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doc#108 | stage of Southern urbanization, such a city | as | Atlanta is not distinctly unlike Columbus |
doc#133 | he had never seen any of them on foot and | as | bad off as these two. </p><p> The girl dropped |
doc#144 | from Curt's fists. </p><p> Curt was in almost | as | bad shape, but he wouldn't quit. He backed |
doc#107 | Washington castigated his critic, General Conway, | as | being capable of "all the meanness of intrigue |
doc#104 | there find that it isn't spooky at all but | as | brilliant as a tile in sunlight. But even |
doc#108 | changing order of the South quite keenly, | as | can be proven by a quick recalling of his |
doc#108 | Yankeefication", as evidenced in such cities | as | Charlotte, Birmingham, and Houston. It |
doc#110 | concept, that they were acting directly | as | citizens. Here are the two Preambles: FEDERAL |
doc#110 | 1821 -- were made by such master moderates | as | Clay and Douglas to resolve the difference |
doc#137 | sleeve of her coat. </p><p> "I'll bet that's | as | close as you've been to a man since you |
doc#146 | third, sounding more distant. </p><p> As near | as | Cobb could determine the shots came from |
doc#107 | loved best, plantation management. He served | as | Commander in Chief during the Revolution |
doc#132 | program with only a 6 percent attrition rate | as | compared with a rate of 59 percent reported |
doc#125 | saline and albumin tests were performed | as | described for the ABO samples except that |
doc#115 | aroused a new vitality in the younger poets, | as | did Byron's Childe Harold. Professor Fredrik |
doc#111 | which will enable us to cope with people | as | effectively as the primitive combination |
doc#107 | took special pains to preserve their papers | as | essential sources for posterity. Their |
doc#23 | special assistant ot the Attorney General, | as | executive director of the new Committee |
doc#132 | Further research in the meaning of crises | as | experienced by the consumers of traditional |
doc#109 | hoops, poles, capes -- which he employed | as | extensions of the body of the dancer, who |