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At and point
At that point we reach the `` closed '' historical situation: the situation in which man is no longer free to return to a status quo ante.
At that point men become aware of the mystery of history called variously `` fate '', or `` destiny '', or `` providence '', and feel themselves caught helplessly in the writhing of a disrupted society.
At this point Mrs. Frances Cupply, one of Wright's handsome daughters by his first wife, came from the house and tried to calm Miriam as she tore down a no visitors sign and smashed the glass pane on another sign with a rock.
At this point a working definition of idea is in order, although our first definition will have to be qualified somewhat as we proceed.
At this point, of course, the issue has become complicated by a development unforeseen by Lappenberg and Kemble.
At that point the Administration will have little reason to hang onto Gen. Swing.
At 2130 hours they had passed through the barbed wire at the point of departure.
At this point it should be painfully obvious that cities, being `` soft '', and the people within them are ideally suited to destruction by nuclear weapons.
At this point the drains are readjusted so that the suds box drain will discharge directly into the waste line and the main tub drain is set at the 2-1/2 mark on the drain gauge.
At this point, unfortunately, romance becomes a regrettably small part of the picture ; ;
At the point where they ended, another settlement grew up around a chapel built at the boat landing by Father Lucian Galtier in 1840.
At one point in the game when the skinny old man in suspenders who was acting as umpire got in the way of a thrown ball and took it painfully in the kidneys, he lay there unattended while players and spectators wrangled over whether the ball was `` dead '' or the base runners were free to score.
At this point Charles C. Hanch, long an advocate of patent peace in the industry, became chairman of the patents committee of the National Automobile Chamber of Commerce, successor to the Automobile Board of Trade.
At this point you cross the wide Corso Vittorio Emanuele 2,, walk along the Corso Del Rinascimento a couple of hundred yards, then turn left on the Via Dei Canestrani to enter the splendid Piazza Navona, one of the truly glorious sights in Rome.
At one point late in the day, when Palmer was lining up a 25-foot putt on the 16th, a thunderous cheer from the direction of the 18th green unmistakably announced that Player had birdied the final hole.
At that point William came into the picture.
At one point, Abby May threatened that she and their daughters would move elsewhere, leaving Bronson behind.
At some point, he was alleged to have accompanied Swein on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land, but proof is lacking.
At that point the deposed emperor was ransomed by Michael I of Epirus, who sent him to Asia Minor, where Alexios ' son-in-law Theodore I Laskaris of the Empire of Nicaea was holding his own against the Latins.
In the list of popes given in the Holy See's annual directory, Annuario Pontificio, the following note is attached to the name of Pope Leo VIII ( 963 – 965 ): At this point, as again in the mid-eleventh century, we come across elections in which problems of harmonising historical criteria and those of theology and canon law make it impossible to decide clearly which side possessed the legitimacy whose factual existence guarantees the unbroken lawful succession of the successors of Saint Peter.
At one point, his Spanish pursuers urinated at the bottom of a tree he was hiding in, but did not discover him.
At no great distance east of this rift-valley is Mount Kilimanjaro-with its two peaks Kibo and Mawenzi, the latter being, and the culminating point of the whole continent — and Mount Kenya, which is.
At this point during the pre-mission preparations, the Saturn V rocket's three stages were powered up and drinking water was pumped into the spacecraft.
At this point, during tests of the CSM's steerable rocket engine in preparation for the burn to modify the craft's orbit, a malfunction occurred in the engine's backup system.
At that point, scientists began to reconsider their pre-mission hypothesis that Descartes had been the setting of ancient volcanic activity, as the two astronauts had yet to find any volcanic material.

At and Geoffrey
At the same time, continuing in this quarter also the work of his father ( who in 1025 took prisoner Herbert Wakedog and only set him free on condition of his doing him homage ), Geoffrey succeeded in reducing the countship of Maine to complete dependence on himself.
At the same time, the vernacular saw a revival as a literary language, through the works of William Langland, John Gower and especially The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer.
At the time of her marriage, Isabella was probably about twelve and was described by Geoffrey of Paris as " the beauty of beauties ... in the kingdom if not in all Europe.
At its head was an abbot, the first incumbent being Geoffrey of Canterbury, former prior of Christ Church, Canterbury, the Kent monastery that probably supplied Dunfermline's first monks.
* Geoffrey V, Count of Anjou At Find A Grave
Writing shortly before Geoffrey of Monmouth, William added much to the damnatio memoriae of Vortigern: " At this time Vortigern was King of Britain ; a man calculated neither for the field nor the council, but wholly given up to the lusts of the flesh, the slave of every vice: a character of insatiable avarice, ungovernable pride, and polluted by his lusts.
At Christmas 2007, he joined the cast of sitcom Not Going Out as recurring character Geoffrey Adams, the father of two central characters.
At the same time, Geoffrey Talbot, de Lacy's ally and Sybil's half brother, took the castle of Hereford and Weobley.
At the time of the marriage, the Salisbury inheritance was not guaranteed, as not only was Earl Thomas still alive, but in 1424 he re-married ( to Alice Chaucer, granddaughter of the poet Geoffrey Chaucer ).
At its formation, the United Kingdom immediately inherited the literary traditions of England and Scotland, including the earliest existing native literature written in the Celtic languages, Anglo-Saxon literature and more recent English literature including the works of Geoffrey Chaucer, William Shakespeare and John Milton.
At the end of 2011, the release of confidential documents under the UK Government's 30-year rule revealed Geoffrey Howe's thoughts regarding the Toxteth riots of 1981.
At the Foreign Office he served first under Francis Pym and then Sir Geoffrey Howe.
Although this cannot have been the origin of the phrase " At sixes and sevens ", as the phrase appears in the works of Geoffrey Chaucer over one hundred years earlier, a connection between the event and the phrase is presumed to exist in some manner.
At the most recent county election in 2009 the town elected a Conservative Party councillor, Geoffrey Roper.
At St. Paul's, Dr. Fu was guided by his mentors Geoffrey Emerson, Derek Too, and Frank Drake.
At Yale, he worked alongside prominent literary critics Paul de Man, Harold Bloom, and Geoffrey Hartman, where they were collectively known as the Yale School of deconstruction.
At Guantánamo, Qahtani was subjected to a regime of aggressive interrogation techniques, known as the “ First Special Interrogation Plan ” that were authorized by US Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and implemented under the supervision and guidance of Secretary Rumsfeld and the commander of Guantánamo, Major General Geoffrey Miller.
At that time he was collaborating on Geoffrey Grigson's New Verse.
At the head of a new army and prepared to conquer Normandy, Geoffrey V was wounded and was forced to return to Anjou once more.
At Cambridge, Guy studied under the Tudor specialist Geoffrey Rudolph Elton.
* At the end of the episode, Geoffrey Bayldon wishes everyone at home a " Merry Other-mass " during an audio montage.
At around the same time, Lieutenant-General Sir Geoffrey Charles Evans, a cigarette smoker and formerly General Secretary of the National Union of Retail Tobacconists made similar proposals to industry figures.
At that time Geoffrey knew almost nothing of his ancestors before his grandparents, but was stimulated to start researching them.
Theory and applications of distance geometry ( 1953 ), Oxford: At the Clarendon Press ( Geoffrey Cumberlege ), XI, 347 p.

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