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She and came
She came down against him, and he tried to break her fall.
She came from Ohio, from what she called a `` small farm '' of two hundred acres, as indeed it was to farmer-type farmers.
She was not an overnight guest in the White House, but Mr. Ike Hoover, the chief usher, had Mama check her fur coat when she came in, and take care of her needs.
She had stood at the bottom of the stairs, as usual, when Mrs. Coolidge came down, in the same dress that is now in the Smithsonian, to greet her guests.
She came back the other day to reassure me.
She came to the ballroom and stood on the two carpeted steps that led down to it.
She had surprised Hans like she had surprised me when she said she'd go, and then she surprised him again when she came back so quick like she must have, because when I came in with the snow she was there with a bottle with three white feathers on its label and Hans was holding it angrily by the throat.
She came to New York from Detroit as a teenager, but with a `` sponsor '' instead of a chaperone.
She discussed in her letters to Winslow some of the questions that came to her as she studied alone.
She thought she was bigger than we are because she came from Torino ''.
She started to move away, just as a woman came out of the cottage, a big-boned, drab-haired figure with a clean apron tied over her limp print dress.
She came to me one day.
She was almost sick when Bobbie came home with the news that Poor John had won the job.
She came out pink from a hot bath, and I gave her my robe.
She came home on the death of her aunt in early November 1842, while her sisters were in Brussels.
She told everyone that the money came from her father, who died at about the same time.
She came home afterward with the necklace and kept silent as if nothing happened.
She slowly began to turn into a black poplar, the bark spreading up her legs from the earth, but just before the woody stiffness finally reached her throat and as her arms began sprouting twigs her husband Andraemon heard her cries and came to her.
She was interviewed by Diane Anderson-Minshall and came out as a lesbian, although she later recanted.
She pieced it together from the news she heard that the prince's wife Ata-bime came to and took a clump of earth in the corner of her neckerchief.
She briefly develops a psychic shadow form like Psylocke's, with a gold Phoenix emblem over her eye instead of the Crimson Dawn mark possessed by Psylocke, Jean briefly lost her telekinesis to Psylocke during this exchange, but her telekinetic abilities later came back in full at a far stronger level than before.
She first came to public attention after winning a musical competition at age six by playing the piano.
She also came from stage acting and had a girlish / whimsical charm to which audiences responded.
She was a young woman who came to the Ryall's Hotel in Blantyre, where Harold Macmillan was lunching on the homeward leg of his famous ' wind of change ' tour in Cape Town.

She and London
She took postgraduate work at the University of Grenoble in France and then returned to London to work on market research with an advertising firm.
She is in Madame Tussard's Waxworks in London, a princess of the Kiowa tribe and an honorary colonel in many states.
She is just home from a sojourn in London where she has become the sweetheart of a young fellow named Ronnie ( we never do see him ) and has been subjected to a first course in thinking and appreciating, including a dose of good British socialism.
She worked for Unilever ( 1973 – 75 ) and then as an administrator at the University of London ( 1975 – 87 ) before entering Parliament.
She lived as a virtual prisoner at Durham House in London.
She commuted between London to be with her husband, and New York, where she was blacklisted and thus rendered unemployable during the Red Scare of 1919-1920.
She released her second live DVD and album, Live From London in October 2009, which was filmed during her sold out 2008 concerts at London's O2 Arena.
She had run away from home, intent on making a career in dance, and aged 18 joined the chorus line at the London Palladium.
" She had bought him a steam yacht, houses in London and in the Leicestershire hunting country, and a Scottish grouse moor.
She was awarded a contract with the Royal Opera in London and made her début at Covent Garden as Marie in La Fille du régiment in 1876.
She commissioned Bernard Crick, a left-wing professor of politics at the University of London, to complete a biography and asked Orwell's friends to co-operate.
She proceeded straight to London, renting them a flat at 26 Charing Cross Road, right in the heart of London.
She was interred in Highgate Cemetery ( East ), Highgate, London in the area reserved for religious dissenters or agnostics, next to George Henry Lewes ; Karl Marx's memorial is nearby.
She entitled the unfinished volume, Zwischen London und Moskau ( Between London and Moscow ).
She noted that they produced an extraordinary wealth of information on German war plans but next to nothing on the repeated question of British penetration of Russian intelligence in either London or Moscow.
She lived separately from Philby, settling with their children in Crowborough while he lived first in London and later in Beirut.
She moved to London at the age of sixteen.
She worked as a guest artist with Roland Petit's Le Ballet National de Marseilles, the Bolshoi Ballet, the London Festival Ballet, the Paris Opera Ballet, the Hamburg Ballet, the Vienna State Opera Ballet, and the Eliot Feld Ballet.
She stopped selling her handbag line and moved to London.
She returned to the London stage in May 2009 to play the lead role in Wallace Shawn's new play, Grasses of a Thousand Colours at the Royal Court Theatre.
She attended the University College of London and was a student of linguistics and anthropology.
She was consequently named Assistant Professor of Egyptology at the University College of London in 1924, a post she held until her retirement in 1935.
She was portrayed by Helen Hayes in the London production of the play Anastasia and in the 1956 film based on the play.

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