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Page "Elinor Glyn" ¶ 16
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She and pioneered
She pioneered a controversial technique for eliciting intimate details from young children and inspired passage of a law allowing them to testify by closed-circuit television, out of the possibly intimidating presence of their suspected molesters.
Abbott pioneered the process of incorporating sociological data relating to child labor, juvenile delinquency, dependency and statistics into the lawmaking process ; she spent much of her time as a political lobbyist for social issues in Washington, D. C .. She was associated with the Social Security Administration from 1934 until her death in 1939 ; during that time period, Abbott helped in the drafting of the Social Security Act and chaired several government committees on child welfare and social issues.
She pioneered work on galaxy rotation rates.
She was a champion of women's rights, supported the education of blacks, pioneered the concept of adult education, and became a founder of parent-teacher organizations.
She has pioneered new experimental techniques based on neutron diffraction, electron microscopy, and synchrotron x-ray diffraction.
She also pioneered the use of pseudoscience in marketing, donning a lab coat in many advertisements, despite the fact that her only training had been a two-month tour of European skin-care facilities.
She then moved on to present a daily live entertainment show, Lunchbox a programme which pioneered daytime broadcasts.
She pioneered the concept of celebrities developing their own brands rather than merely endorsing others.
She pioneered the use of monoclonal antibody technology in brain research and discovered a gene that plays a critical role in the spread of cancer in the brain.
She died in 1885 in California, where she pioneered and agitated right to the end.
She was a founder member of the Charity Organisation Society ( now the charity Family Action ) which organised charitable grants and pioneered a home-visiting service that formed the basis for modern social work.
She pioneered efforts to integrate West Virginia's schools, housing, and public accommodations and to pass civil rights legislation enforcing such integration.
" She reviews the influence of Darwin's techniques here on later research by Boysen Jensen, Frits Went, and others that ultimately led to the discovery of auxin as the growth principle and notes that Darwin pioneered the use of the coleoptile ( which in Darwin's time was called a cotyledon ) in plant growth studies.
She pioneered the ' head-to-hem ' boutique concept that paved the way for the future success of Ralph Lauren in America.
She pioneered library services for the blind and organized the New York state library for the blind in 1899 also serving there as a librarian.
She was the first woman ever elected as Jefferson County clerk and recorder, where she pioneered the use of mail ballots.

She and risqué
She acts like a showgirl ( recreating a risqué musical number she had seen performed by one of Jerry's girlfriends ) and lets on that their " father " had been a gardener at Princeton University, not a student athlete.
She moved to Paris where she shared an apartment with singer Grace Jones ( who at that time was also a model ) and immersed herself in the Parisian nightlife, often performing risqué cabaret acts in clubs and parties with Jones.
She was the subject of a risqué poem by John Suckling ( poet ) Upon My Lady Carlisle's Walking in Hampton Court Garden
She was also one of the first artists to have a music video banned because of its lyrics rather than its imagery ; some broadcasters refused to air the sexually risqué " Sugar Walls ", which had been written for her by Prince ( using the pseudonym Alexander Nevermind ).
She subsequently performed in the much more risqué Midnight Frolic, a show staged after hours in the roof garden of the New Amsterdam Theatre.
She was soon known for her risqué songs, flirtatious nature and willingness to show her legs on stage.
She reveled in dropping risqué double entendres and making frequent jokes about her display of cleavage.
She sang, danced, and acted in somewhat risqué college reviews, published her poetry in an alternative student magazine, and was a knowledgeable presence at the film society where she developed her interest especially in European new wave cinema.
She played Kay Webster in the risqué, satirical 1970s soap opera The Box, and the scheming Alison Carr in the 1980s melodrama Sons and Daughters.

She and sometimes
She would sometimes even get a little hard on you, she took you so seriously.
She is thought to bear the name of the deity who was derived from Libya, where known as Neith, the same source sometimes identified as the parallel for Athene.
She sometimes makes unsettling romantic advances towards Laura.
She also commented on Dean's romantic side claiming that he will often do spontaneous things to surprise her and sometimes even writes her poems.
She was sometimes thought of as one of the Pleiades ( and hence a nymph ).
She is a reluctant and sometimes traitorous party to the office's determination to keep Mike away from production meetings.
She is predominantly pictured with Zeus or Athena and sometimes Ares.
She is also sometimes associated with cypress, a tree symbolic of death and the underworld, and hence sacred to a number of chthonic deities.
She is also sometimes referred to as Guanyin Pusa ().
She is sometimes called la Gran Contessa (" the Great Countess ") or Matilda of Canossa after her ancestral castle of Canossa.
She sometimes appears in the form of a crow, flying above the warriors, and in the Ulster cycle she also takes the form of an eel, a wolf and a cow.
She was wife to Pallas and bore him Zelus, Nike, Kratos and Bia ( and sometimes Eos ).
She also has done tours featuring her poetry, sometimes along with either Lydia Lunch or Henry Rollins.
She is sometimes shown with a staff in hand.
She went on to comment that reviving memories of a suit that the majority of the public had forgotten after the initial burst of publicity, commenting " when you run these ads defending, defending, defending, sometimes people think, " Well, wait a minute, why are they trying so hard to defend themselves?
Anna Pinney, a young woman who sometimes accompanied Anning while she collected, wrote: " She says the world has used her ill ... these men of learning have sucked her brains, and made a great deal of publishing works, of which she furnished the contents, while she derived none of the advantages.
She noted that if such stones were broken open they often contained fossilised fish bones and scales, and sometimes bones from small ichthyosaurs.
She was regarded sometimes as his wife, sometimes as his sister.
She sometimes makes the mistake of applying Gothic novels to real life situations ; for example, later in the novel she begins to suspect General Tilney of having murdered his deceased wife.
She is honest and kind, although she can sometimes be slightly over-trusting and naïve, which leads the Duke family into trouble on a number of occasions.
She sometimes aspired to be a songwriter and singer, and at other times a reporter.
She is commonly known by her nickname Granuaile in Irish folklore, and a historical figure in 16th century Irish history, and is sometimes known as " The Sea Queen of Connaught ".
She sometimes renders those fragments in Giraud's original French, sometimes in Hartleben's German, at other times in English and Japanese.

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