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Page "Major Victory (DC Comics)" ¶ 15
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Beyond the stockade rifles began to explode as some of the guerrillas fired at shadows that they imagined were Apaches.
This time Lewis had his own rifle in his hands, and he threw some answering fire back at the mysterious far-off shot, then spent most of the day searching out the area.
Haying time was close at hand, and they needed some strong branches to repair a hay rack.
`` Gyp'll be holdin' forth in some bar if he's here at all '', Cobb declared, glancing along the street as they stretched their legs.
We made a rendezvous tomorrow evening at nine on some street near Lake Ponchartrain.
For a brief period each year, the rays of the sun are warm enough to melt some of the snows piled a mile deep at the base of the headwalls, and then the pinnacles glisten in the daytime at high noon, and billions of gallons of water begin their slow seepage under the glaciers and across the rockstrewn hanging valleys on their long, meandering journey to the sea -- running east past the sky-carving massifs of Gurla Mandhata and Kemchenjunga, then turning south and curling down through the jungles of Assam, past the Khasi Hills, and into Bengal, past Sirinjani and Madaripur, until the hard water of the melting snows mingles with the soft drainage of fields and at length fans out to meld with the teeming salt depths of the Bay of Bengal.
Once ( this was on the third day of school ) she kneeled down to pick up some books where they'd dropped on the floor and Jack looked up her dress -- at the bare expanse of incredibly white leg.
By subduing disparate lesser groups the nation has, to some degree at least, broadened the capacity for individual liberty.
There has probably always been a bridge of some sort at the southeastern corner of the city.
And yet we obviously also believe that the avoidance of the disaster depends in some obscure or at least uncertain way on the details of how we behave.
There are, however, some wonderful chapters at the beginning of the second part, concerning the reactions of the Swedes in adversity.
But I have been at some pains to review it as the drama of the common man, to point up what happened to him under Eisenhower's leadership.
He opens his discourse, however, with a review of the Eisenhower inaugural festivities at which a sympathetic press had assembled its massive talents, all primed to catch some revelation of the emerging new age.
Actually, you could wish for some passion, now and then, but when you look around the world and see the little volcanos of current history which partisan social passions have wrought, you are glad that in these pamphlets there is at least some civilized calm.
We feel uncomfortable at being bossed by a corporation or a union or a television set, but until we have some knowledge about these phenomena and what they are doing to us, we can hardly learn to control them.
Ptolemy's problem is to forecast where, against the inverted bowl of night, some particular light will be found at future times.
You probably would not remember, since you never seemed to remember even the same moments as I, much less their intensity, one sunny midday on Fifth Avenue when you had set out with me for some final shopping less than a week before the wedding you staged for me with such reluctance at the Farm.
In The Publick Spirit of the Whigs, it may be noted, Swift himself contemptuously dismissed Steele's reference to his friend at court: `` I suppose by the Style of old Friend, and the like, it must be some Body there of his own Level ; ;
While I was sitting at one of the rewrite telephones with my derby and my great beard, Arthur Brisbane whizzed in with some editorial copy in his hand.
The discussion is therefore limited to a suggested procedure for realizing at least some of the potential importance of this volume for future policy.
In looking back over the volumes, it is possible to find errors of interpretation, some of which were not so evident at the time of writing.
As I got off the trolley at Kehl bridge the next morning, I was met by what looked like 5,000 students, some of whom were carrying sticks apparently for the coming `` battle '' with the police.

at and point
She had reached a point at which she didn't even care how she looked.
My future lay solely with the hall, yet what did I know about the hall at this point??
And he missed the point that the swarthy witches might be laughing at him for hoping to escape Nicolas Manas.
The RAF was Britain's weapon of attrition, and flying a fighter plane was the way her sons could serve her best at this point in the war.
Taking aim at the man's face, Matsuo squeezed the trigger up to the point of discharge, and then he changed his mind.
And this occurs now, at the refrain of Jacoby's song -- at the point, in fact, of the name `` Lizzy '' -- ; ;
With regard to the change we are examining, the question is, at what point does the change become irreversible??
It was symbolized ( at least for those of us who recognized ourselves in the image ) by that self-consuming, elegiac candle of Edna St. Vincent Millay's, that candle which from the quatrain where she ensconced it became a beacon to us, but which in point of fact would have had to be as tall as a funeral taper to last even the evening, let alone the night.
The preliminaries ended with the publication of Steele's Crisis on January 19, and from that point on the fight proceeded at a rapid pace.
Some historians have found his point of view not to their taste, others have complained that he makes the Tory tradition appear `` contemptible rather than intelligible '', while a sympathetic critic has remarked that the `` intricate interplay of social dynamics and political activity of which, at times, politicians are the ignorant marionettes is not a field for the exercise of his talents ''.
It was at this point that Pike decided to capitalize on the bad feelings between the two men.
But it would not be very satisfactory to leave our conclusions at the point just reached.
He smoked, as did everybody, and imbibed the various alcoholic beverages of that day, although his protestations while at Cambridge and after that he was no drunkard point to reasonable abstinence from the wild drinking bouts of some of the undergraduates and, we must add, of some of their elders including many of the regents or teachers.
Only '' a New York hick would expect to find the literary life in Greenwich Village, at any point, later than Walt Whitman's day.
There was a pretty thorough silence at that point.
He can ( 1 ) point his car resolutely at the invading fender and force the other driver back into Lane A ; ;
Of course, this isn't taking into consideration the population of Nevada and New York city, but it's the way things look from here at this point.
It is perfectly conceivable that a resumption of atmospheric tests may, at some point in the future, be necessary and even justifiable.
If he were to go with White, he would be out there two days, not just listening in the dark at some point between here and Papa-san, but moving ever deeper into enemy land -- behind Papa-san -- itself.
At 2130 hours they had passed through the barbed wire at the point of departure.
He felt himself now, as he himself says in his Confessions, at a crucial point of his life.
Mr. Speaker, I ask unanimous consent that all Members who desire to do so may extend their remarks at this point in the record ; ;
Of these states the average `` change-over '' point ( at which a car is substituted for allowances ) is 13,200 miles per year.

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