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Page "Donald A. Wollheim" ¶ 19
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He'd and line
He'd take your leg off with a line drive, turn the third baseman around like a swinging door and powder the hand of the left fielder.

He'd and was
He'd started a fire and put coffee on, and now was busy at the work board of his chuck wagon.
He'd put on his old brown corduroy coat and it was already soaked.
He'd shoot at anything if it was the rear end of a horse or his own sentry.
He'd have to think, but the main thing, the imperative necessity, was to leave before Sam Bentley was up and about, and before Millie detained him with sympathy.
He'd been sent by Pittsburgh's GM Branch Rickey to evaluate Clemente's teammate Joe Black, a pitcher Rickey himself had originally signed for the Dodgers and was now thinking of reacquiring for Pittsburgh.
He'd shoot from wingovers, zooms, and barrel rolls, and after a few passes the sleeve was ribbons.
Then it hit me: He'd been giving me all this bullshit about his wife and his two kids in London, when in fact he was gay, and he was makin ' a move on me!
Tim Finnegan lived in Walken streetA gentleman Irish, mighty oddHe had a brogue both rich and sweetAnd to rise in the world he carried a hodYou see he'd a sort of a tipplin ' wayWith a love for the liquor he was bornAnd to send him on his way each day, He'd a drop of the craythur every morn '
He'd consult the daily directory in the lobby and find a party — usually a Bar Mitzvah reception — and he would go up to the room and ask to speak to whoever was paying for the affair.
He'd play the record but he'd improvise over what Earl was doing ..... ' course, when you heard Art play you didn't hear nothing of anybody but Art.
He'd be out there squinting because he could see, at midnight, the moonlight and shadows, and that was his way of not seeing the weeds or imperfections that would plague him during the day ..." Talking of the tranquility he felt at Friar Park, Harrison once said: " Sometimes I feel like I'm actually on the wrong planet, and it's great when I'm in my garden.
He'd first learned of the revolution when he noticed the Securitate was no longer tailing him.
He'd gotten into the oscillating resonances idea because he'd seen that any one type of molecule has differing absorptions at differing radiant frequencies and he was entirely persuaded that the only difference between one frequency and another is the frequency.
" He'd come and see where I was working, and he might say, ' Very nice, very nice.
Comparing Richards to Lemon, Bannister said, " He'd post the lineups 10 minutes before the game, and only then we'd find out who was playing and where.
He'd become friends with him by letting him think Tommy was gone on his behalf.
Featured on the cover of the January 1981 issue of Contemporary Keyboard magazine ( a story that was reprinted in Contemporary Keyboards book on the greatest rock keyboardists ), DeYoung described many of his steps along the way through his keyboard-playing career: He'd never played an acoustic piano until the recording session for 1972's " Lady "; he recorded the track for 1979's " Babe " in a friend's basement on a Rhodes electric piano he'd never touched before ; the odd feeling of switching back to playing accordion for the song " Boat On The River " and discovering how small the keys felt to his fingers after years of playing electric organs and pianos.
He'd end up doing all of that and I was the one that got squeezed out ; I was doing almost nothing.
He'd grab a guy's tie and slam his chin into the table before the guy knew he was in a war.
He'd become a celebrity and was more interested in talking to Dag Hammarskjold and Adlai Stevenson.

He'd and I
He'd written a book " I Am Not Spock ," and that gave people the idea.
He'd say, ' Hey, I did this.
He'd come out and show me that big fist of his when I wasn't bearing down the way he thought I should.
: He'd make me feel like I would die.
He'd just come off back to back successes with Gloria Gaynor and Peaches & Herb and had won a Grammy for Gaynor's huge hit " I Will Survive ".
He'd told me I was getting this surprise.
He'd often joke about it, " This is a magnificent building ," he said with his tenor voice, " but I think the roof is leaking.
He'd say, ' I don't want to take away from you dropping your gloves, but, I don't want you to think about not doing it.
He'd written Bus stop, wet day, she's there, I say please share my umbrella and it's like when you get a really great part of a lyric or, I also had this nice riff as well, and when you have such a great start to a song it's kind of like the rest is easy.
He'd take those skeleton outlines I had given him and turn them into classic little works of art that ended up being far cooler than I had any right to expect.
He'd be handsomer than he is if he had better manners but life and his enemies have left him looking a little beat up, and I suppose having seen his mother ( back about 1840 ) trying to take a bath in a wooden washtub without fully undressing left his soul a little warped.

He'd and think
He'd wanted her to go back to a normal girl's life after she had gotten her revenge due to the brutality of the life of a Samurai, and he often tries again to convince her to do so whenever situations that he doesn't think she can handle arise.
He'd play attacking shots off balls other people would only think of defending.

He'd and .
He'd be an idiot to let them stay he thought, but he couldn't send them on, either.
He'd come alone, without his wife and child.
He'd been in an angry mood: Conchita had thought his face almost ugly with the anger in him.
He'd told Hank Maguire and Luis Hernandez about his wife's refusal to come with him and about what he now intended to do.
He'd hoped to catch Jesse Macklin there.
He'd mounted up immediately and raced with a revolver ready toward the spot from which he'd estimated the shot had come.
He'd grin.
He'd come East for the christening, by God he would.
He'd not care about getting waked so he could give up some of his whisky to a slit of a kid and maybe lose one of his hiding places in the bargain.
( He'd get the engine oil flowing with an electric heater under a big canvas cover.
He'd landed the plane on a small airstrip in Connecticut and as soon as the aircraft had coasted to a stop, everyone had burst into chatter at the same moment.
He'd have to start going to some of the other places again.
He'd been there several times, back when, while he and Radic had been friends, or at least not enemies.
He'd mentioned it, himself, at church and everybody seemed to have the idea that Tolley had left because Jenny had jilted him for Roy Robards.
He'd had no idea how unhappy his sweet peach had been.
He'd tell Sabella about the nightmare.
He'd just admitted it to me.
He'd not only told me so, he'd proved it.
" While Frank Miller has described the relationship between Batman and the Joker as a " homophobic nightmare ," he views the character as sublimating his sexual urges into crimefighting, concluding, " He'd be much healthier if he were gay.

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