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Page "Fanni Kaplan" ¶ 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 prisons
She spent a year and a half in Serb prisons before being released as a result of international pressure.
She turns out to be an Interpol agent, also on Sauvage's tail ( every major convict released from one of Sauvage's prisons in the last six months has been employed by one of his companies ).
She was held in prisons at Torgau in Saxony and at Königsberg in Brandenburg, where she suffered great hardship from exposure, cold, and malnutrition.
She supports increasing funding for drug treatment programs ; rather than building more prisons.
She lists her political interests as criminal justice, foreign affairs, human rights, international development, penal reform, and prisons, and has written several books, including Creating Criminals: prisons and people in a market society ; Bricks of Shame: Britain's prisons ; Failures in Penal Policy ; Imprisoned by Our Prisons: a programme for reform ( Fabian Series ); The Prisons We Deserve and A Sin Against the Future: imprisonment in the world.
She was the commander of three large US-and British-led prisons in Iraq in 2003, eight battalions, and 3, 400 soldiers from the U. S. Army Reserve.
She spoke in different European cities, collected money, published a brochure on Russian prisons translated into many languages.
She wrote not only extensively on the state of prisons for both men and women, but also on the role of women in society in works such as La Mujer del Porvenir Woman of the Future ( 1869 ), The education of women, The current state of women in Spain, The work of women, The woman of the house ( 1883 ) and Domestic service.
She feels strongly that new prisons ought not to be built and had campaigned vocally, but without success, against the rebuilding of a prison at Bishopbriggs which lies within her constituency.
She speaks to women groups and prisons all over the country openly and honestly about the hardship of her first marriage.
She later toured on the Chautauqua circuit, moving audiences with her vivid account of life in prisons and calls for reform.
She was initially sentenced to death, but later her punishment was reduced to life imprisonment and Horáková was sent to the concentration camp Terezín and then to various prisons in Germany.
She lobbied for improvements in the city's prisons, advocated the hiring of police matrons, and urged the establishment of separate prisons for women.
She frequently visited the various prisons in and about New York.
She visited prisons and in 1874 wrote to the New York Prison Association to express her concern about " the dreadful state of the Prisons ".

She and Siberia
She later wrote about her solo trips through Romania, Africa, Laos, the states of the former Yugoslavia, and Siberia.
She has been in dangerous situations ; for example, she was attacked by wolves in the former Yugoslavia, threatened by soldiers in Ethiopia, and robbed in Siberia.
She broke her knee while on the Baikal Amur Mainline railway, then tore a calf while recuperating at Lake Baikal and her plans changed to a journey around Siberia by train, boat and bus, documented in Through Siberia by Accident.
She revisited Siberia and wrote a companion book, Silverland.
She performed with John Forsythe in a drama which concerned a U. S .- bound airplane's encounter with Russian fighter planes above Siberia.
She left home aged fifteen to marry Afanasy Bochkarev and they moved to Tomsk, Siberia where they worked as laborers.
She was convicted for the assassination and exiled to Siberia.
She set out from Cape Arctichesky in Siberia.
She and this friend were both betrayed by the Professor for gain, and she had also been sent to Siberia for a time.
She is important to the story because she knows about Siberia and the suffering that Reb Yudel Krinsky went through there.
She was born the eldest of five children in Siberia.
She wrote several romantic and historical novels including Elizabeth ; or, the Exiles of Siberia ( Elisabeth ou les Exilés de Sibérie 1806 ), a " wildly romantic but irreproachably moral tale ", according to Nuttall's Encyclopaedia.

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