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was and final
`` No, I don't think so '', said the big man, and it was the final clincher for Ernie.
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.
While the final combat of the campaign was being worked out at Jonesborough, Thomas, on Sherman's instructions, ordered Slocum, now commanding the Twentieth Corps, to make an effort to occupy Atlanta if he could do so without exposing his bridgehead to a counterattack.
In spite of this catastrophe the final mortality figure from disease in the American Army during World War 1, was 15 per 1,000 per year, contrasted with 110 per 1,000 per year in the Mexican War, and 65 in the American Civil War.
In the final analysis his contribution to American historiography was founded on almost intuitive insights into religion, economics, and Darwinism, the three factors which conditioned his search for a law of history.
As it was, his absence because of his final illness was a blow to the administration.
Mrs. Dwyer's husband, M. Joseph Dwyer, was taking a 10-year-old boy from Union County on the tour of the Capitol during the final weeks of the last session.
One had to believe in final events or one was stranded in the abyss of nothing.
Lublin was the seed of action for the `` final solution '' of the Jewish problem.
But after the doctor's return that night Alex could see, from the high window in his own room, the now familiar figure crouched on a truly impressive heap of towels, apparently giving its egg-hatching powers one final chance before it was replaced in its office by a sure-enough hen.
As was said in Gonzales, `` it is the Appeal Board which renders the selective service determination considered ' final ' in the courts, not to be overturned unless there is no basis in fact.
in the sphere was starting buffer and in the cone was final buffer, 0.50 M in both Af and Tris, pH 4.1.
The final sample was not significantly different from a normal distribution in regard to reading achievement or intelligence test scores.
In I wanted to tell him, but I was afraid to the final to is lightly stressed because it represents to tell him.
By these steps the final AIA list was reduced from 8,000 to 3,500.
The final mailing of the questionnaire was made late in August, 1960, to 4,900 firms consisting of 3,450 from the AIA list and 1,450 from the TR list.
Over 1,000 returns were received within two weeks after the final mailing was made.
The final step was a vote for a $230,000 bond issue for the construction of a sewage system by the 1959 town meeting, later confirmed by a two-thirds vote at a special town meeting June 21, 1960.
If Cynewulf was literate, the Beowulf poet may have been also, and so may the final redactor of The Iliad and The Odyssey.
During the year that followed, Dick co-operated whole-heartedly with the dentist and was delighted with the final result achieved -- an upper row of strong straight teeth that completely changed his facial appearance.
The final proof was a small incident.
The Air Force's, and the game's, final play, was a long pass by quarterback Bob McNaughton which Gannon intercepted on his own 44 and returned 22 yards.
Within a week after the injury, suffered in St. Louis's victory in the final game of the Kentucky tournament, Nordmann was sitting on the Bill's bench doing what he could to help Benington.

was and spur
By her eighteenth birthday her bent for writing was so evident that Papa and Mamma gave her a Life Of Dickens as a spur to her aspiration.
And all this too shall pass away: it came to him out of some dim corner of memory from a church service when he was a boy -- yes, in a white church with a thin spur steeple in the patriarchal Hudson Valley, where a feeling of plenitude was normal in those English-Dutch manors with their well-fed squires.
The Title 8, program of the National Defense Education Act of 1958 was a great spur to this trend toward area schools.
In the field of entertainment there is no spur to financial daring so effective as audience boredom, and the first decade of the new device was not over before audiences began staying away in large numbers from the simple-minded, one-minute shows.
A year ago the Negro Radio Association was formed to spur research which the 30-odd member stations are sure will bring in more business.
The temple site was on a low spur of the hill, below the town.
This was a spur to having primarily simple parts to play, and in the case of a resident virtuoso group, a spur to writing spectacular, idiomatic parts for certain instruments, as in the case of the Mannheim orchestra.
The biggest effect of the Channel F in the market was to spur Atari into releasing and improving their next-generation console which was then in development.
" On the ride into battle his spur struck the bridge stone of the Bow Bridge ; legend has it that, as his corpse was being carried from the battle over the back of a horse, his head struck the same stone and was broken open.
In an effort to spur membership, at the June 6, 1876 meeting of Mecca Temple, the Imperial Grand Council of the Ancient Order of the Nobles of the Mystic Shrine for North America was created.
The spice trade was of major economic importance and helped spur the Age of Discovery in Europe.
In 1952, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory was founded to act as Los Alamos ' " competitor ", with the hope that two laboratories for the design of nuclear weapons would spur innovation.
This immense Gothic building, with walls 17 – 18 feet thick, was built 1335 – 1364 on a natural spur of rock, rendering it all but impregnable to attack.
It was intended to spur innovation and provide competition to the nuclear weapon design laboratory at Los Alamos, New Mexico, home of the Manhattan Project that developed the first atomic weapons.
The wartime airfield became Nassau's international airport in 1957 and helped spur the growth of mass tourism, which accelerated after Havana was closed to American tourists in 1961.
During the Battle of Chattanooga in November, under Grant's overall command, Sherman quickly took his assigned target of Billy Goat Hill at the north end of Missionary Ridge, only to discover that it was not part of the ridge at all, but rather a detached spur separated from the main spine by a rock-strewn ravine.
Starting in about 1848 the South Alternate of Oregon Trail ( also called the Snake River Cutoff ) was developed as a spur off the main trail.
Magallan ( 1 species ) was characterised by having winged fruit and Tropaeastrum ( 2 species ) by having no spur while Tropaeolum ( 86 species ) was diagnosed only by the absence of the characteristics of the other two genera.
According to the twelfth century chronicler William of Malmesbury, the abbey was built on a gravel spur " between the rivers Kennet and Thames, on a spot calculated for the reception of almost all who might have occasion to travel to the more populous cities of England ".
The group hoped to spur enough support in order to make the Braves rethink their plans before it was too late to stop the construction process in Gwinnett.

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