Word: porches
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Only Suspect. San Francisco police found a blood-stained claw hammer and a pair of bloody scissors, along with a bloodstained shirt and pair of slacks, in a cardboard box on the porch of Eben's apartment. Eben, police believe, argued with his sister over $5,000 that was due her shortly from her mother's estate, saying that he wanted the money to go to Spain. The police theorize that when she refused him the money, he killed her. "Eben Gossage is our only suspect at this point," said Homicide Inspector Kenneth Mannly. Grim argues that...
...also so worried about making some kind of directorial comment that he isn't content with just creating fantasy--he fusses with it so much that the end product is often confusing and unintentionally funny. Marie-Ange, a beautiful child of about sixteen, is sitting on the porch talking with Emmanuelle--they're both swinging lazily in hanging wicker seats--about the evils of sexual repression. As a demonstration of how to be otherwise. Marie-Ange casually picks up a magazine, leafs through it, and to Emmanuelle's consternation, just as casually begins to masturbate. When she finishes, a minute...
...that black kid visit. A place where in some countries they didn't even need draft boards during the war because young men were enlisting like Tennessee volunteers; where eight-year-olds with distorted inbred faces and rifles in their hands stare blankly at the cars from a porch fronting a house with no plumbing, may be a TV. Where Jock Yablonski ran for president of the UMWA and got himself, his wife and his daughter murdered in their beds for it. And where things haven't changed since a long time ago when coal companies from Pittsburgh...
...young man began to calculate. That meant there would be no privileged entrée to the President, long one of the rituals of real influence. Anybody wanting to see Gerald Ford would have to enter his office from the corridors or the secretary's office or the porch, all doorways monitored and barred except by previous arrangement. It was a device to discourage empire builders or any staff man who felt he could occupy the presidential...
...grilling, although Ehrlichman may have elicited some sympathy from the jury earlier in an emotional recitation of his final days in the Nixon Administration. On questioning by his lawyer, William Prates, Ehrlichman recalled being summoned to Camp David on the afternoon of April 29, 1973. There, on a cabin porch, Nixon told him he must resign. Ehrlichman said Nixon found this chore "very painful" and even "broke down at one point and cried." Nixon offered him money for legal fees and "anything else he could do for me." All Ehrlichman wanted, he testified, was for Nixon some day "to explain...