atwater in A Sentence

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    Atwater asked Ellis why he opposed integration.

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    Maybe Atwater was the inside man.

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    Agent Atwater was working with us for months.

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    Then Ellis asked Atwater why she worked so hard to improve housing for blacks.

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    As we know, Lee Atwater and Roger Ailes came up with the Willie Horton ad.

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    Atwater once lurched toward Ellis with a knife and had to be held back by her friends.

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    7

    The first convention I attended was in 1918 at Atwater, Ohio, a few miles from Alliance.

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    Similarly, Atwater and Ellis spent ten days in a public charrette before they finally came to understand and appreciate each other.

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    Rare but valuable examples such as Atwater and Ellis show us how we can use philosophical tools to reduce political polarization.

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    10

    Similarly, Atwater and Ellis arranged meetings with each other in order to figure out how to work together in the charrette.

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    11

    Similarly, Atwater and Ellis spent 10 days in a public charrette before they finally came to understand and appreciate each other.

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    Rare but valuable examples such as Atwater and Ellis show us how we can use philosophical tools to reduce political polarisation.

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    13

    He said:“I used to think that Ann Atwater was the meanest black woman I would ever seen in my life. ….

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    14

    First, we should not give up on trying to reach extremists, such as Atwater and Ellis, despite how hard it is.

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    Atwater and Ellis spent eight hours a day for ten days in a charrette before they finally came to understand and appreciate each other.

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    16

    For instance,“atte” meant“at the,” and has since been shortened to“at” in cases like Atwood or Atwater, which means the family likely lived near the woods or a river at some point.

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    17

    And if Atwater and Ellis had not asked each other questions, they never would have learned that what they both cared about the most was their children and alleviating the frustrations of poverty.

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    18

    If Atwater and Ellis had merely asserted their views and assumed that they already understood each other, then they never would have learned that they both cared about their children and were frustrated by their poverty.

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    19

    Despite their mutual hatred, when courts ordered Durham to integrate their public schools, Atwater and Ellis were pressured into co-chairing a charrette- a series of public discussions that lasted eight hours per day for 10 days in July 1971- about how to implement integration.

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