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Page "Ann Clwyd" ¶ 2
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She and served
She served for a number of years without pay beyond her travel and maintenance.
She served as secretary in the Seminary office for 25 years, and was in charge of correspondence, records, and bookkeeping.
She served one four-year term on the national committee.
She established a Nursing Trust for local villages, and served on various committees and councils responsible for footpaths and other country life issues.
She served as president of the New York branch.
She served as managing editor from 1917 to 1921.
She also served as one of three co-hosts ( along with Roy Clark and Glen Campbell ) on the CBS special Fifty Years of Country Music.
She served 30 days in jail for violation of the terms of her probation and entered a drug program immediately thereafter.
She has served as Commissioner since February 2009.
She served three terms as Prime Minister of Norway ( 1981, 1986 – 89, 1990 – 96 ), and has served as the Director General of the World Health Organization.
She served as Prime Minister from February to October in 1981.
She served as the regent of Mantua during the absence of her husband, Francesco II Gonzaga, Marquess of Mantua and the minority of her son, Federico, Duke of Mantua.
She also served on the board of the Freedom National Bank until it closed in 1990.
She served as curator of ethnology at the American Museum of Natural History from 1946 to 1969.
She served as president of the American Anthropological Association in 1960.
Barbara Walters said of her, " She has served every day for eight long years the word ' style.
She served in the Baltic during the Gunboat War where she participated in the seizure of Anholt Island, and the Channel.
She was first elected to the City Council in 1975 as an at large member, she served on the council until 1982.
She had to leave her other children behind because they were not legally freed in the emancipation order until they had served as bound servants into their twenties.
She was active in student politics and served as the Social Affairs Secretary and Organization Secretary of the National Union of Students from 1969 to 1970.
She served five full terms and less than a year of her sixth term in the parliament until her inauguration as President in 2000.
She served off and on until she was struck from the Navy list ca.
She served as president until her death in 2006.
She served as a secretary for the 1933 Swedish Summer Grand Prix.

She and Shadow
She afterwards declined to serve in Iain Duncan Smith's Shadow Cabinet ( although she indicated on the television programme When Louis Met ..., prior to the leadership contest, that she wished to retire to the backbenches anyway ).
She played a child psychiatrist in the film noir Shadow on the Wall ( 1950 ) with Ann Sothern and Zachary Scott ; her performance was called " beautiful and convincing " by New York Times critic A. H. Weiler.
She subsequently served as Shadow Minister for Lands under then leader Maggie Hickey.
She also received an Emmy nomination as co-producer of his telefilm, The Shadow Box.
That same year, she also featured on three songs of Massive Attack's album 100th Window before releasing her double album, She Who Dwells in the Secret Place of the Most High Shall Abide Under the Shadow of the Almighty.
She filmed Third Finger, Left Hand ( 1940 ) with Melvyn Douglas and appeared in I Love You Again ( 1940 ), Love Crazy ( 1941 ) and Shadow of the Thin Man ( 1941 ), all with William Powell.
She has written two more novels in the Chocolat series, continuing the adventures of Vianne Rocher ; The Lollipop Shoes ( re-titled The Girl With No Shadow in the US ) and Peaches for Monsieur le Curé ( Peaches for Father Francis in the US ), as well as two French cookbooks ( co-written with Fran Warde ), two collections of short stories and a number of dark psychological thrillers, including Gentlemen and Players and Blueeyedboy.
She is also known for her notable performances in Alfred Hitchcock's Shadow of a Doubt ( 1943 ) and William Wyler's The Best Years of Our Lives ( 1946 ).
She wrote a memoir of her experiences there entitled Winfield: Living in the Shadow of the Woolworths.
She became Shadow Minister for Women, and then Shadow Transport Secretary.
She performed in his The Mercury Theatre on the Air radio adaptations, and had a regular role opposite Welles in the serial The Shadow as Margo.
She was however kept in the shadow cabinet by Tony Blair as Shadow Health Secretary.
She helps them on various missions such as battling the Shadow King and returning to ancient Camelot to prevent it from being prematurely destroyed.
She was promoted again to Shadow Secretary of State for Education following Menzies Campbell's election as leader on 2 March 2006.
She appointed Maudling to the post of Shadow Foreign Secretary.
She had made a commitment to the then Conservative Shadow Education Secretary, David Willetts to resign if the literacy and numeracy targets were not met.
She is the main character in the novel Shadow Princess by Indu Sundaresan, published on 23 March 2010.
She returned as Shadow Secretary of State for Overseas Development from 1989 to 1992 and then served as Shadow Secretary of State for Wales in 1992 and for National Heritage from 1992 to 1993.
She is currently the Shadow Home Secretary and Shadow Minister for Women and Equalities.
She began her career as an economics researcher for the Shadow Chancellor John Smith in 1990 before working in Arkansas for Democratic Presidential candidate Bill Clinton in 1992.
She came top in the 2010 ballot for places in the Shadow Cabinet and there was speculation that Ed Miliband would appoint her Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer, but she was appointed Shadow Foreign Secretary, shadowing William Hague, a job she did for just under four months.

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