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Page "editorial" ¶ 337
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each and city
In each city civic and education leaders have been working hard to get public opinion prepared to accept the inevitability of equal treatment.
Equal proportions of children in each city were drawn from upper-lower and lower-middle class neighborhoods.
Radio broadcasts had not begun and most devotees of baseball attended the games near home, in the town park or a pasture, with perhaps two or three trips to the city each season to see the Cubs or the Pirates or the Indians or the Red Sox.
Even a city of thirty thousand might have six baseball teams, sponsored by grocers and hardware merchants or department stores, that played two or three times a week throughout the summer, usually in the cool of the evening, before an earnest and partisan audience who did not begrudge a quarter each, or even more, to be dropped into a hat when the game was half over.
He would not ride the eight-thirty local to the city each morning.
In 1823, Light had fondly written of the Sicilian city of Catania: " The two principal streets cross each other at right angles in the square in the direction of north and south and east and west.
The colectivos each travel a designated area of the city, the three main ones being Costera, Colosio, Coloso, or a mixture of the three.
The city had long been ruled by kings born to the Penthilid clan but, during the poet's life, the Penthilids were a spent force and rival aristocrats and their factions contended with each other for supreme power.
The Persians found the Ionians difficult to rule, eventually settling for sponsoring a tyrant in each Ionian city.
Every passage to the city was guarded by gates and towers, and a wall surrounded each of the city's rings.
Within five days after the beginning of their terms, the four Aediles ( two Plebeian, two Curule ) were required to determine, by lot or by agreement among themselves, what parts of the city each should hold jurisdiction over.
In recent years, the Port Authority has established it as one of the most important ports in Spain for cruises, with 72 calls to port made by cruise ships in 2007 bringing some 80, 000 passengers and 30, 000 crew to the city each year.
The BBWAA began by polling three writers in each league city in 1938, reducing that number to two per league city in 1961.
The bishop in a large city ( the Metropolitan bishop ) would appoint a priest to pastor the flock in each congregation, acting as his delegate.
Blissymbols were invented by Charles K. Bliss ( 1897 – 1985 ), born Karl Kasiel Blitz in the Austro-Hungarian city of Czernowitz ( at present the Ukrainian city of Chernivtsi ), which had a mixture of different nationalities that “ hated each other, mainly because they spoke and thought in different languages .”
Along with the larger tasks of exploration, warfare and diplomacy, the player has to make decisions about where to build new cities, which improvements or units to build in each city, which advances in knowledge should be sought ( and at what rate ), and how to transform the land surrounding the cities for maximum benefit.
The two clubs play six games against each other every season, featuring a three game series in each city.
The service was slowly being expanded over the years as more postal offices were established in each large city by 1918.
On June 4, 1998, the city officially opened the Museum Campus, a lakefront park, surrounding three of the city's main museums, each of which is of national importance: the Adler Planetarium & Astronomy Museum, the Field Museum of Natural History, and the Shedd Aquarium.
It is the shortest among 43, 589, 145, 600 possible tours visiting each city exactly once.

each and quick
The explanations below are for quick reference and do not fully or completely define the statistic ; for the strict definition, see the linked article for each statistic.
As mentioned above, this is usually broken down verbally as " slow, slow ; quick, quick " where the ' slows ' cover two beats ( or ' counts ') each and the ' quicks ' mark a single beat ( or ' count ') each.
Together, they arranged the murder of their respective siblings, in quick succession, and were thereafter married to each other.
He developed quick reflexes through various athletic and leisure activity, such as bouncing a ball off the concrete steps in front of his house, moving in closer to reduce reaction time with each throw.
Sometimes vacancies arise in quick succession, as in the early 1970s when Lewis Franklin Powell, Jr. and William Rehnquist were nominated to replace Hugo Black and John Marshall Harlan II, who retired within a week of each other.
Allen suggests that the purpose of recognizing faces has its roots in the " parent-infant attraction, a quick and low-effort means by which parents and infants form an internal representation of each other, reducing the likelihood that the parent will abandon his or her offspring because of recognition failure ".
After reading a quick description of each study, the subjects were asked whether their opinions had changed.
Sinker EDM allowed quick production of 614 uniform injectors for the J-2 ( rocket engine ) | J-2 rocket engine, six of which were needed for each trip to the moon.
In Norse mythology, Árvakr ( Old Norse " early awake ") and Alsviðr ( Old Norse " very quick ") are the horses which pull the sun, or Sol's chariot, across the sky each day.
A survey of 1, 000 experts she and Lee Rainie conducted for the Pew Research Center Internet & American Life Project found that the generation brought up from childhood with a continuous connection to each other and to information will be nimble, quick-acting multitaskers who count on the Internet as their external brain ; the experts also predicted Gen AO will exhibit a thirst for instant gratification and quick fixes, a loss of patience and a lack of deep-thinking ability.
Sometimes, both arrow buttons appear next to each other for quick, precise manipulation without having to drag the thumb or move the mouse great distances to the other arrow ( this was offered as an option in Mac OS 8. 5 ); one of them may also be duplicated so as to show at both ends of the bar, providing familiarity for those used to both separate and adjacent buttons.
It permits quick decision-making, as only one person decides for the whole group and keeps each decision to him / herself until he / she feels it needs to be shared with the rest of the group.
The books and movies that came out in quick succession anticipate current production methods of Hollywood, in two respects: First, the authors distributed the writing among themselves ; their " working method was to draw up the general plot between them and then go off and write alternate chapters independently of each other, meeting up to tie the two halves of the story together in the final chapter.
Due to Canada ’ s size and diversity, the development of the modern Canadian public library was more of a slow evolution than a quick transition as each of the provinces ’ specific conditions ( geographic, economic, cultural, demographic, etc.
Although quarrels and reconciliations between the three kings followed each other in quick succession, in general it may be said that Louis favoured the divorce, and Charles opposed it, while neither lost sight of the fact that Lothair had no sons to inherit his lands.
After ten days of rehearsals for each of his casts, Preminger began principal photography of both films on January 21, filming an English language scene and then its German equivalent in quick succession.
On the part of the comb where she is sitting she starts whirling around in a narrow circle, constantly changing her direction, turning now right, now left, dancing clockwise and anti-clockwise, in quick succession, describing between one and two circles in each direction.
The final episode also included the original tag line, with some revision, printed on the screen with the words " There is a destiny that makes us FAMILY " ( replacing the word ' brothers '), as well as quick clips of each of the show's title cards and announcers over the six decades it was on television, leading to the show's former long-time opening announcement: " And now, The Guiding Light ".
The Carrion Crow is noisy, perching on the top of a tree and calling three or four times in quick succession, with a slight pause between each series of croaks.
This apparently ensures her physical well-being rather than preventing extra-pair copulations, as neighboring males will stray through each other's territory to snatch a quick fling with the resident females.
It consists of roughly 191 columns, with each row corresponding to a specific Sephirah or path on the Tree of Life for a total of 35 rows and is used for a quick reference for corresponding mnemonics and factors of religion for use in magic ( for instance, an evocation of Venus would have one looking across that column for the colour corresponding to Venus that will be the colour of his or her robe, and then Venusian incense, etc.

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