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rose and from
When East Germans fled to the West by the thousands, paeans of joy rose from the throats of Western publicists.
The smoke from that chimney rose as sluggishly as smoke from any other, and hung as sadly in the drizzle, creeping back down along the sopping canvas of the roof.
Adam rose from the crouch necessary to enter the hut.
Unsinkable slowed and stopped, hundreds of brilliant white flares swayed eerily down from the black, the air raid sirens ashore rose in a keening shriek, the anti-aircraft guns coughed and chattered -- and above it all motors roared and the bombs came whispering and wailing and crashing down among the ships at anchor at Bari.
A plume of smoke rose from a Central Vermont locomotive which idled behind a string of gravel cars, and little figures that were workmen labored to set the ruptured roadbed to rights.
A cow rose from the ground rear end first.
He rose from his chair.
Tractor production at Massey-Ferguson, Ltd., of Toronto in July and August rose to 2,418 units from 869 in the like period a year earlier, says John Staiger, vice president.
Net earnings of that road rose from 62 per cent of interest requirements in calendar 1957 to 86 per cent in the 12 months ended Feb. 28, 1961.
The azaleas were as large as shrubs, and their myriad blooms, many still tight in the bud, ranged in color from purple through fuchsia and rose to the palest pink, along with many white ones too.
A hermit living there told him that amid the rocks was a chasm communicating with purgatory, from which perpetually rose the groans of tortured souls.
In Alfred Duggan's Conscience of the King, a historical novel about Cerdic, founder of the Anglo-Saxon kingdom of Wessex, Ambrosius Aurelianus is a Romano-British general who rose independently to military power, forming alliances with various British kings and setting out to drive the invading Saxons from Britain.
Although, the young prince's troops could get the mastery in 1189 when the boyars of Halych rose against his rule, but shortly afterwards Prince Vladimir II Yaroslavich managed to escape from his captivity and he expelled the Hungarian troops from Halych.
The proportion of natives of Tehran, the Caspian, Azarbaijan and Kurdistan rose from 4 % of blue collar workers to 22 % of white collar workers to 45 % of managers.
The population of the parish rose from 6, 471 in 1841 to 14, 999 in 1851 and 32, 299 in 1861 and John Davies described it as " the most dynamic place in Wales ".
Coal mined in Aberdare parish rose from in 1844 to in 1850, and the coal trade, which after 1875 was the chief support of the town, soon reached huge dimensions.
: the third day he rose from the dead ;
: Do you believe in Jesus Christ, his only Son, our Lord, who was born of the Virgin Mary, was crucified, died, and was buried, rose from the dead, and is now seated at the right hand of the Father?
On the third day He rose again from the dead.
The school in Weimar experienced political pressure from conservative circles in Thuringian politics, increasingly so after 1923 as political tension rose.
The English infantry rose from the edge of the Nebel, and silently marched towards Blenheim, a distance of some.
The 1981 season saw Walsh lead the 49ers to a Super Bowl championship ; the team rose from the cellar to the top of the NFL in just two seasons.

rose and chair
Still today in Jersey, the presence of established laurels or rose gardens in old houses gives a clue to the past party adherence of former owners, and the chair of the Constable of Saint Helier in the Assembly Room of the Parish Hall still sports the carved roses of a former incumbent.
He quickly rose to the status of number one contender on the strength of his " cobra clutch " challenges where he would seat wrestlers in a chair in the ring, and apply the hold, offering $ 5, 000 to anyone who could break it.
He was then elected in 1978 to the North Carolina House of Representatives, and served two terms ( 1979 – 1988 ) and rose to chair the House Appropriations Committee.
He was the son of the sportsman Graham Doggart who rose to chair the Football Association.
In Congress, he rose to chair the Committee on Reform in the Civil Service.
Originally tapped to work as a story editor, he rose fairly quickly through the ranks, thanks in part to his mentor, chair and co-founder Robert Shaye.
Redden rose to chair the North Carolina Democratic Party executive committee from 1942 to 1944.
He was the son of the sportsman Graham Doggart ( 1897-1963 ), who rose to chair the Football Association and play county cricket for Middlesex.
She was chair of Scottish Labour Students and rose through Labour ranks serving on the Scottish Labour Party's National Executive.
Fowler eventually rose to vice-chairwoman of the House Republican Conference ( caucus ), the number-five position among House Republicans ( behind the Speaker, Majority Leader, Majority Whip and Republican Conference chair ).
However, a bright light shines in the woman's face, drawing her away, abandoning the man and dropping the rose on the chair.
Witt joined the business school faculty at the University of Texas at Austin in 1968, and rose through the ranks as chair and associate dean.
But he being highly displeased with their request, rose suddenly from his chair, which for some days he had not been able to do without assistance ; and receiving fresh vigour from the memory of that action, said, ' I tell you, it was a just act ; God and all good men will own it.
He eventually rose to the rank of professor, and served many administrative roles, including department chair, dean, vice president for academic affairs, and provost.

rose and took
In February, the people rose again: Alexius IV was imprisoned and executed, and Murzuphlus took the purple as Alexius V. He made some attempt to repair the walls and organise the citizenry, but there had been no opportunity to bring in troops from the provinces and the guards were demoralised by the revolution.
Mohamed Bacar soon rose to leadership of the junta that took over and by the end of the month he was the leader of the country.
LaGuardia took office on March 4, 1917 but soon was commissioned in the United States Army Air Service ; he rose to the rank of major in command of a unit of Ca. 44 bombers on the Italian-Austrian front in World War I. LaGuardia resigned his seat in Congress on December 31, 1919.
In 1996, a new movement known as the Taliban, rose to power, defeated most of the warlords and took over roughly 80 % of Afghanistan.
Major took up a post as an executive at the Standard Chartered Bank in May 1965, and he rose quickly through the ranks.
John Major wrote in his auto-biography that, " During my premiership interest rates fell from 14 % to 6 %; unemployment was at 1. 75 million when I took office, and at 1. 6 million and falling upon my departure ; and the government's annual borrowing rose from £ 0. 5 billion to nearly £ 46 billion at its peak before falling to £ 1 billion ".
A former aide recalled that Ribbentrop threw the German Embassy into chaos due to his erratic personality: He rose, muttering bad-temperedly ... Dressed in his pyjamas, he received the junior secretaries and press attachés in his bathroom ... He scolded, threatened, gesticulated with his razor and shouted at his valet ... As he took his bath, he ordered people to be summoned from Berlin, accepted and cancelled, appointed and dismissed, and dictated through the door to a nervous stenographer ... He cursed people in their absence, calling them saboteurs and communists ... It was my task to put his calls through ; his valet stood within splashing distance holding a white telephone ... Ribbentrop believed only ministers ranked above him: everyone else, including his ambassadorial colleagues, had to kept waiting on the line.
These trends faltered in the 1980s as the government took a more active part in industry, deficits rose, and the national currency was generally overvalued and devalued numerous times.
During Tipu's childhood, his father rose to take power in Mysore, and Tipu took over rule of the kingdom upon his father's death in 1782.
Years later, the Ndongo rose to prominence again when Jinga Mbandi, known as Queen Jinga, took power.
During the last few years of the Sui Dynasty, the rebellion that rose against it took many of China's able-bodied men from rural farms and other occupations, which in turn damaged the agricultural base and the economy further.
Celtic revival took hold here, and motifs such as the Glasgow rose became popularised.
Maria Theresa once again rose to the emergency, a new " insurrection " took the field in Hungary, and a corps of regulars was assembled to cover Vienna, while the diplomats won over Saxony to the Austrian side.
Soon Genoa revolted from the oppressive rule of the victors, rose and drove out the Austrians ( 5 – 11 December ) as an Allied invasion of Provence stalled, and the French, now commanded by Charles Louis Auguste Fouquet, Duc de Belle-Isle, took the offensive ( 1747 ).
Born in Nancy, France, the son of a baker, he trained as an artilleryman and took part in the battles of the French Revolution where he rose through the ranks.
Between 2001 and 2004, the percentage of children enrolled in primary school education rose to 72 %, and an estimated 300, 000 adults took part in Lavalas sponsored adult literacy campaigns.
She had died before he rose to fame, and after her death he took an oath of chastity.
The Pelasgians under Nasas " rose up " ( anestēsan ) against the Hellenes ( who presumably had acquired Thessaly ) and departed for Italy where they first took Cortona and then founded Tyrrhenia.
As social tensions rose, Republican officials took their places at the courthouse in Colfax.
The first march before the Wall, at the call of Jules Guesde, took place on May 23, 1880, two months before the Communards ' Amnesty: 25, 000 people, a symbolic " immortal " red rose in their buttonholes, stood up against police forces.
It starred Raymond Lam as Zhao Pan, a man of the Zhao state who took on his new identity of Ying Zheng and rose to power as Qin Shi Huang.
His reputation rose further when opposition leaders under parliamentary privilege alleged that Taoiseach Charles Haughey, who in January 1982 had been Leader of the Opposition, had not merely rung the President's Office but threatened to end the career of the army officer who took the call and who, on Hillery's explicit instructions, had refused to put through the call to the President.
However, it took a long time before it rose from its downfall.
" She quickly rose to fame and, by 1935, was seen as a replacement of actress Myrna Loy, as she took many roles Loy was initially set for.

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