Dhofar Liberation guerillas. 16. I’m a cop, and there’s only one side
III. А.
1. The room was empty and, unusually, moisture dimmed his eyes. 2. Momentarily, Tanya lost her poise. 3. He was uncomfortably aware of a nervous constriction in his throat. 4. Oddly, Leesburg was distant from any airport. 5. She was characteristically frank. 6. «No!» Viciously, Warren Trent stubbed out his cigar. 7. Surreptitiously, Peter Coakley yawned. 8. Patsy Smith nodded miserably. 9. Happily he added the cash to his own wallet. 10. As I fully expected he had refused. 11. Typically, the four young men who comprised the TV crew had taken over as if the entire event had been arranged for their convenience. 12. Tragically, however, the instruction had resulted in at least one aircraft breaking apart. 13. Usually, controllers worked in shirtsleeves. 14, Mentally, Mel Bakersfeld filtered out most of the exchange, though he was aware that what had been said about conditions away from the terminal was true. 15. Earlier she had despatched her maid on an invented errand and, cruelly, instructed the moon-faced male secretary – who was terrified of dogs – to exercise the Bedlington terriers. 16. Normally, the immediate sense of pressure on entering the control area made it customary to give a hurried nod or a brief «Hi!» – sometimes not even that. 17. Superficially, little had changed since a few moments ago. Yet, subtly, the relaxed mood prevailing earlier had vanished. 18. Hesitantly, Mrs Quonsett released her seat belt. 19. More conventionally, Anson Harris added a «Good evening». 20. Briefly, the policeman seemed ready to vent his anger, then decided otherwise. 21. She appeared actively to dislike him. 22. The food, surprisingly, was French. 23. How soon, he began to wonder, could he decently go back to London? 24. He was haunted by the image, the snapshot vision, which he had received in the cemetery, of Emma and the girl, black rainswept figures, clinging grotesquely together. 25. Emma still, magnetically, existed. 26. They were often thus happily silent together. 27. Wisely, Ross didn’t answer.
Б.
1. Джейн
IV.
1. Deep in her, under layers of hurt pride and cold practicality, something stirred hurtingly. 2. And always she wondered sneeringly why Melanie did not realise that Ashley only loved her as a friend. 3. Ann had increasingly taken over the management of the nursery. 4. «I have caused all this,«he thought desparingly. 5. Her fingers clenched as she looked unseeingly into the rain. 6. Her slipper patted longingly. 7. His white teeth gleamed startlingly against his brown face. 8. He proceeded musingly to shake sugar into his coffee. It was screamingly funny. 10. It was distressingly plain that a crisis abruptly appeared. 11. «You may kiss me,«said Granma, surprisingly, and she smiled in her most approving manner. 12. They were dancing to the most maddeningly ludicrous tunes from the piano. 13. But he remained annoyingly unlover like and, worst of all, seemed to see through all her manoeuvrings to bring him to his knees. 14. Confederate money had dropped alarmingly and the price of food and clothing had risen accordingly. 15. Recently, though, he had found himself increasingly aware of just how attractive she was. 16. The boy agreed trustingly. 17. The law of noise, he declared, was increasingly under study by the nation’s courts. 18. Curtis O’Keefe amusedly pictured the havoc which the prolonged call was causing at the busy room-service order desk eleven floors below. 19. At a time when he was supposedly on duty and required elsewhere in the hotel, he was discovered in a bedroom with a woman guest. 20. He won deredidly where his brother-in-law was going at the moment and if it involved one of his amorous adventures, of which – reportedly – there were a good many. 21. She had to reveal the truth in her own – admittedly magnificent – way. Admittedly party labels do not count for everything. He reportedly said his plan was «a great idea» to discover who had given «The Times» the secret papers. 24. Would he, exasperatingly, go only partly, but not quite enough?
V.
1. She
VI.
1. The country was hard up financially. 2. Tevis sat centrally in the radar room on a high stool. 3. She was not basically unkind. 4. That was substantially a day of Stahr’s. 5. We are fundamentally alike. 6. Economically, the country has no rivals on the world market. 7. Ann’s Christian piety, though doctrinally a little vague, was unwavering. 8. She saw, fragmentarily, the black square glass and the red eyes of the beating moths. 9. Hugh reflected that it was a peaceful scene, a scene even of positive innocence: an innocence to which Penn youthfully, Swann professionally, and Ann with some more subtle resonance of the spirit, contributed each their note. 10. «The New York Times» pointed out editorially… 11. The petition is being circulated nationally. 12. Under the term of lipids (липиды) are included a great diversity of naturally occurring substances. 13. Certain types of chemical substances are known collectively as mutagens. 14. These results are represented diagrammatically in figure 1. 15. There is a very big improvement on what I saw in 1966, both artistically and technologically.
VII.
1. Не raised a supercilious eyebrow when he observed that I took it with calm. 2. He shrugged a Gallic shoulder. 3. He would argue, cajole, lose his temper, start for the door in frowning anger. 4. The thought reminded him of the annoying two days he would have to wait for confirmation. 5. She relapsed into an infuriated silence. 6. The girls were sharing giggled confidences. 7. Then the train came out on the sea – lovely bays with sand and grass and trees, sloping up towards the sudden hills that were like a wall. 8. «Well, sir,«began the former, with smiling importance, «and what may–?» 9. He was sitting in dazed silence after Albert Wells’ announcement. 10. «All tied up with confessions and everything!» he said, lifting a knowing finger. 11. They did not find the trail again for an agonising ten minutes. 12. Then the laughing words of Ashley came back to her. 13. «Go and never come back!» he said, pointing a dramatic finger to the door. 14. He gave a little gulp of astonished laughter. 15. She shrugged a mental shoulder. 16. Then with a muttered curse he turned and grabbed the lever. 17. She raised an inquiring eyebrow. 18. «Well!» Milo exclaimed, with thin-lipped disapproval. «He certainly found out how wrong he was, didn’t he?» 19. This was the only topic that could rouse them out of their staring and shivering apathy. 20. I crossed