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Glancing and has
Porche has published two books of poems, The Body's Symmetry and Glancing Off.

Glancing and .
Glancing hits on hard surfaces will result in fragmentation, reducing the risk of ricochets.
Glancing over its pages, however, it seemed to him a sin that a book so holy and so salable should be destroyed.

at and them
I would turn away from my writing in the hope of getting a good look at them but I never quite succeeded.
He did not look at them now.
She regarded them as signs that she was nearing the glen she sought, and she was glad to at last be doing something positive in her unenunciated, undefined struggle with the mountain and its darkling inhabitants.
sufficiently, at least, to get them back into town.
He looked at each of them in turn, Brannon last of all.
He came to the edge of the veranda, peered down at them with his hand on his gun.
He had cursed at them and threatened them.
`` Everyone knew it, but he sort of acted like he didn't care who knew it -- even after them notes came, even after he'd heard about Lewis, even after he'd been shot at a couple o' times hisself ''!!
Seeing them waiting there at the foot of Emigrant Rock was so overwhelming that, for a good minute after they rounded the bend and started down the grade leading toward them, Matilda could not speak at all.
Hez looked up at the high face of Emigrant Rock, official signboard for the Raft River turnoff, and gloated, `` Seems funny that them Burnsides never took time to leave their John-Henry up thar ''.
The sky glowered down at them.
The truck dropped them off at the various revetments spread through the jungle.
The ceiling stayed solid above them at about eight hundred feet, and at times the sheer cliffs seemed about to close in.
Four cars were parked at the curb, and two of them were police radio cars.
Neither of them, I understood, had been present at the filming session earlier.
He turned and looked at them with clear blue eyes, immaculate eyes.
He leered at the stranger as the distance between them closed.
He grinned at them wolfishly.
They lay, with the birds hopping from branch to branch above them and the bright sky peeping down at them.

at and McGarry
Burgess was succeeded by Bill McGarry, who bought new players such as Charlie Livesey and Ron Saunders, and in his only season at the club led the club to what was at the time its highest ever league position: third in the Third Division.
McGarry joined Ipswich in 1964, and was replaced by player-manager Ken Furphy, from Workington Furphy rebuilt the team around players such as Keith Eddy and Dennis Bond, but after holding Liverpool to a draw in the FA Cup and narrowly failing to win promotion in 1966 – 67, Bond was sold to Tottenham for £ 30, 000, Watford's record transfer receipt at the time.
* McGarry — A bird who lives at the shore and tries to get Crabby not to swear
* Michael McGarry, in A Dictionary of the Jewish-Christian Dialogue ( 1995 ), explains apocatastasis as " one particular Christian expression of a general theology of universalism ... the belief that at the end of time all creatures – believers and sinners alike – would be restored in Christ.
He then moved on to Northwood Mission where he played at outside-right, alongside Bill McGarry and Basil Hayward, who would later become his team-mates at Port Vale.
He accepted an invitation to join the band for a gig at Wilson Hall, Garston and became the seventh member of The Searchers, replacing McGarry to join John McNally, Mike Prendergast and Tony Jackson.
* " Skrillex and Dieselboy at King Cat Theatre ," Seattle, January 21, 2011, review by Brady McGarry, SSGMusic. com, January 24, 2011
In season six, during a Middle East peace negotiation at Camp David, McGarry finds it impossible to support Bartlet's position about sending thousands of American soldiers to the West Bank and Gaza as part of an Israeli-Palestinian agreement, and ( in a very tense moment ) Bartlet and McGarry come to an agreement that McGarry will resign at the first available opportunity.
" He considered the world of The West Wing a boys club at times, and felt McGarry could be harder on C. J. Cregg than he was on the male senior staffers.
McGarry appears in two of the five episodes which had been filmed, but not yet aired, at the time of Spencer's death on December 16, 2005.
succeeds Leo McGarry as White House Chief of Staff in the sixth season ( halfway through Bartlet's second term ) after McGarry suffers a heart attack at Camp David.
While her subsequent performance as the Chief of Staff appears at first to be procedural in nature and lacking the independent advice which McGarry brought to the position, C. J.
When Leo McGarry looked unable to serve as Chief of Staff, following his heart attack at Camp David, White House reporter Greg Brock suggested that Will might be appointed as Bartlet's new Chief of Staff.
Mark McGarry, an attorney with the Florida Office of the State Attorney, characterized Lisa's stay at the FSO as an " isolation watch ":
After several deadlocked ballots at the Democratic National Convention and a rousing speech from Santos, President Bartlet threw his support to Santos, as did a key teachers ' union leader, which secured the nomination for Santos, with former White House Chief of Staff Leo McGarry as his running mate.
Lyman had been growing increasingly frustrated at the Hoynes campaign's constantly avoiding taking positions on key issues like Social Security reform, and was impressed with Bartlet's rigorous honesty after being asked to see the then-Governor of New Hampshire by Leo McGarry.

at and suddenly
A man was standing in the open door of the lighted orderly room a few yards to Mike's left, but he, too, suddenly made up his mind and went racing to join the confused activity at the east end of the stockade.
And listening to such a conversation one morning while taking a cup of chocolate in a cafe, Rousseau found himself bathed in perspiration, trembling lest his authorship become known, and at the same time dreaming of the startling effect he would make if he should proclaim himself suddenly as the composer.
Once covertly looking at Simms Purdew, the only man in the world whom he hated, he had seen the heavy, slack, bestubbled jaw open and close to emit the cruel, obscene banter, and had seen the pale-blue eyes go watery with whisky and merriment, and suddenly he was not seeing the face of that vile creature.
He looked at her out of himself, she thought, as he did only for an instant at a time, the look which always surprised her even now when his uncombable hair was yellowing a little and his breath came hard through his nicotine-choked lungs, the look of the gaunt youth she had suddenly found herself staring at in the Tate Gallery on a Thursday once.
It is the strategy of blockade, therefore, that is suddenly at the center of attention of administration officials, Members of Congress, officers in the Pentagon.
It suddenly occurred to me that I did not particularly like acting, that I was at some sort of crossroads and would have to decide soon what I was going to do with my life.
But at this the one too-large cat suddenly became two cats, stretching.
Very suddenly, the driver stopped swearing at them, turned on his heel and went back to his truck.
Kimmell ordered the driver to back up, watched the children safely across and was approaching the car when it suddenly `` took off at high speed '', he said, narrowly missing him.
Then one day, early in January, 1960, I sat down at my desk, and suddenly I was aware of the crucifix.
The years suddenly fell away at this point.
During his second week at sea he brought the curious melody out of the instrument and suddenly wanted to force the biwa to remain at just that moment in its history when it had given him pleasure.
Aldona died suddenly at the end of May 1339 and was buried in Kraków.
Although he had long suffered from heart trouble, his early death was unexpected ; taken ill suddenly at the end of 1934, he lay bedridden for three months before dying of pneumonia.
Early travelers in Asia sometimes describe a kind of military amok, in which soldiers facing apparently inevitable defeat suddenly burst into a frenzy of violence which so startled their enemies that it either delivered victory or at least ensured what the soldier in that culture considered an honourable death.
Nebuchadnezzar recounts a dream of a huge tree that is suddenly cut down at the command of a heavenly messenger.
Defender Tommy Caton, who had been out of action due to injury since January 1991, announced his retirement from playing on medical advice in March 1993, having failed to recover full fitness, and he died suddenly at the end of the following month, aged just 30 years.
YPLL measurements do not account for how disabled a person is before dying, so the measurement treats a person who dies suddenly and a person who died at the same age after decades of illness as equivalent.
More at ease, the Emperor went to his desk to sign some decrees, where he was suddenly approached by Stephanus:
Note also that until well into the 20th Century, rather than an official readying the ball for scrimmage, the side entitled to the snap had complete custody of the ball and could snap it from the required spot at any time ; for instance, a tackled ball carrier might feign injury, then suddenly snap the ball while recumbent, there being no stance requirement yet.
During a test session at Riverside International Raceway in August 1966, with Ken Miles driving, the car suddenly went out of control at the end of Riverside's high-speed, 1-mile-long back straight.

0.343 seconds.