71. A dozen families had lived here, leaving behind petroglyphs and pictographs. 72. A family lives there and tends the garden and dusts the suit of armor in the hallway. 73. A leap-year family must occasionally live in multiples of four. 74. A place where first families can live in trailers or mansions, either worthy of public tours. 75. A neighbor, Diane Fond, said that the family had lived there for more than four years and that Sacci had been renovating the house. 76. A stranded family lives out of the back of a pickup. 77. About a dozen listless families are still living in makeshift tents spread out in the town square, where pigs and dogs root through the dirt. 78. Against a blustery backdrop of crashing winter waves and craggy cliffs, the family lives a laconic life of solemn adjustment. 79. After three days, he moved on to northern Georgia, where his family had lived. 80. Both were longtime legal residents of the United States whose immediate families live in this country. |