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Page "belles_lettres" ¶ 869
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Yet and no
Yet we no longer feel uneasy.
Yet your editorial said: `` Now the Attorney General writes that no considerations ' justify any loss of revenue of this proportion ' ''.
Yet although the Kennedy Administration, and the Eisenhower Administration before it, have both declared themselves solidly for repeal of the Connally amendment, as contrary to our best interests, no action has yet been taken.
Yet no detail was too small to receive attention from this master, and as a result the playing here has humor, delicacy, and radiant humanity.
Yet actually `` the image corresponded in no way to the actualities of the post-war world.
Yet, in summarizing a series of careful essays on the Yalta Conference, Forrest Pogue could find no basis for Yalta becoming `` a symbol for betrayal and a shibboleth for the opponents of Roosevelt and international cooperation ''.
Yet adequate compensation -- and particularly merely adequate compensation is no substitute for those intangibles which cause a man to sacrifice part of his earning potential by taking up college teaching in the first place.
Yet it seems clear that there can be no good sufficiently great, or evil repelled sufficiently grave, to warrant the destruction of mankind by man's own action.
Yet in its position statement, the IDF writes that " there is no overwhelming evidence to prefer one species of insulin over another " and " highly purified animal insulins remain a perfectly acceptable alternative.
Yet heart problems often produce no symptoms until very advanced, and many symptoms, such as palpitations and sensations of extra or missing heart beats correlate poorly with relative heart health vs disease.
Yet, most importantly, the observer has no influence on the specific element of the world that becomes reality.
Yet it also made clear that the plot was in no way official and that any activity centred on a small group of discontented officers.
Yet now that he, Hengist, no longer doubts the death of Vortimer, Hengist submits himself and his people to the will of Vortigern, so that he will accept whomever Vortigern likes among his men, and send the rest back to Germania.
Yet another Latin designation for this law is tertium non datur: " no third ( possibility ) is given ".
Yet such was the authority of this wanton, that no man dared fall out with his successful rival ; he was only too happy to be allowed to visit as a familiar friend ," Saint-Simon wrote.
Yet there were no legal documents describing its powers or acknowledging its existence.
Yet at the report of a gun or the too near approach of the visitor, they dart down and are seen no more till the cause of alarm seems to have disappeared.
Yet, Freud's text is in no way a psycho-historical work since the focus of the study is to examine and explain the level of individual psyche which may arise from the influence of the structures of civilization.
Yet there was no attempt to establish a permanent presence in the area until the Middle Kingdom ( c. 2100-1720 BC ), when Egypt constructed a network of forts along the Nile as far south as Samnah, in southern Egypt, to guard the flow of gold from mines in Wawat.
Yet the Air Force and military planners were, in the mid-1950s, reluctant to simply hand over the nuclear strike capability to missiles, which after launch were no longer under positive control, could not be recalled or redirected, and would reach their targets within a matter of minutes after the order to fire.
Yet Adorno's intellectual nonconformism was no less shaped by the repugnance he felt towards the nationalism which swept through the Reich during the First World War.
Yet his reservations about twelve-tone orthodoxy became steadily more pronounced: According to Adorno, twelve-tone technique's use of atonality can no more be regarded as an authoritative canon than can tonality be relied on to provide instructions for the composer.
Yet Adorno was no less moved by other public events: protesting the publication of Heinrich Mann's novel Professor Unrat with its film title, The Blue Angel ; declaring his sympathy with those who protested the scandal of big-game hunting and penning a defense of prostitutes.
Yet the delegates were worried that each elector would only favor his own state's favorite son candidate, resulting in deadlocked elections that would produce no winners.

Yet and leader
Yet to another Menshevik leader, Fyodor Dan, he confided that Stalin became " the man to whom the Party granted its confidence " and " is a sort of a symbol of the Party " even though he " is not a man, but a devil.
Yet almost immediately upon their exile, Lehi is commanded by God to send his sons back to Jerusalem to retrieve the brass plates, a record similar to the Old Testament which was owned by Laban, a powerful leader in Jerusalem.
Yet his flint-faced, unprepossessing ways and terse rural speech proved politically attractive: " That Yankee twang will be worth a hundred thousand votes ", explained one Republican leader.
Yet she was an imaginative child and a natural leader who became interested in theatre at an early age.
Yet another version claims that Qi killed Bo Yi and usurped his position as leader.
Yet it was as a leader of Irish Nationalism that Parnell established his fame.
He was an excellent policymaker but he needed a strong leader to restrain him .... Yet Vogel had vision.
Yet Curzon — General Sir Herbert Curzon by this time — is not a brutal man or an uncaring one: simply a brave and honest but stubborn and unimaginative leader.
However, " inherent to butch-femme relationships was the presumption that the butch is the physically active partner and the leader in lovemaking .... Yet unlike the dynamics of many heterosexual relationships, the butch's foremost objective was to give sexual pleasure to a femme.
Yet Wightman was a well-respected business man and community leader, whose zeal for his faith and freedom of expression brought him in direct conflict with the religious establishment led by King James I.
Yet, a government derived from charismatic legitimacy might continue if the charismatic leader has a successor.
Yet critics claim the public record celebrating Morris as a suffrage leader is wrong.
Yet another Arnold Winkelried, sometimes conflated with the aforementioned, was a notorious mercenary leader during the first quarter of the 16th century.
Yet despite the estrangement of the Whitmer family, there is little evidence that any of the Eight Witnesses denied his testimony to the authenticity of Book of Mormon or the golden plates — although one third-hand source, the former Mormon leader Stephen Burnett, said in 1838 that Martin Harris had told him that " the eight witnesses never saw plates & hesitated to sign that instrument for that reason, but were persuaded to do it.
Yet, Montoneros killed notable persons who were not guilty of violence against the people ( such as Arturo Mor Roig, the architect of the 1973 democratic transition, and labor union leader José Ignacio Rucci ).

Yet and had
Yet had he not visited the girl at Saw Buck he would never have been involved in this latest tangle.
Yet often fear persists because, even with the most rigid ritual, one is never quite free from the uneasy feeling that one might make some mistake or that in every previous execution one had been unaware of the really decisive act.
Yet, after Rousseau had given the social contract a new twist with his notion of the General Will, the same philosophy, it may be said, became the idea source of the French Revolution also.
Yet General Suvorov -- who had never forgotten hearing his adored Czarina declare that all truly great men had oddities -- was mad only north, northwest.
Yet, the idea imbedded in each was identical: to surround the unknown with mystery and to isolate that class which had been given special dominion over the secrets of God.
Yet this scream had a different note in it.
Yet Maude had suggested that Sarah return to New York.
Yet with all this knowledge I had nothing of substance to unravel our case, as you would call it, till yesterday.
Yet when the dear baby came, he had Tillie over here in a jiffy, and was as attentive and sweet and worried and happy when it was all over as any husband could have been.
Yet the whole of Anne was something she had never learned in any college.
Yet that had not seriously troubled him, not then.
Yet he knew the others were sleeping more soundly, now that they had renewed their contact with the matter that had birthed them to send them riding high vacuum.
Yet this quaint dandified little man who, I was sorry to see, now limped badly, had been in his time one of the most celebrated members of the Belgian police.
Yet there were a few recruits, such as Clement Davies, who had deserted to the National Liberals in 1931 but now returned to the party during the World War II and who would lead it after the war.
Yet it had been the capital of the state for over a thousand years, and it might have seemed unthinkable to suggest that the capital be moved to a different location.
Yet, given that Pliny had not heard the word directly from a Cimbric informant, it cannot be ruled out that the word is in fact Gaulish instead.
Yet he also put forward arguments that suggested that polytheism had much to commend it in preference to monotheism.
Yet already Husserl had felt the desire to pursue philosophy.
Yet, when a distinction is made, Epipaleolithic is used for those cultures that were not much affected by the ending of the Ice Age ( like the Natufian and Khiamian cultures of Western Asia ) and the term Mesolithic is reserved for Western Europe where the extinction of the Megafauna had a great impact on the Paleolithic populations at the end of the Ice Age ( like European post-glacial cultures: Azilian, Sauveterrian, Tardenoisian, Maglemosian, etc.
Yet, writer Gore Vidal, in his autobiography Point to Point Navigation, recounted that Gable demanded that Cukor be fired off Wind because, according to Cukor, the young Gable had been a male hustler and Cukor had been one of his johns.
Yet, the extremely bloody battles of Ramillies ( 1706 ) and Malplaquet ( 1709 ) proved to be Pyrrhic victories for the allies, as they had lost too many men to continue the war.

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