There was almost another today, AMAIN with ALEE, but they missed by a couple of rows.
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"The death toll may rise and rise," said Abdikadir Admen, the director of the privately-run Amain ambulance service.
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Amain Berhane better known as Berhana is an American singer-songwriter.
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They on the hill, which were not yet come to blows, perceiving the fewness of their enemies, came down amain.
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Amain Berhane was born near Atlanta, Georgia in an Ethiopian family. Growing up, he wrote songs and sang in church. He studied screenwriting at The New School in New York City, and there started to realize music was something he wanted to pursue more seriously. His self-titled EP was self-released in 2016.
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56) > One wind there is: ten sailors row amain > Two vessels, and one steersman steers the twain. (xiv.14) > I am a black child sprung from a bright sire, > A wingless bird, fleeting to heaven from earth. > Each eye that meets me weeps, but not from grief, > And in thin air I vanish at my birth. (xiv.5) > A blackened lump am I-and fire begat me: > My mother was a tree on mountain steep.
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O Christ, the Lord of hill and plain O'er which our traffic runs amain By mountain pass or valley low; Wherever, Lord, thy brethren go, Protect them by thy guarding hand From every peril on the land. O Spirit, whom the Father sent To spread abroad the firmament; O Wind of heaven, by thy might Save all who dare the eagle's flight, And keep them by thy watchful care From every peril in the air. O Trinity of love and power, Our brethren shield in danger's hour; From rock and tempest, fire and foe, Protect them whereso'er they go, Thus evermore shall rise to thee Glad praise from air and land and sea.
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The Chattahoochee River rises in what used to be Habersham County, as portrayed in Sidney Lanier's poem "Song of the Chattahoochee": :Out of the hills of Habersham, :Down the valleys of Hall, :I hurry amain to reach the plain, :Run the rapid and leap the fall, :Split at the rock and together again. The county, originally comprising much of Northeast Georgia, was cut up dramatically in the latter half of the 19th century and the first years of the 20th century; as population increased in the area, new counties were organized from it and borders were changed. In 1857, its most western part was added to Lumpkin County, which had been created in 1832. That same year, the area east of Lumpkin and west of present-day Habersham became White County.
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