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Page "Oswald von Wolkenstein" ¶ 13
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was and apprehended
Thus it was that Barco, apprehended for mere larceny, now began to suspect that one or another of his murders had been uncovered.
In June 1791, the King made an ill-fated attempt to flee the country ( flight to Varennes ), but was apprehended short of his goal on the Austrian Belgian border and was forced to return under guard to Paris.
Rudolph was apprehended in 2003 and pleaded guilty to the attacks.
Habib Tanious Shartouni, a member of the pro-Damascus Syrian Social Nationalist Party, confessed to the crime, was apprehended and handed to Amine Gemayel.
The public safety exception derives from New York v. Quarles, a case in which the Supreme Court considered the admissibility of a statement elicited by a police officer who apprehended a rape suspect who was thought to be carrying a firearm.
An American, Kurt Muse, was apprehended by the Panamanian authorities, after he had set up a sophisticated radio and computer installation, designed to jam Panamanian radio and broadcast phony election returns.
In his relations with the Holy Roman Empire, where no more danger was to be apprehended since the fall of the Hohenstaufen dynasty, Martin followed the moderate course taken by Gregory X. Rudolf I of Germany sent Bishop Henry of Basel to Rome to request coronation.
Two days later, Taylor attempted to flee Nigeria, but he was apprehended by Nigerian authorities and transferred to Freetown under UN guard.
In 2001, Mahmood was apprehended by the FIA for his suspect connections to Taliban and its related splinter groups.
Once again, he escaped, and was at liberty until November, when he was apprehended and returned to Marshalsea, under penalty for escape of £ 1000.
Muenter was later apprehended and confessed to attempted assassination of the vice president.
The king's wrath was aimed at Tyndale: Henry asked the Emperor Charles V to have the writer apprehended and returned to England under the terms of the Treaty of Cambrai, however, the Emperor responded that formal evidence was required before extradition.
En route to Mooresville to testify against Singleton Dillinger briefly escaped his captors but was apprehended within a few minutes.
Acoli then drove the car ( a white Pontiac LeMans with Vermont license plates )— which contained Assata Shakur, who was wounded, and Zayd Shakur, who was dead or dying — down the road at milepost 78 across from Service Area 8-N ( the Joyce Kilmer Service Area ), where Assata Shakur was apprehended.
A contemporary account which sheds light on the circulation of the music between Catholic country houses, refers to the arrest of a French Jesuit named De Noiriche, who was followed from an unidentified country house by spies, apprehended, searched and found to be carrying a copy of the 1605 set.
In November 2004, Australian authorities apprehended Nick Marinellis of Sydney, the self-proclaimed head of Australian 419ers who later boasted that he had " 220 African brothers worldwide " and that he was " the Australian headquarters for those scams ".
Washington, on hearing of Burgoyne's advance and the retreat from Ticonderoga, stated that the event was " not apprehended, nor within the compass of my reasoning ".
The practice of magic was banned in the Roman world, and the Codex Theodosianus states: If any wizard therefore or person imbued with magical contamination who is called by custom of the people a magician ... should be apprehended in my retinue, or in that of the Caesar, he shall not escape punishment and torture by the protection of his rank.
Some days before the execution, Captain Thomas Lee was apprehended as he kept watch on the door to the Queen's chambers.
In 1849 he was apprehended in Dresden for his participation in the Czech rebellion of 1848.

was and near
Next to him was a young boy I was sure had sat near me at one of the trading sessions.
Hague, like all who worked near the pits, was partly deafened from the constant assault against his eardrums.
Pamela was glad Jim was nowhere near.
Over the rapidly-diminishing outline of a jump seat piled high with luggage Herry's black brushcut was just discernible, near, or enviably near that spot where -- hidden -- more delicately-textured, most beautifully tinted hair must still be streaming back in cool, oh cool wind sweetly perfumed with sagebrush and yucca flowers and engine fumes.
This one was actually more of a `` near miss ''.
Seated near it with his back to the door was the rancher, Ed Dunn.
When he awoke in the mornings, she was in his mind and he could hardly wait to get to school to be near her in the flesh.
And so when the others stampeded out that afternoon Jack remained docilely in his seat near a window, looking out in what he hoped was a pitiable manner, while the other kids laughed and yelled in at him and made faces as they dispersed, going home.
This young slave was therefore quite unprepared when Delphine Lalaurie signaled that she wanted him to draw near.
My curiosity was sharpened a day or two before the interview by a conversation I had with a well-informed teacher of literature, a Jesuit father, at a conference on religious drama near Paris.
The family estate was situated near Vadstena on Lake Vattern in south central Sweden.
Land was near, and on June 12, one hundred and fourteen days after leaving America, they actually saw, twenty miles away, the coast of Orissa.
The use of map coordinates was begun when the senior officers began to select tactical points by designating a spot as `` near the letter o in the word mountain ''.
Samuel Gorton was born at Gorton, England, near the present city of Manchester, about 1592.
There was no time in the short Mexican encounter to evolve a solution but the area provided a proving ground for new departures in the near future.
Many years later I went to see S.K. in England, where he was living at Whiteleaf, near Aylesbury, and he showed me beside his cottage there the remains of the road on which Boadicea is supposed to have travelled.
More, the U.S. action was hailed by a principal opposition leader, Dr. Juan Bosch, as having saved `` many lives and many troubles in the near future ''.
Annisberg was about seventy-five miles west of Birmingham, near the Georgia border and on the Tallahoosa River, a small and dirty stream.
But it had, as was usual in southern cities of this sort, a Black Bottom, a low region near the river where the Negroes lived -- servants and laborers huddled together in a region with no sewage save the river, where streets and sidewalks were neglected and where there was much poverty and crime.
The gunfire, which was so near that it seemed just a piece up the road now, stopped for long enough to count to twenty ; ;
This was one of the Irish women who had built their own huts down near the river.

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