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doc#97 | left eyebrow and a possible sprained knee. | His | losses included his money bag, containing |
doc#100 | even in the presence of Southern friends. | His | assumption seems to be that any such friends |
doc#101 | astonished a nineteenth-century statesman. | His | duty was to his sovereign and to his nation |
doc#102 | thinkers financed by the U. S. Air Force. | His | investigations made him the Paul Revere |
doc#102 | Beallsville, Ohio, is a quiet but impressive man. | His | eyes are steady anchors of the deepest |
doc#102 | are steady anchors of the deepest brown. | His | movements and speech are precise, clear |
doc#102 | Wisman, below, would listen in and act. | His | consoles can give him instant contact with |
doc#103 | He was over six feet tall and very thin. | His | legs were narrow and very long. Every bone |
doc#105 | energetic and conscientious Mr. Steinberg. | His | London contract was rescinded, and now, |
doc#105 | harmony, as well in the violin and piano. | His | professional career began when he was twenty |
doc#107 | high ambition, was a political prodigy. | His | revolutionary pamphlets, published when |
doc#107 | to ratification almost single-handedly. | His | collaboration with Washington, begun when |
doc#107 | first Cabinet as Secretary of the Treasury. | His | bold fiscal program and his broad interpretation |
doc#107 | own state, was epitomized by Washington. | His | first inaugural address speaks of "my country |
doc#110 | without the base alloy of hypocrisy". [ | His | emphasis] </p><p> When the Southern States |
doc#112 | like Godot, he arrived before the hour. | His | letter had suggested we meet at my hotel |
doc#112 | genesis, not to impose himself upon another. | His | light blue eyes, set deep within the face |
doc#112 | with slight inflections from the French. | His | tweed suit was a baggy gray and green. |
doc#112 | that Beckett sees is already shattered. | His | talk turns to what he calls "the mess", |
doc#115 | nearly all the rest of his life in Sweden. | His | cause was to commemorate the glory of her |