
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He was the artistic adviser to the Queen, and he had certain proclivities, which they all had. |
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It was hoped that he could be persuaded to wait on the committee in an advisory capacity. |
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Nor does it matter whether he wears an army uniform, a three-piece suit or a kaffiyeh. |
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Mr Bernau said he accepted the fees as a part of the open market, but urged people to use a free machine where possible. |
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When he next opened them, he was behind an electric kaleidoscope or a card of faceted glass. |
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By the way they were all paying attention to him so raptly, I could tell he was the ringleader of the group. |
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It was he who through his manipulation and deception engineered the capture and ransom of my beloved daughter. |
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I feel like I must suck as a mother because some days it seems that all he does is whine and moan and complain. |
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I think he is a worthy advocate of the policy and he is also a worthy adversary for the press. |
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The newspaper also asked why he would not name the lawyer who advised him that he was in the clear. |
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He assaulted nurses who tried to calm and restrain him and left other workers cowering as he ranted at them. |
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Exuding confidence and advocating a positive outlook, he has no harsh words for anyone. |
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It seems that if a man leaves his house without saying where he is going, he is assumed to be looking for a girlfriend. |
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In aerodynamics he introduced formulas for aerodynamic force and for the distribution of pressure. |
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In the process, he became a military strategist, rising through the ranks from major to brigadier general. |
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In the evening he served a lavish meal of goat and rice, and gave us directions to where we could find his sons and camels. |
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He asked me, his voice a slightly high-pitched whine, as though he had never progressed from childhood. |
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He told police that he used it because it helped him sleep when he was coming off heroin. |
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His biggest fear is losing the heavily mortgaged family house, where he lives alone. |
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At the beginning of this debate Stephen said that he thinks that he is a positivist, whereas I am a Platonist. |
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In the meantime, Chu's whereabouts remain unknown although rumor have it that he could be in China. |
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All this time, Brooks moans and whines, but he is inspired without hardly realizing it. |
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She didn't look up until he had ascended the porch steps and rapped his knuckles on the railing. |
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Wetting his lips, he engaged the engine, launched the wing and wire aero machine and was quickly airborne! |
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Just a few numbers earlier he was welcomed by a rapturous reception from ecstatic fans chanting his name. |
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I'd forgotten to mention but I had a bit of an accident with Dads car whilst he was away. |
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Not before long he heard a sharp rap on the door, and a stern voice telling him no doors were to be locked in that family. |
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Then, his body was put into a barrel filled with cement, whereupon he was dumped into the ocean off Brooklyn. |
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By paying attention to his lyrical skill, you notice that he is not only a phenomenal rapper, but also a fine poet. |
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Eventually he began sobbing and praying for a miracle, whereupon a lone figure on a jet ski appeared. |
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He was beaten until he lay writhing helplessly on the ground, whereupon his captors doused his body with kerosene and set it ablaze. |
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I talked briefly to the paramedic, whined a bit about my circumstances, and did whatever he told me to do. |
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He opened his eyes and, having watched her for a while, he asked her what she was doing. |
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Possibly this will depend on whether or not he has any more legal costs that need defraying. |
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Roosevelt the Germanist admired the kaiser's finer Teutonic qualities, as indeed he did those of Bismarck and Helmuth von Moltke. |
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I asked Mr Hoteit whether he had a minute for a short enquiry and he confirmed that he had. |
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He has an efficient arable operation and from it he is producing a branded rapeseed oil which he bottles and sells to retailers. |
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His ugly face split into a malicious grin and he bore down upon her with rapid speed. |
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A loud whinny broke his thoughts, and Dirano's head turned sharply, and he saw a blur of a white horse, rearing and galloping towards him. |
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Yet even he admits that defending his sport is rapidly becoming an impossible task. |
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But, if by any accident the parachute is not expanded as he falls, the rapidity of the fall will not be checked. |
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Perhaps this is why he has threatened legal action against some who are reporting this story. |
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Mark decided simply to set one up and since then, he has seen the business expand rapidly. |
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He stopped, but ere long, he continued to tap the carriage floor with the heels of his polished black shoes. |
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Derek cut in, he leaned closer taking a whiff of her breath then stepped back, the stench was very unpleasant. |
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Perhaps that is why he has written some of the best story beginnings in the history of literature. |
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There he had a nest over the window of a house in which dwelt the writer of fairy tales. |
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Domitia finds the list while he sleeps, and joins others whose names are there in a conspiracy. |
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A high-church Whig, he was appointed bishop of Lincoln in 1716, and in 1723 translated to the see of London. |
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On both sides of the Atlantic each culture is in rapid decline and his first priority was to ensure he had recordings of each form of worship. |
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While he shortened the distance between them, Dimitri realized Reana had been quietly sitting and sharpening her sword with a whetstone. |
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Small is currently ranked 37 in the world, a grim reminder of just how far he has slipped down the rankings. |
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Dettori waved to the crowd as he passed the post and was met by rapturous applause as he made his way into the winner's enclosure. |
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To be able to take a stand like he did is rare and precious thing in politics. |
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He had the required service in the ranks but wondered whether as a former commissioned officer he was eligible for admission. |
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Why else would he point to the Macleans rankings which I posted on a few days ago? |
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Given the mood Her Majesty must be in where dates are concerned, he did well to get the nod. |
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His lawyer has advised him that if attacked in his home he is within his rights to use the revolver. |
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The chief safety scientist of American phone companies was sacked when he found out too much. |
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The little girl fell silent, whimpering in pain from the tight grip he had on her hair. |
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Tristyn whined her complaint as he once more changed the channel to the infamous movie. |
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His father was operating on a cat in the room below when he saw his son hurtle to the ground. |
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Broadly, he says, his government has listened and tried to understand business, but there are issues which still rankle. |
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Even when he was offering me advice on my personal life, he had me in stitches. |
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Several lawyers have offered free advice on the issue and he said he would ask one of them what he should do. |
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He opened the door on a whim, expecting nothing, but instead, he was faced with four sets of eyes. |
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The way he practically whined it made me smile and eventually I began to giggle. |
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He loved a laugh and when he was in a crowd he was the life and soul of the party. |
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He can win whenever and however he wants, but the people on the roadside have stopped cheering. |
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David had to postpone any college plans he may have had when his uncle died suddenly. |
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A colleague found him dead in bed after breaking into his room when he did not turn up for work. |
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Tony was in the kitchen sorting out a cup of tea, a tinny and a few snacks when he suddenly became quite excited. |
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He had been behind the counter for less than two minutes when he thought the stall had been hit by an earthquake. |
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Was it really worth those few minutes of peace when he knew he was slowly killing himself? |
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Why had he been sent to Somerset, whence he had escaped and taken refuge in the station? |
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Even now, approaching 60, the team of engineers still joke about his desire to test whenever he can. |
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I'd leave him in that box and let him ride around in the UPS truck til they send him back from whence he came. |
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This, he swore, was due to positioning his cap at the rear of the animal whenever it lifted its tail. |
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Strangely, he is the adviser to the transport department whose services the police use. |
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Presently, he has his hands full as an adviser to European Parliament on Guatanemo Bay. |
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In the past he has been an adviser to the New Zealand and Russian Governments on pensions policy. |
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But can he connect one-on-one with voters in New Hampshire kaffeeklatsches? |
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He was all dressed up, wearing a suit and a kaffiyeh, he looked really respectable. |
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Wearing another hat, he is also well known in these columns for his advocacy of the death penalty. |
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Immediately asking for money, he forces them into their mansion and ransacks the place. |
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A staunch advocate of the policy, he created it as a model institution designed to teach both academic and industrial subjects. |
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A precise sound, it gained coherence and Padlin realized he was not hearing a whine or a howl or a growl but a phrase. |
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Sadly, pathetically, while he was hospitalised his neat single storey home was broken into and ransacked in an obvious search for money. |
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Then he bound her hands and ransacked the house, stealing what is believed to be a few hundred pounds. |
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He maintained that he had no money to pay the ransom demanded and that it was a case of mistaken identity. |
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Only recently had she found out he had intended to capture her and take her away for ransom. |
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That he has not in the end succeeded is no reflection on his sustained advocacy. |
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A Yorkshire businessman tried to hold his own family to ransom after claiming he had been kidnapped from his kebab shop. |
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Suspecting the car may be the one being ransomed, police stopped Ali Jaan before he got into the car. |
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No longer will he grace our courts with superb advocacy and inspired legal reasoning. |
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A member of the Party and a former commerce minister, he is considered an advocate of free-market policies. |
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As soon as he was released Kelly returned to the performance of Peter Pan and received rapturous applause from the audience. |
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While showering Taylor with jewels worth a king's ransom, he also gave generously to friends such as Smith. |
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For some reason he ranted on and on about the fact that they'd been promised a move to new offices, and it wouldn't happen. |
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He advocated a wider hunt for candidates which he said should lead to more of a meritocracy. |
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Replying to a question by the advocate, he said he had not seen his client firing the rifle. |
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Nevertheless, he is advocating a fine balance between free trade and trade restriction. |
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Would the member please withdraw the comment he made about advocating separatism. |
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While he hasn't put a title to his collection, one cannot miss the sense of rapture and enchantment that the paintings seem to convey. |
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Shelley went into rapture when he saw a wandering cloud and he celebrated the moment with a song. |
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No one saw what happened to the company director, or exactly where he was when the wall of water struck. |
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A guest, if he does not bring his own pipe and pipe-bearer, has a kalian offered to him. |
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He would play the expert, telling Lee how to play football and where he went wrong. |
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I have had chats with him as a mate and as a teammate and I can tell him where he is going wrong and what he is doing right. |
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People seem to think he is not passionate enough, but it's just that he doesn't rant and rave. |
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As if concerned that his rants may appear too smug or self-important, he tempers them with spoonfuls of self-loathing. |
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Not only is he in the position where he has to make tough decisions, he doesn't cop out of them. |
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At last, he has been allowed to take up his office in the House of Commons, where he has raised the Irish flag. |
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Though she did not marry the father, he built her a house where she lived and raised their son. |
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He could not even find the house where he had lived with his parents and sister. |
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That could depend on whether her whereabouts became public knowledge, he said. |
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Any French foreign minister knows what he is talking about where French Africa is concerned. |
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His whereabouts are unknown, though China insists that he is quietly continuing his studies in a secret location. |
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His present whereabouts are unknown, but it is acknowledged that he gave a statement to US interrogators. |
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But perhaps now we'll be given overdue respite from the rantings of those intent on persuading us he was some kind of miracle-worker. |
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At the 1998 Nagano Olympics, he was rapped by Bazay for criticizing the selection of freestyle skier Jean-Luc Brassard as Canada's flag-bearer. |
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After this was done he moved to the coffin and rapped on the lid three times. |
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The door was locked, but he rapped on it softly for several minutes and finally it swung open. |
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The back-cover biography assures you in rampant detail that he knows whereof he speaks. |
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Last week he ran a competition whereby you had to think of a way to blow a thousand quid so that you could win the same amount. |
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When it comes to Germans and their relationship with dictators, Enzensberger knows whereof he speaks. |
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That earns him a sharp rap on the shoulder, but he says he doesn't mind because my punches don't hurt. |
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By his will dated 8th June 1956 he appointed the Mother to be his executrix and bequeathed all his property whatsoever or wheresoever to her. |
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Before he could answer Roland's question, a sharp rap on the door interrupted him. |
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A judge, although it may be that on occasions he can legitimately exercise the functions of an aedile, is no censor. |
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While it mainly relies on the music, when Tefrey does decide to rap, he demands your attention. |
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Lee said he had been unaware that the rapper had made music and video recordings from behind bars. |
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He is incensed about the November 2 announcement of a proposed antitrust settlement that he thinks barely raps them on the knuckles. |
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President Kennedy was told the Bay of Pigs would go smoothly and then he took the rap. |
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I would say that he is taking the rap for it anyway, short of being the scapegoat. |
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When he carried out a train robbery, he claimed he was defending the small farmer against rapacious railroad magnates. |
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He seemed to have gained a greater self-confidence from the incredible and unexpected success of his book and he capitalized on it rapaciously. |
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I found some food and fed the wolf, whereupon he vanished into the shadows. |
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Then he attended to another patient and when he returned I assented to the extraction whereupon he gave me a local anaesthetic. |
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I mean, wherever things were to be photographed he went, and away he went and things happened in front of his camera. |
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Indeed, Morrissey's new songs are the most rapturously received, more so even than the Smiths gems that he periodically drops into our laps. |
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Victoria liked the idea of the holiness of the cross watching over her son regardless of wherever he goes in life and whatever he's doing. |
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They had planned for this, but he still doubted whether or not it was really going to work. |
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Since he lacks the financing to build, he lacks the wherewithal to complete his side of the contract. |
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There he is in The Unicorn or The Crown or wherever in Hampstead just after his roast beef and Yorkshire pud. |
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I first interviewed Alexie just before Smoke Signals, the film he wrote and coproduced, was released. |
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On awakening he found the figure on the kakemono seemed to be alive. |
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Jack was about to throw another heavy branch at Mesa, but the wolf became alert almost instantly as he heard whinnies and howls from somewhere off in the fields. |
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Arnold grunted as he rappelled down the side of the crevice. |
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Yet, at the end, he did facilitate acceptance of the kaiser's abdication, the establishment of the Weimar Republic, and the armistice, and he remained a hero. |
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He's constantly pitching our services, but he always swings for the home run and whiffs, leaving it to lower-level salespeople to bring in the business that keeps us afloat. |
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If you fancy a duel of words with a lippy French barman while he mixes you something long and cool, then this is the place to unsheathe your rapier wit. |
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Last year, he was one home run from a 40-40 season, and he improved his walks-to-strikeouts ratio, walking more than whiffing for the first time in his career. |
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Unlike the Media burglars, he revealed his identity soon after turning over the files he had copied. |
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The reason why this guy makes me feel better is because he has less! |
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Fulkerson, the founder of the magazine who has hired March, is someone he can cope with. |
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The horse whickered a soft greeting as he drew near her stall. |
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The cop who shot Akai, he should be arrested and reprimanded for what he did. |
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Our call is to serve God in whichever way he has equipped us to do so. |
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He can tell by the rapidity of the bleeps that he is close by now. |
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They are part of the reason why he turned down jobs outside of Dundee. |
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Eubanks is an assistant athletic director for football and he coordinates on-campus recruiting visits. |
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It was to be regretted, he would admit if questioned, that the table flipped sideways, causing all those plates and their children to fly every whichaway. |
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In 1964, or about a hundred knives after making his first one, he switched his focus to selling Arkansas whetstones and a year later began selling knives. |
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He didn't whine or complain about the pain, he simply internalized it. |
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But he did about as much as one can while serving as Senate minority leader to co-opt Tea Party support. |
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Mr Wood said aid had to be sent wherever people needed water, food and shelter but he warned there was no overall single answer to the problem of poverty. |
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I suggest to the member that he await the decision on the kahawai quota and its introduction to the quota management system in about 6 weeks' time. |
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Tamino is discovered by servants to the Queen who show him a picture of the princess, whereupon in true opera style he falls instantly in love with her. |
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Today, Stephenson is cooperating with a federal investigation of the eBay reseller whom he purchased these works from. |
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When that did not work they wound up the spring in his back with a key and set him loose solo, whereupon he succeeded in looking like a mechanical toy. |
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One police officer was coolly dispatched as he lay wounded on the sidewalk. |
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And wheresoever the children of men dwell, the beasts of the field and the fowls of the heaven hath he given into thine hand, and hath made thee ruler over them all. |
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Michnik knows whereof he speaks and writes, unlike so many of those in the European media who are busy gnawing at the supports of the trans-Atlantic alliance. |
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The October 11 date he set for the Rapture came and went uneventfully. |
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He had an arrangement whereby he could arrive at any time he needed help. |
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Tri-state area voters would elect the cookie monster if he brought the Knicks another championship. |
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And one of this disgusting crew beat the rap when he was charged and tried a few years back, a time when their expressions of remorse might have actually meant something. |
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He was arrested and released on bail, whereafter he quit music and fled to Paris with his girlfriend Pamela Jones to start a new life in obscurity. |
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Using a mixture of readings and commentary, he ranges from More's Utopia through the English Civil War period with its Levellers, Ranters and Diggers. |
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His estate included a house where he was living at the time of his death. |
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The distance Cooke exhibits in his writing reflects the distance he created in real life. |
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From the very earliest stages of his career he was a ranter. |
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They told the public not to believe that the coo meant what he said even though, yes, he said it. |
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Conway goes on to list a series of other coincidences that he suggests are not simply explained. |
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But you're not in a position to say where he was whilst this was going on? |
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Secondly he used his light and mobile forces, irregular Cossack and Kalmuck light cavalry, Russian dragoons and mounted infantry to harass the Swedish advance. |
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Earlier this month, another man was arrested for planning to kidnap a Barcelona player so he could hold him to ransom to pay off his business debt. |
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Head of Finance Eamonn O Sullivan said he did not believe that a situation would arise where the council would be held to ransom by the health board. |
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After the return of the students, he continued his advocacy of reforms. |
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Announcing his retirement at this week's Christmas concert at Selby Abbey, he went out not with a whimper but a bang, and a departing salvo aimed at New Labour. |
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This convivial mask he wears, along with his omnipresent flask, is obscuring a deep hurt stemming from his father. |
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But when push comes to shove, he sold out to preserve his place in the party, and all for a man whose campaign attacked his family to score political points only 4 years ago. |
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He also needs to show that, notwithstanding his mostly-superficial second term problems, he can get what he wants from the Senate when the chips are down. |
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But again, I've got to think when push comes to shove, he won't do it. |
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When he went on to suggest there was a lot that was objectionable happening off the ball it only served to heighten a suspicion that he had been whingeing. |
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He had traded his convict uniform for civilian attire, though he still had on prison-issue footwear. |
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Denied parole nine straight times, he insists he is innocent of the crime for which he was convicted. |
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His father Eric came from Breslau, but as a young man escaped to Paris, whence he was sent to London in 1900 by a theatrical agency to run its London branch. |
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If he realized that she knew that he was an escaped convict, then he might assume that she would be only too eager to send him back from whence he came. |
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After that he just started whimpering and I began to feel sorry for him. |
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He rankled the teachers last spring when in the middle of a policy meeting with the union president he reportedly demanded a million-dollar campaign contribution. |
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It is so rankly deceitful that even he would blush to be involved. |
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Afraid for the first time of the darkness, he began to whimper in fear. |
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The flip-phone seemed plenty smart enough for what he needed, that being to converse with somebody. |
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I think Paul Swain put it perfectly when he said that if the system was lax, the New Zealand First members would be the first to scream, whinge, and whine about it. |
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And he has exhausted all of the possible clever taxation wheezes. |
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Thus begins a wheezy, dull little story that follows Clint around as he has annoying conversations with his complainy doctor, jerky cops, and Jeff Daniels. |
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Pulcini had locked the front door of the convent, but now he found it open. |
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Once he lunged at a man trying to rob a convenience store, subduing him with his bare hands. |
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On the afternoon Brown was killed, he had stolen a pack of cigars from a convenience store. |
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He seems reluctant to advertise the fact he has a cousin from France. |
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She could smell his rank breath as he whispered fervently to her. |
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He rapidly rose through the ranks until he was offered the chance to be its Leeds-based director of operations for the north of England and Scotland. |
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Later, his father rose through the ranks in the army, but he never forgot. |
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After working as a welder he attended university, and rose through the ranks of the steel industry to emerge as deputy head of a large steel mill. |
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Papa, a captain when he left the reserves, still knew how to pull rank. |
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The insider claims that a senior civil servant in the Home Office broke ranks and told his bosses that he could not go along with the official line. |
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In May 2003, he was promoted to the highest rank of cadet officer. |
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Hospitalized, seriously injured, he would return after a six-week convalescence. |
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Superman could conceivably have figured out just when Krypton went kablooey but how could he have known how many days or weeks before that date he was born? |
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Yet he doesn't need to move the whole kit and caboodle to New York. |
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I know that you can do better than that and just stay there because he has given you the most respect and ranked you higher than any other of his generals. |
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On their debut, he sounded whiny as often as he sounded heroic. |
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The sensible left should stop whingeing about that and admit that Brown did us all an enormous favour when he came up with the Treasury's five economic tests. |
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