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ran and for
We ran out of money and we haven't eaten for two days ''.
I worked for my Uncle ( an Uncle by marriage so you will not think this has a mild undercurrent of incest ) who ran one of those antique shops in New Orleans' Vieux Carre, the old French Quarter.
After I paid Monsieur Prieur for Dandy, I brought him home, but he was ill at ease and ran away the same night.
They ran for three hours.
For ten minutes they ran beneath the squall, raising their arms and, for the first time, shouting and capering.
The final issue of the Englishman, No. 57 for February 15, ran to some length and was printed as a separate pamphlet, entitled The Englishman: Being the Close of the Paper So-called.
He ran for the sick room, found his pistol was broken, and threw it away.
We ran east for about half a mile before we turned back to the road, panting from the effort and soaked with sweat.
Watson ran up the ladder and stood for a second sucking in the cool air that smelled of mud and river weeds.
So when the Big House filled up and ran over, the sisters-in-law found beds for everyone in their own homes.
set production ( excluding those destined for the export market ) also ran ahead in the early months, but was curtailed after the usual vacation shutdowns in the face of growing evidence that some of the early production plans had been overly optimistic.
The average reader of this magazine owns more than one gun ( we ran a survey to find out ) but he's always on the lookout for new and better arms.
Instead, he whirled and ran to his house for a gun, forcing them to kill him, Cook reported.
During Dulles's first two years in office, while Republicans ran the Senate, the Department was at the mercy of men who had thirsted for its blood since 1945.
The game players saw the Air Force film Monday, ran for 30 minutes, then went in, while the reserves scrimmaged for 45 minutes.
Her young British lawyer, James Dunlop, pleaded that she was sorely needed at her Portland home by her widowed mother, 80, her maiden aunt, also 80 and bedridden for 20 years, and her uncle, 76, who once ran a candy shop.
And so the sun came up again and for a moment its color was the young men's blood, shifting then into the full heat and outcry which ran with their hearts.
In late 1854, Lincoln ran as a Whig for the U. S. Senate seat from Illinois.
Absalom himself was caught by his head in the boughs of an oak-tree as the mule he was riding ran beneath it-an irony given that he was previously renowned for his abundant hair and handsome head.
In 1839, Johnson entered the race for re-election to his House seat, initially as a Whig ; when another Whig entry arose, to enhance his position in the campaign, he ran as a Democrat and was elected to his second, non-consecutive term in the Tennessee House.
In 1872 he ran for election to fill Tennessee's new at – large seat in the House of Representatives.
The King ran an office for captives from the Royal Palace, which leveraged the Spanish diplomatic and military network abroad to intercede for thousands of prisoners-of-war, receiving and answering letters from Europe.
While the issue of military funding was perhaps the most obvious explanation for Grothendieck's departure from IHÉS, those who knew him say that the causes of the rupture ran deeper.

ran and from
Donovan snatched Greg's chute from him with a belligerent motion and almost ran to the plane with it.
He jumped back, ducked and ran, crouching, down the hill away from the school.
Just then Charles Lever yelled, `` Hey, Jack '', from the quarry road which ran behind the Carter house, and Jack grabbed the lunch from the table and darted out the kitchen door, yelling `` Good-bye, Mom '' over his shoulder.
The musician ran away from school when he was fifteen, but this escapade did not save him from the Gymnasium.
Hearst won the Iowa state convention, but ran into a bitter battle in Indiana before losing to Parker, drawing an angry statement from Indiana's John W. Kern:
It ran north, away from the town and the people, through woods and past the nothingness of a graveyard.
Cried the guard who ran from the hut to shout to other men standing about outside.
Four or five of the cousins from East Texas were about his age, so naturally they ran around together.
Her words jumbled together and she all but ran from the office and from the question in Rev's face.
`` Skip '' Hovarter back in town from a summer in the Reno-Lake Tahoe area where he ran into Rusty Warren, Kay Martin, the Marskmen and Tune Toppers -- all pulling good biz, he says.
She ran from a little group of us.
The popular AFI 100 Years … series, which ran from 1998 to 2008, and created jury-selected lists of America ’ s best movies in categories including Musicals, Laughs and Thrills, drove new generations to experience classic American films.
The series, adapting several of the best-known Poirot and Marple stories, ran from 4 July 2004 through 15 May 2005, and has since been shown in repeated reruns on NHK and other networks in Japan.
It ran from Neuilly Bridge to the Bois de Boulogne.
The course ran from the South side of the city, north along the lakefront to Evanston, Illinois, and back again.
Apollo ran from 1961 to 1972, and was supported by the two-man Gemini program which ran concurrently with it from 1962 to 1966.

ran and Nanyang
This is a legacy from its acquisition of Nanyang Commercial Bank, which ran a travel agency for the convenience of its Southeast Asian customers.

ran and now
He ran on his plump sticks of legs, freezing now and again into the sudden startled attitudes which the camera had caught and held on the paling photographs, all carefully placed and glued and labeled, resting in the fat plush album in the bottom drawer of the escritoire.
Foster listened with angelic patience until Digby ran down, then said, `` Listen, junior, you're an angel now -- so forget it.
One common replacement for LocalTalk was PhoneNet, a 3rd party solution ( from a company called Farallon, now called Netopia ) that also used the RS-422 port and was indistinguishable from LocalTalk as far as Apple's LocalTalk port drivers were concerned, but ran over the two unused wires in standard four-wire phone cabling.
In early 1945, the U. S. army ran tests of various 2, 4-D and 2, 4, 5-T mixtures at the Bushnell Army Airfield in Florida, which is now listed as a Formerly Used Defense Site ( FUDS ).
The myth was perpetuated by Romeyn de Hooghe's Spiegel van Staat der Vereenigden Nederlanden (" Mirror of the State of the United Netherlands ", 1706 ), which also ran to many editions, and it was revived in the atmosphere of Romantic nationalism in the late eighteenth-century reforms that saw a short-lived Batavian Republic and, in the colony of the Dutch East Indies, a capital ( now Jakarta ) that was named Batavia.
" A horsecar ran from Temescal in Oakland to the university campus along what is now Telegraph Avenue.
According to Jocelin of Brakelond, in 1198 during a fire at the abbey of St Edmundsbury ( now Bury St Edmunds ), the monks ' ran to the clock ' to fetch water, indicating that their water clock had a reservoir large enough to help extinguish the occasional fire.
In 1696 he ran a tile and brick factory in what is now Tilbury, Essex and living in the parish of Chadwell St Mary.
Private libraries appeared during the late republic: Seneca inveighed against libraries fitted out for show by illiterate owners who scarcely read their titles in the course of a lifetime, but displayed the scrolls in bookcases ( armaria ) of citrus wood inlaid with ivory that ran right to the ceiling: " by now, like bathrooms and hot water, a library is got up as standard equipment for a fine house ( domus ).
The Wotojobaluk people of Victoria tell of Totyerguil from the area now known as Swan Hill who ran out of spears while chasing Otchtout the cod.
Consequently Potsdamer Platz S-Bahn station became the most infamous of several Geisterbahnhofe ( ghost stations ), its previously-bustling platforms now decrepit and sealed off from the outside world, patrolled by armed guards and through which trains ran without stopping.
The rivers of the Central Valley ran out to sea through a canyon that is now the Golden Gate.
* 1933 – Salvador Lutteroth ran the first ever EMLL ( now CMLL ) show in Mexico, marking the birth of Lucha Libre
Turner also purchased UHF Channel 36 WRET ( now WCNC ) in Charlotte, North Carolina and ran it with a format similar to WTCG.
Unable to collect the Sun's energy for power from its solar panels, the probe soon died when its batteries ran out and is now derelict in a solar orbit.
As in 1789, George Washington, now president, ran unopposed.
Leopold's regime began undertaking various development projects, such as a railway that ran from the coast to Leopoldville ( now Kinshasa ) which took years to complete.
This great estuary ran through a wooded valley and is now referred to as the Solent River.
The first electric tram in Melbourne was built in 1889 by the Box Hill and Doncaster Tramway Company Limited — an enterprise formed by a group of land developers — and ran from Box Hill railway station along what is now Station Street and Tram Road to Doncaster, using equipment left over from the Centennial International Exhibition of 1888 at the Royal Exhibition Building.
Despite Asser's comment that the dyke ran " from sea to sea ", it is now thought that the original structure only covered about two-thirds of the length of the border: in the north it ends near Llanfynydd, less than five miles ( 8 km ) from the coast, while in the south it stops at Rushock Hill, near Kington in Herefordshire, less than fifty miles ( 80 km ) from the Bristol Channel.
Sports car racing has intermittently been popular in Japan – in the 1960s small-capacity sports racers and even a local version of the Group 7 cars as raced in Can-Am were popular ; a healthy local sports prototype championship ran until the early 1990s and now the Super GT series provides high-budget exposure to manufacturers, with many international drivers appearing.
The three major alignments were the Lower Post Road ( now U. S. Route 1 along the shore via Providence, Rhode Island ), the Upper Post Road ( now US 5 and US 20 from New Haven, Connecticut by way of Springfield, Massachusetts ), and the Middle Post Road ( which diverged from the Upper Road in Hartford, Connecticut and ran northeastward to Boston via Pomfret, Connecticut ).
Flynt attended Salyersville High School ( now Magoffin County High School ) in the ninth grade, however ran away from home and, despite being only 15 years old, joined the United States Army using a counterfeit birth certificate.

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