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She conducts her squadron and the rest of her adoptive nation's fleet through several battle exercises to improve them.
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She and conducts
She conducts him to one of the " paid avoidance areas " in California, where people are paid to do without the full panoply of modern technology, as an alternative to spending billions to rebuild infrastructure after the earthquake.
She conducts music workshops around the United States, United Kingdom, Canada and Australia, including a workshop she created called " Building a Vocal Community: Singing in the African American Tradition ".
She demands that she be given complete control over the niece and, with the support of the parson, the Squire finally agrees and Mrs Western conducts her to her own more salubrious lodgings.
She conducts master classes in Fort Worth, New York City, Los Angeles and other cities around the country.
She conducts her affair with Lord Meldrum even when her husband is present in the house by secretly giving him sleeping pills.
She has always admired her father ( who left his samurai family in Japan to protest the declining social status of the samurai ), and fondly remembers how he conducts himself — from his courtship of Jeanne's mother to his virtuoso pig-carving.
She played a female preacher, " Reverend Brown ", who conducts a funeral service for a murdered policeman.
She regularly appears as a guest contributor and panelist on various news programs, conducts speaking engagements across the country, and blogs for the The Huffington Post.
: She is an easily angered woman who conducts experiments and creates humans who cannot feel physical pain.
She and her
She was carrying a quirt, and she started to raise it, then let it fall again and dangle from her wrist.
She showed her surprise by tightening the reins and moving the gelding around so that she could get a better look at his face.
She had offered to walk, but Pamela knew she would not feel comfortable about her child until she had personally confided her to the care of the little pink woman who chose to be called `` Auntie ''.
She remembered little of her previous journey there with Grace, and she could but hope that her dedication to her mission would enable her to accomplish it.
She and squadron
She spent five months in repair on the west coast, so VF-3 squadron transferred to the on January 31.
She spent the summer detached off Le Havre under Rear-Admiral George Brydges Rodney, rejoining Hawke in October, and then being sent to join a squadron under Commodore Robert Duff, to watch the French in Quiberon Bay.
She served first in the Channel squadron, then the West Indies, then joining the flying squadron at Bahia on 4 August 1869.
She was educated at the University of Sussex and is the daughter of Ulric Cross, a former High Court judge in Trinidad, Trinidadian High Commissioner to London ( 1990-1993 ) and much decorated RAF squadron leader in World War II.
She and rest
She was the sun, he the closest planet orbiting around her, the rest of the world existing and visible yet removed.
She managed to find new subjects for portraiture, working in the mornings and enjoying a leisurely life the rest of the time.
She continued to work there for the rest of her career and was as dean of the school from 1883 to 1902.
She wrote of the Americans, " The boy learns to make advances and rely upon the girl to repulse them whenever they are inappropriate to the state of feeling between the pair ", as contrasted to the British, where " the girl is reared to depend upon a slight barrier of chilliness ... which the boys learn to respect, and for the rest to rely upon the men to approach or advance, as warranted by the situation.
She explained " I keep the good will of all my husbands — my good people — for if they did not rest assured of some special love towards them, they would not readily yield me such good obedience ," and promised in 1563 they would never have a more natural mother than she.
She was able to regain the ability to write normally, but she was able to write backwards for the rest of her life.
She is initially portrayed as innocent, but by the end of the play has begun to acquire a ruthless streak of her own, insisting that Henry imprison his three sons for the rest of their lives in the dungeon.
She spent the rest of her life defending his reputation and managing his art and effects, much of which eventually was donated to Glasgow University.
She retaliates and finally Giant Evila's head disconnects from the rest of its body, hovering above everyone.
She was so horrified at the sight of her siblings ' death that she stayed greenishly pale for the rest of her life, and for that reason she was dubbed Chloris (" the pale one ").
She is allowed a dignified death through the fact that Angel listens to her ( he hasn't throughout the rest of the novel ) and through her parting words of " I am ready ".
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