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Examples
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Through tremendous force of will (and no small amount of fortune) Robert has endured long enough to finish that book -- a novel called Humping Credenzas With The Late Bobby Kennedy: A Convict's True Account, which was released today through Wyatt-MacKenzie Publishing, and is available here through Amazon. com.
Zac Hill: Searching for Bobby Kennedy: Health Care and the Moral Imperative
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Through tremendous force of will (and no small amount of fortune) Robert has endured long enough to finish that book -- a novel called Humping Credenzas With The Late Bobby Kennedy: A Convict's True Account, which was released today through Wyatt-MacKenzie Publishing, and is available here through Amazon. com.
Zac Hill: Searching for Bobby Kennedy: Health Care and the Moral Imperative
-
Through tremendous force of will (and no small amount of fortune) Robert has endured long enough to finish that book -- a novel called Humping Credenzas With The Late Bobby Kennedy: A Convict's True Account, which was released today through Wyatt-MacKenzie Publishing, and is available here through Amazon. com.
Zac Hill: Searching for Bobby Kennedy: Health Care and the Moral Imperative
-
Through tremendous force of will (and no small amount of fortune) Robert has endured long enough to finish that book -- a novel called Humping Credenzas With The Late Bobby Kennedy: A Convict's True Account, which was released today through Wyatt-MacKenzie Publishing, and is available here through Amazon. com.
Zac Hill: Searching for Bobby Kennedy: Health Care and the Moral Imperative
-
Through tremendous force of will (and no small amount of fortune) Robert has endured long enough to finish that book -- a novel called Humping Credenzas With The Late Bobby Kennedy: A Convict's True Account, which was released today through Wyatt-MacKenzie Publishing, and is available here through Amazon. com.
Zac Hill: Searching for Bobby Kennedy: Health Care and the Moral Imperative
-
[410] The Convict's Address to his Unhappy Brethren: Being a Sermon preached by the Rev.Dr. Dodd, Friday, June 6, 1777, in the Chapel of Newgate, while under sentence of death, for forging the name of the Earl of Chesterfield on a bond for L4,200.
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The Convict's Address to his unhappy Brethren was of his own writing [470].
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Cleveland, recited an original poem, "The Convict's Mother," with marked effect.
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Convict's parents to testify in home invasion case
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[867] Johnson, in _The Convict's Address_ (_ante_, p. 141), makes Dodd say: -- 'Possibly it may please God to afford us some consolation, some secret intimations of acceptance and forgiveness.
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