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Examples
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Rumsfeld, temporarily in an office in the Executive Office Building, noted that he had met the day before "at approximately 5 p.m." with his pal Dick Cheney, then a presidential assistant, and others "to assist me in starting the move into Haig's old office" in the West Wing.
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Seems the safe had not been opened during Haig's tenure.
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"[T] he narrative is skimpy and redundant, perilously cute and clogged with anticipations of Haig's Shakespeare-inflected The Dead Fathers Club ... by no means a failure, but Aesop and Orwell did it better."
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There is no disputing, however, that Mr. Haig's dramatic talents are fit for a king.
The Witty Madness of David Haig's George III Is Fit for a King Elizabeth Fitzherbert 2011
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The Dead Fathers Club was Haig's next book to be published.
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Rumsfeld, temporarily in an office in the Executive Office Building, noted that he had met the day before "at approximately 5 p.m." with his pal Dick Cheney, then a presidential assistant, and others "to assist me in starting the move into Haig's old office" in the West Wing.
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Alice Haig's no-less winning Celia tags along behind with a basket of fruit appropriate to her gooseberry-like presence.
As You Like It Alfred Hickling 2010
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Henry Goodman is a silky, saturnine Sir Humphrey; every seam of David Haig's garments appears to be splitting under the pressure of his prime ministerial tension.
Birdsong; On Ageing; The Big Fellah; Yes, Prime Minister Susannah Clapp 2010
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Seems the safe had not been opened during Haig's tenure.
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But Mr. Haig's strength lies in his power to evoke both laughter and tears simultaneously, often defusing the most intense scenes with a wry humor.
The Witty Madness of David Haig's George III Is Fit for a King Elizabeth Fitzherbert 2011
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