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Page "Lucienne Robillard" ¶ 6
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She and held
She held Jonathan's letter, his words burning like a brand, and knew suddenly that the bonds between them were severed.
She held herself that way and turned her head towards them and laughed and winked.
She held out her hand to show that she had money.
She had held to the letter of her contract and didn't come onto the stage until well after 4 p.m., the appointed hour, although the Music at Newport people had tried to get the program underway at 3.
She convinced him that he ought to be a member of some of the small tea-drinking parties she held at her rooms and in the end he complied with her wishes, although it was only rarely that he added anything to the random conversations.
She held high moral principles and, despite her shyness in company, was prepared to argue for her beliefs.
She tried to flee, but he coiled around her legs and held her arms tightly against her sides as he raped her.
She was held against her will and repeatedly raped.
She was transferred from Mauthausen to the notorious women's concentration camp at Ravensbruck, located 50 miles from Berlin, where unbeknownst to Gemma at the time, her daughter Yolanda ( whose husband also died in the camps ) and baby grandson were also held for a year in a separate barrack.
She was the daughter of citrus fruit magnate John A. Snively, who held extensive properties both in Winter Haven and in Waycross ; Parsons ' father was a famous World War II flying ace, decorated with the Air Medal, who was present at the 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor.
She held her first Council in the Great Hall ( The Old Palace ) of Hatfield.
She decided that an ecumenical council needed to be held to address the issue of iconoclasm and directed this request to Pope Hadrian I ( 772 – 795 ) in Rome.
She held various positions in the American Association for the Advancement of Science, notably president in 1975 and chair of the executive committee of the board of directors in 1976.
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 firmly held on to this conviction until her death.
She appointed Gardiner to the council and made him both Bishop of Winchester and Lord Chancellor, offices he held until his death in November 1555.
She is also a co-founder of Broadway Barks, an annual animal adopt-a-thon held in New York City.
She held a low estimation of her writing abilities.
" She further held that to be is to be something, that " existence is identity.
She held that perception, being physiologically determined, is incapable of error.
" She held that the former is good, and the latter evil, and that there is a fundamental difference between them.
" She opposed involuntary military conscription, but also thought those who avoided being drafted should be held criminally liable.
She held this position until she retired in 1988.
She is charitable enough to pity Edward for being held to a loveless engagement by his gentlemanly honour.
She was elected to the Helsinki City Council, a position she held continuously for five terms from 1977 to 1996.

She and post
She resigned the presidency two months ahead of the end of her term of office to take up her post in the United Nations.
She also tells about her pre and post Little House career and her side-projects during the Little House years.
She returned to England in early 1522, in order to marry her Irish cousin James Butler, 9th Earl of Ormond ; however, the marriage plans ended in failure and she secured a post at court as maid of honour to Henry VIII's queen consort, Catherine of Aragon.
She then married his brother, Rainilaiarivony, head of the army at the time of Radama II's murder who was promoted to the post of Prime Minister upon the resignation and exile of his older brother.
She held this post until 1919, a year after the first women had been granted the vote.
She was baptised at St Peter's Church in Liverpool on 16 February 1823 while her family was en route to her father's post in India.
She died 12 hours later in Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital, after being transferred from the event's first-aid post.
She was in 1984 appointed as governor general by Elizabeth II, Queen of Canada, on the recommendation of Prime Minister of Canada Pierre Trudeau, to replace Edward Richard Schreyer as vicereine, and she occupied the post until succeeded by Ray Hnatyshyn in 1990.
She solicited donations from the Browning Society to found the college and build a post office.
She also kept a military shop, at appropriate times, in the post office, which is presently the residence of Selice Inman Ray.
She also designed and supervised the building of Greenlawn's post office east of Broadway behind the train station in 1911.
She was a French-Native American woman who ran a trading post located near the mouth of the Menominee River and came to be known as " Queen Marinette.
" She retired her post office cancellation stamp in 1957 when Home on the Range became Jeffrey City.
She left the post when her husband became a leader of the Soviet Union in 1985.
She served as the House Minority Whip from 2002 to 2003, and was House Minority Leader from 2003 to 2007, holding the post during the 108th and 109th Congresses.
She was the first woman in U. S. history to hold that post.
She has continued to post landslide victories since, dropping beneath 80 percent of the vote only twice.
She was in 1999 appointed as governor general by Elizabeth II, Queen of Canada, on the recommendation of Prime Minister of Canada Jean Chrétien, to replace Roméo LeBlanc as viceroy, and she occupied the post until succeeded by Michaëlle Jean in 2005.
On 23 March 2006, Gandhi announced her resignation from the Lok Sabha and also as chairperson of the National Advisory Council under the office-of-profit controversy and the speculation that the government was planning to bring an ordinance to exempt the post of chairperson of National Advisory Council from the purview of office of profit. She was re-elected from her constituency Rae Bareilly in May 2006 by a margin of over 400, 000 votes.
She landed in Falmouth, Cornwall, setting Lapenotiere on his historic 36-hour journey by post chaise to the Admiralty in London.
She refuses, and Ahasuerus decides to remove her from her post.
She held that post from 2003 to 2007.
She retained this post throughout the first term of the Labour government, and beyond the 2001 UK general election into the second.
She left the post in 1998 to pursue career as a lawyer.

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