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Fortuitously and first
Fortuitously for the CIA, that failed scouting trip coincided with the first US state visit of Anastasio Somoza García, the President of Nicaragua ( 1937 – 47, 1950 – 56 ), who told the Truman Administration ( 1945 – 53 ) of the existence of a small, Guatemalan rebel-group commanded by Col. Castillo Armas.

Fortuitously and was
Fortuitously this was early attached to a very notable manuscript, Asser's Life of King Alfred, which undoubtedly assisted its survival.
Fortuitously, there was an opening in the English department and Merton was hired on the spot.
Fortuitously, America's ongoing western migration by wagon trains with the goal of claiming cheap lands in the west was building rapidly from a trickle of settlers from 1841's opening of the Oregon Trail ( now a wagon road ) to a flood of emigrants headed west by 1847 – 49 and thereafter well into the later 1880s.
Fortuitously Raab also observed that light was dependent for the killing of paramecia cultures to take place.
( Fortuitously, the young woman from the US embassy who delivered the letter to Fuller was the former ward of Newton D. Baker, by this time serving as U. S. Secretary of War.
Fortuitously for Johnson, Lew Ayres, who played the title role in the popular Dr. Kildare movie series, was leaving to join the US Army as a medical corpsman.
Fortuitously, Manglapus was on a speaking engagement in the United States when Marcos declared martial law in 1972.
Fortuitously, the pair met through their wives, who knew each other socially — at the time, Lautner was having trouble finding contractors to work on his houses, and de la Vaux, a boat builder, was keen to move into housing construction.
Fortuitously in 1823 the duty or tax of £ 30 per ton was taken off salt.
Fortuitously in Tianjin at the time of Ridel's arrival was the commander of the French Far Eastern Squadron, Rear Admiral Pierre-Gustave Roze.
Fortuitously for Char, the Sazabi was also designed with an escape pod which is automatically fired if the mobile suit sustains critical damage, although this does not save him as Amuro manages to catch the escape pod.

Fortuitously and when
Fortuitously, the Zulu army had already begun to assemble at Ulundi, as it did every year for the First Fruits ceremony when all warriors were duty-bound to report to their regimental barracks near Ulundi.

Fortuitously and by
Fortuitously, or by design, the main British fleet did not make contact with the Japanese and thus remained available for future action.

Fortuitously and .
Fortuitously for him, in the Autumn of 1145, Pope Eugenius requested Louis to lead a Crusade to the Middle East, to rescue the Frankish Kingdoms there from disaster.
Fortuitously he had convinced one of his examiners, Edward Augustus Freeman, of his talent.
Fortuitously, however, the new sound made them a crossover pop-R & B-rock sensation, bringing them even more fans and chart presence.
Before the verdict on his designs had come back, Peet felt like he had enough, and went screaming out of the studio, “ no more lousy ducks !” Fortuitously, he came back the next day to pick up his jacket and found an envelope, informing him he had been promoted to the story department.
Fortuitously, Borduas met Ozias Leduc in the winter of 1921-1922, and Leduc agreed to take the young artist under his wing.
Fortuitously, the game ' did much much better than ever imagined ' and funds for at least the forthcoming twelve months quickly rolled in to replace it.
Fortuitously, his recommendation coincided with a sudden surge in the small picture-book market.
Fortuitously, the French struck the least prepared unit in the Allied army — a Portuguese militia unit — and routed it.
Fortuitously, however, Rooke had already learnt the news of the Spanish convoy from one of his own ships – Captain Thomas Hardy in the Pembroke who had stayed behind to water in the Portuguese port of Lagos.
Fortuitously, the system operated on the same 45 MHz frequency as the BBC's dormant Alexandra Palace television station.

Fortuitously and on
Fortuitously, Lohmann's return coincided with a return to extremely treacherous wickets after a long spell of dry weather and much better pitches than Lohmann had ever bowled on before.

Lamb's and first
Many first hand accounts of the American War of Independence can be found in " the Diary of Lieutenant Frederick Mackenzie " or Serjeant Roger Lamb's " Original and Authentic Journal of Occurrences During the Late American War ".
1915 " Sensation ", Joseph Lamb's first rag published under John Stark's label.
The first volume he produced was Charles Lamb's Album Verses.
Lamb's first publication was the inclusion of four sonnets in the Coleridge's Poems on Various Subjects published in 1796 by Joseph Cottle.
Norman Lamb's first appointment after being elected was as a Lib Dem spokesman on International Development.
Besides this, he also illustrated books, including the first edition of Charles and Mary Lamb's Tales from Shakespeare in 1807.
In March 1809 he defended the conduct of the Duke of York, and on 31 December 1810 supported William Lamb's amendment to the first regency resolution ( ib.
" Lindall owns Charles Lamb's copy of the first illustrated 1691 edition of Paradise Lost, as well as Lady Pomfret ’ s copy of the first illustrated edition ( circa 1688 ).
On 1 and 3 July 1707, Croydon played London twice, the first game played in Croydon, possibly at Duppas Hill, and the second at Lamb's Conduit Field in Holborn.

Lamb's and was
Instead he wrote radio scripts, including Your Hit Parade, until he was introduced to Austrian composer Frederick Loewe, who needed a partner, in 1942 at the Lamb's Club.
It also was adapted by Robert Smyth at Lamb's Players Theatre in San Diego, CA, in 2004, and was included in their mainstage season for that year.
Lamb's hallmark was finding the middle ground.
According to A. Asbjorn Jon ' the choice of name Polidori's Lord Ruthven is presumably linked to Lady Caroline Lamb's earlier novel Glenarvon, where it was used for a rather ill disguised Byronesque character '
An early ferry that operated for many years was Lamb's Ferry near Rogersville.
Lamb's Ferry Road was named for John Lamb who moved from Indian Creek in Giles County, TN in 1816 to establish a ferry across the Tennessee River south of what would later become Rogersville.
Among those who frequented Mr. Lamb's establishment were Clark Gable, Guy Lombardo, the Prince of Wales and the Vanderbilts, who came to party and eat chingarora oysters, for which Raritan Bay was then famous.
The film received mixed critical reviews, and was a box-office failure ; the film was criticized both for its historical inaccuracies ( the timing of William Lamb's political career, the portrayal of Byron as a tall, handsome man who lacked his characteristic limp ) and for its own ( lack of ) merits.
Although their meeting had been shrewdly orchestrated by William Lamb's mother, theirs was a love match.
Lamb's most famous work is Glenarvon, a Gothic novel that was released in 1816 just weeks after Byron's departure from England.
Although published anonymously, Lamb's authorship was an open secret.
Byron's confidante and close friend was William Lamb's own mother, the colourful Lady Melbourne.
Another name was Lamb's Bridge, which was used for a short time in the early 1850s in recognition of John Lamb's Tavern and store, located at the village end of the bridge that spanned the Grand River.
Joplin was favorably impressed with Lamb's compositions, and recommended him to classical ragtime publisher John Stark.
In 1742 – 1745 a building was erected north of Lamb's Conduit Street in Bloomsbury.
Captain Thomas Coram ( c. 1668 – 29 March 1751 ) was a philanthropist who created the London Foundling Hospital to look after unwanted children in Lamb's Conduit Fields, Bloomsbury.
An extract from this masque is given in Lamb's Dramatic Poets, and was highly praised by Coleridge.
By the end of 1822, Ainsworth was writing for The London Magazine, which allowed him to become close to Charles Lamb, to whom Ainsworth sent poetry for Lamb's response.
He belonged to the great period of English dramatic literature, but, in Lamb's words, he " claims a place among the worthies of this period, not so much for any transcendent genius in himself, as that he was the last of a great race, all of whom spoke nearly the same language and had a set of moral feelings and notions in common.

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