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Those and cars
Those who knew him described Shehhi as a very religious and friendly individual who wore western clothes and sometimes rented cars for trips to Berlin, France, and the Netherlands.
Those who cannot afford cars inevitably suffer the worst, because they have no choice but to rely on public transport.
Those who secured membership in this selective party received considerable rewards, such as access to special lower priced shops with a greater selection of goods, special schools, holiday facilities, homes, furniture, works of art and official cars with special white license plates so that police and others could identify these members from a distance.
Those behind the railroads are in trouble not because the need for passenger transportation has declined or even because cars, airplanes, and other modes of transport have filled that need.
Those large companies could afford constant development and styling changes, so that their cars looked fresh every year, whereas the smaller manufacturers could only afford gradual change.
Those lines were run with standard tramway cars.
Those street lights ended up being put up on Free and High streets, making it easier for cars to cross, but causing traffic to back up along Main Street.
Those chassis and spare parts were later also used to build a couple of non-genuine, so-called bitsa cars.
Those who do drive only black cars, like the Markham-Waterloo Mennonite Conference.
Those codes also distinguish the gearboxes and steering components which are not greasable on later cars, so cutting first-user servicing costs.
Those used in sports cars are usually " transparent " to the driver ; there is no shifter or select lever.
Those who were ticketed sued the city for the damage and the police had to itemise everything in the cars.
Those cars are asked to return to the strip for an additional timed run to ensure there is no sandbagging.
Those built in 1907 were the last BU cars ever built.
Those cars tend to be noisy and feature cost cuttings like:
Those R-body cars included the Chrysler Newport, Chrysler New Yorker, and Dodge St. Regis, but no Plymouth version that year.
Those lines were purely built for its passenger / freight service, and " drivers " pushed small train cars all the way.
Those few trips which operate through all the way from the airport to Hillsboro, and vice-versa, are marked in printed public schedules as " blue " trips ( shaded in blue ) on their Blue Line portions, and the MAX cars display blue signs over most of the trip.
Those cars are extremely rare nowadays.
There are two varieties of Vehicon: Those that transform into Earth muscle cars, and those that become Cybertronian jet fighters ; the latter are more frequently seen.
Those who had cars filled them to capacity for the " trip to lunch ", and the other students walked.
Those who were asked the question with " smashed " as the verb said the cars were moving faster than those who were asked the same question with the verb " hit.
Those ten cars were originally numbered 201 – 210, but were renumbered 501 – 510 in 1905 and kept those numbers for the remainder of their working lives, which ended in 1950 with the abandonment of Portland's last three city streetcar lines.

Those and are
Those three other great activities of the Persians, the bath, the teahouse, and the zur khaneh ( the latter a kind of club in which a leader and a group of men in an octagonal pit move through a rite of calisthenics, dance, chanted poetry, and music ), do not take place in buildings to which entrance tickets are sold, but some of them occupy splendid examples of Persian domestic architecture: long, domed, chalk-white rooms with daises of turquoise tile, their end walls cut through to the orchards and the sky by open arches.
Those who are sexually liberated can become creatively alive and free, their instincts put at the service of the imagination.
Those who are sexual deviants are naturally drawn to join the beatniks.
Those who are insecure fear to be candid in self-examination.
Those who do have occasion to deal with the invasions in a more general way, like T.W. Shore and Arthur Wade-Evans, are on the side of a gradual and often peaceful Germanic penetration into Britain.
Those that are available shed little light.
Those who are too weak, should climb on the chair and, starting at the top of the chin, let themselves slowly down.
`` Those are the things I can do, now that I'm set up ''.
Those are the nectaries or honey glands ( Fig. 26, page 74 ).
Those modern scholars who urge that we must keep in mind the fundamental continuity of Aegean development from earliest times -- granted occasional irruptions of peoples and ideas from outside -- are correct ; ;
Those whom I wish to address with this letter are for the most part unknown to me.
Those that remain are those that were headed by strong executives, men with the abilities to last almost 30 years in the competitive survival of the fittest.
Those illustrated are reminiscent of a circus top or a merry-go-round.
Those who have served as faculty advisers are too familiar with the useful but artificial mechanisms of student government to be taken in by `` busy-work '' and ersatz decision making.
Those who favor placing trade unions under anti-trust laws imply that they are advocating a brand new reform.
Those who transfer their membership are no exception to the rule.
Those arguments are presented in written briefs and sometimes in oral argument to the court at a hearing.
Those either are not found in proteins ( for example carnitine, GABA ), or are not produced directly and in isolation by standard cellular machinery ( for example, hydroxyproline and selenomethionine ).
Those that target protein synthesis ( aminoglycosides, macrolides, and tetracyclines ) are usually bacteriostatic.
Those listed as " closed " are only for those with " a desire to stop drinking ", while " open " meetings are available to anyone.
Supporters of this view believe that “ to a hypothetical outside reader, presents Christianity as enlightened, harmless, even beneficent .” Some believe that through this work, Luke intended to show the Roman Empire that the root of Christianity is within Judaism so that the Christians “ may receive the same freedom to practice their faith that the Roman Empire afforded the Jews .” Those who support the view of Luke ’ s work as political apology generally draw evidence from the facts that Christians are found innocent of committing any political crime ( Acts 25: 25 ; 19: 37 ; 19: 40 ) and that Roman officials ’ views towards Christians are generally positive.

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