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For and time
For the unseen, ghostlike rifleman aimed a little higher the third time.
For a while he was content to let events develop in their good time.
For lawyers, reflecting perhaps their parochial preferences, there has been a special fascination since then in the role played by the Supreme Court in that transformation -- the manner in which its decisions altered in `` the switch in time that saved nine '', President Roosevelt's ill-starred but in effect victorious `` Court-packing plan '', the imprimatur of judicial approval that was finally placed upon social legislation.
For ten minutes they ran beneath the squall, raising their arms and, for the first time, shouting and capering.
For example, suppose a man wearing a $200 watch, driving a 1959 Rolls Royce, stops to ask a man on the sidewalk, `` What time is it ''??
For a time the President received hundreds of them every day, most of them worthless.
For some time, despondency in some Northern quarters had been displayed in two ways -- an eagerness for peace and a dissatisfaction with Lincoln.
For a time, urging Breasted to give up his public relations work and take up writing instead, he hoped to persuade him to become his assistant in research for the labor novel ; ;
For a time it appeared that a common European army might be created, but the project for a European Defense Community was rejected by the French National Assembly in 1954.
For some time the Communists honored the distinction between the Soviet zone of Germany and the Soviet sector of Berlin by promulgating separately the laws for the two areas.
For the first time in history the entire world is dominated by two large, powerful nations armed with murderous nuclear weapons that make conventional warfare of the past a nullity.
`` For a time I thought of trying to reach the Free Polish Forces, but one thing led to another.
For the first time, he be sad about the move.
For readjustment to the U.S., volunteers should be given some separation allowance at the end of their overseas service, based on the length of time served.
For grant to the Government of India under subsection ( E ) of Section 104 of the Act, the rupee equivalent of not more than $538 million for financing such projects to promote balanced economic development as may from time to time be mutually agreed.
For this reason, the more uncertain skywave service was denominated `` secondary '' in our rules, as compared to the steadier, more reliable groundwave `` primary service '', and, for both skywave service and skywave interference, signal strength is expressed in terms of percentage of time a particular signal-intensity level is exceeded -- 50 percent of the time for skywave service, 10 percent of the time for skywave interference.
For the making of selections on the basis of excellence requires that any foundation making the selections shall have available the judgments of a corps of advisors whose judgments are known to be good: such judgments can be known to be good only by the records of those selected, by records made subsequent to their selection over considerable periods of time.
For in almost less time than it takes to tell it, Henri's bodyweight was increasing rapidly.
For some time this writer has been suggesting a Junior Judging Class for Intermediates over 16 and under 20 years of age who are ineligible to compete in the Junior Class.
For prevention of ketosis, feed 1/4 pound per head daily for 6 weeks commencing at calving time.
For example, to move ( as the score requires ) from the lowest F-major register up to a barely audible N minor in four seconds, not skipping, at the same time, even one of the 407 fingerings, seems a feat too absurd to consider, and it is to the flautist's credit that he remained silent throughout the passage.
For what I express in my remark is something going on in me at the time, and that of course did not exist until I did come on the scene.

For and 1920s
For a while in the 1920s and 1930s there was a Green International ( International Agrarian Bureau ) based on the peasant parties in Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Poland and Serbia.
For twenty years Unusual Films emphasized children's films and video production before, in 2011, it released Milltown Pride, a feature-length film set in 1920s Upstate South Carolina.
For this reason, many people see the 1920s as the heyday of the Esperanto movement.
For example, boric acid was widely used as a food preservative from the 1870s to the 1920s, but was banned after World War I due to its toxicity, as demonstrated in animal and human studies.
For a number of years, the small, frail 1920s player Bill Johnston was considered by many to have had the best forehand of all time, a stroke that he hit shoulder-high using a western grip.
For all its success, by the 1920s Argentina was not an industrialised country by the standards of Britain, Germany or the United States.
For the first time since the 1920s, its earnings had exceeded those of arch rival General Motors ( GM ).
For a 1920s map of what at that time was considered to be Kensal Green, see Brent Council local history.
For example, 1920s and solo Charleston was-and is-usually danced to 2 / 4 ragtime music or traditional jazz, Lindy Hop was danced to swing music ( a kind of swinging jazz ), and Lindy Charleston to either traditional or swing jazz.
For example, the Federal Reserve federal funds rate in the United States has varied between about 0. 25 % to 19 % from 1954 to 2008, while the Bank of England base rate varied between 0. 5 % and 15 % from 1989 to 2009, and Germany experienced rates close to 90 % in the 1920s down to about 2 % in the 2000s.
For example, Homer Groening, the father of Matt Groening ( creator of The Simpsons ), spoke Plautdietsch as a child in Saskatchewan in the 1920s, but his son Matt never learned the language.
For a few years during World War I and the early 1920s, rival Baltimore and Ohio Railroad passenger trains to Washington, Chicago, and St. Louis also used Pennsylvania Station, initially by order of the United States Railroad Administration ( USRA ), until the Pennsylvania Railroad terminated the Baltimore & Ohio's access in 1926.
For many years a leading figure of the Bohemian scene in New York's Greenwich Village, Bodenheim deteriorated rapidly after his success in the 1920s and 1930s.
For much of the 1920s and 1930s, between long stints living abroad ( including Albania ), Lane lived with the Wilders at Rocky Ridge Farm.
For many years he was based in Los Angeles, California where he led a band in the 1920s and later ran a bar.
For the last year of the war German military and civilians retreating towards Berlin were hounded by the presence of " low flying aircraft " strafing and bombing them, an activity in which even the ancient Polikarpov Po-2, a much produced biplane of 1920s design, took part.
For a time he was a member of Bessie Smith's Traveling Revue in the 1920s.
For example, in recent United States history, the gang Murder, Inc. committed hundreds of murders in the 1920s to the 1940s on behalf of the National Crime Syndicate.
For the rest of the 1920s his military career was a steady upward curve: he was appointed GOC Curragh Training Camp in August 1925, Quartermaster General in March 1927, and Chief of Staff in February 1929.
For most of the years since the 1920s the club operated in the Mid-Wales League, or the Central Wales League as it was sometimes known, winning the championship in 1975 – 76, 1978 – 79, 1981 – 82, 1986 – 87 and 1987 – 88 – on the strength of this record, the club gained entry to the English league system in the HFS Loans ( Northern Premier ) League.
For this reason, Kushiro was considered a valuable target for the Tsars during the Russo-Japanese Wars, but it only became a really important port during the 1920s with the growth of commercial fishing, for which its reliable freedom from ice reduced costs.
McCoy and Harlan wrote " For many readers in the 1920s, Prufrock seemed to epitomize the frustration and impotence of the modern individual.
For ten years Collier attempted to reconcile intensely visual experience opened to him by the Sitwells and the modern painters with the more austere preoccupations of those classical authors who were fashionable in the 1920s.
For example American-based fiddlers like Michael Coleman, James Morrison and Paddy Killoran did much to popularise Irish music in the 1920s and 1930s.

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