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Saxton and was
Saxton has made only one second-half appearance this season and that was in the Washington State game, for four plays: he returned the kickoff 30 yards, gained five yards through the line and then uncorked a 56-yard touchdown run before retiring to the bench.
The first steam-grist mill was erected in 1856 by Saxton and Casil.
The first steam-grist mill was erected in 1856 by Saxton and Casil.
Saxton was the home of the Huntingdon and Broad Top Railroad ( H & BT ).
The railroad was the life blood of the town, and the Saxton grew up around it.
More recently, Saxton was also the site of the Saxton Nuclear Generating Station, the nation's 4th nuclear power plant, which has since been dismantled.
In 1592 Bingley was shown on a map by Yorkshire map-maker Christopher Saxton as a single street with about 20 houses on each side.
It has always been commented that the reason that Saxton got the nod was because of his ties with the underworld.
He was treated by a Professor of Medicine at UCSF, Saxton T. Pope.
According to the Revenge of the Sith Incredible Cross-sections by Dr. Curtis Saxton, and according to the film's visual dictionary, Itchy was involved in the Battle of Kashyyyk as a gunner aboard an Oevvaor jet catamaran in the defense of Kachirho during the Battle of Kashyyyk.
Plath was writing the novel under the sponsorship of the Eugene F. Saxton Fellowship, affiliated with publisher Harper & Row, but they were disappointed by the manuscript and withdrew, calling it, “ disappointing, juvenile, and overwrought .” Early working titles of the novel included Diary of a Suicide and The Girl in the Mirror.
Ida Saxton McKinley ( June 8, 1847 – May 26, 1907 ), wife of William McKinley, was First Lady of the United States from 1897 to 1901.
Ida was born in Canton, Ohio, the elder daughter of James Saxton, prominent Canton banker, and Katherine DeWalt.
In the United States House elections, 2006, Saxton was challenged by Democrat Rich Sexton, a lawyer and U. S. Navy veteran from Mount Laurel.
Saxton was widely praised across South Jersey for his efforts to remove Fort Dix from the Pentagon's base realignment and closure lists in 1989 and 1991, McGuire Air Force Base from the list in 1993, and Lakehurst Naval Air Station from the list in 1995.
Saxton was also supportive of some gay rights measures, including the Employment Non-Discrimination Act and hate crimes bills.
" Brigadier General Rufus Saxton, an abolitionist from Massachusetts, was appointed by Sherman to oversee the settling of the freed slaves.
It was established in 1895 by Seattle's five Grand Army of the Republic posts ( Stevens Post # 1, Miller Post # 31, Cushing Post # 56, Saxton Post # 103, and Green Lake # 112 ) on land donated by Huldah and David Kaufman, two of the first Jews in Seattle, having arrived there in 1869.
It was from this meeting that the McKinley National Memorial Association was formed and Theodore Roosevelt chose the first Board of Trustees, with recommendations from the President's widow, Ida Saxton McKinley.
By November 16 the cornerstone was laid in an official ceremony attended by the former First Lady, Ida Saxton McKinley, and other family members.
According to the Clerical Guide Crowe was also rector until his death at Llanymynech in Denbighshire, from 1805, and incumbent of Saxton in Yorkshire, valued at about £ 80 a year, from the same date.
Noble's first and second sons George and Saxton became successively second and third baronets, while his third son John Noble, also involved with Armstrongs, was created a Baronet in his own right in 1923.

Saxton and town
The first town officials were selected, including town supervisor Reuben Deyo, justices of the peace Silas Saxton, John B. Howell, and John L. Deyo, with Hasbrouck Lefevre as town clerk.
The town appears as Dauentre on the Christopher Saxton map of 1637.

Saxton and several
On May 26, 2006, Saxton reported hearing a loud gunfire-type noise in the Rayburn House Office Building that led to the building being shut down for several hours.

Saxton and people
Officially founded in 1855 by James Saxton, Saxton has been home to people for many years.

Saxton and .
* Pope, Saxton ( 1925 ) Hunting with the Bow and Arrow New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons
* 1847 – Ida Saxton McKinley, American wife of William McKinley, 25th First Lady of the United States ( d. 1907 )
* 1941 – Catherine P. Saxton, English-American public relations executive
* 1907 – Ida Saxton McKinley, American wife of William McKinley, 25th First Lady of the United States ( b. 1847 )
( In three sequels by Mark Saxton, including The Islar ( 1969 ), below.
* May 26 – Ida Saxton McKinley, American First Lady ( b. 1847 )
* June 8 – Ida Saxton McKinley, U. S. First Lady ( d. 1907 )
Gen. Rufus Saxton, an abolitionist from Massachusetts who had previously directed the recruitment of black soldiers, to implement that plan.
New York City, New York: Saxton & Miles.
Shopkeepers Daniel and Saxton Miner in Milltown owned the sole other vehicle mentioned, a “ carriage on springs .” Nine leading citizens, including Elias Sanford Palmer and Thomas Prentice, also possessed another status symbol: clocks with “ steel and brass parts .” Serving not just the thirst of the townspeople but also of the many millworkers were nine taverns, five of which were connected with stores.
* Jim Saxton ( born 1943 ), former representative from.
The Township Council President is Angela R. Garretson, the Council Vice President is President Carlisle, Jr. and Frank Deo all members ( at-large ) the wards are represented by Tonia Hobbs ( Ward 1 ), Salonia Saxton ( Ward 2 ), Donald DeAugustine ( Ward 3 ) and Gerald Freedman ( Ward 4 ).
Saxton is a borough in Bedford County, Pennsylvania, United States.
Saxton is located at ( 40. 214584 ,-78. 245241 ).

was and once
It was hotter once they reached the flat, and drier, but the grass was better.
Its front was windowless, but irregularities in the masonry might be an indication that windows, now blinded, had once looked out upon the street.
I was at once disappointed, although just what I had expected him to look like I could not have explained.
I found a trooper once the Apache had spread-eagled on an ant hill, and another time we ran across some teamsters they'd caught, tied upside down on their own wagon wheels over little fires until their brains was exploded right out o' their skulls.
At once my ears were drowned by a flow of what I took to be Spanish, but -- the driver's white teeth flashing at me, the road wildly veering beyond his glistening hair, beyond his gesticulating bottle -- it could have been the purest Oxford English I was half hearing ; ;
He caught up with me once and grabbed me, but I was all covered with zing -- it's very slippery, you know ''.
The lad's once superb body was a mass of scars and welts.
Being somewhat delicate in health, at the age of sixteen he was sent to Southern Europe, for which he at once developed a passion, so that he spent nearly all of the following ten years abroad, at first in Italy, then in Greece, Egypt, Asia Minor, and Palestine.
She was pious, too, once kneeling through the night from Holy Thursday to Good Friday, despite the protest of the nuns that this was too much for a young girl.
In his fight for the Illinois and Indiana delegations, Hearst made several trips to Chicago to confer with Andrew Lawrence, the former San Francisco Examiner man who was now his Chicago kingpin, and once to meet with Bryan.
There was a battle on an average of once every three weeks.
In a letter to Meynell, which was written in June, less than a month before Katie's wedding, he was highly melodramatic in his despair and once again announced his intention of returning to the life of the streets: ``
Meynell once again paid his debts and it was Katie, rather than Thompson, whose life was soon ended, for she died in childbirth in April, 1901, in the first year of her marriage.
the pope was playing a dangerous game, with so many balls in the air at once that a misstep would bring them all about his ears, and his only hope was to temporize so that he could take advantage of every change in the delicate balance of European affairs.
To the Weston house came once William Allen Neilson, the president of Smith College who had been one of my old professors and who still called me `` Boy '' when I was sixty.
and once when he came to see us in New York he walked away in a rainstorm, unwilling to hear of a taxi or even an umbrella, although he was at the time ninety years old.
Lewis was spending his mornings, with the help of two secretaries, on the galleys of that long novel, making considerable revisions, and the combination of hard work and hard frivolity exhausted him once more, so that he was compelled to spend three days in the Harbor Sanatorium in the last week of January.
He is said to have reported that once, when she went to a hospital to call on a friend after a serious operation, and the friend protested that it had been `` nothing '', she replied, `` Well, it was your healthy American peasant blood that pulled you through ''.
Milton was to act as the archfool, the supreme wit, the lightly bantering pater, Pater Liber, who could at once trip lightly over that which deserved such treatment, or could at will annihilate the common enemies of the college gathering, and with words alone.

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