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She and ties
She is often depicted with her sacred creature, an owl usually named as the " owl of Minerva ", which symbolizes her ties to wisdom.
She had the help of those trade groups that would benefit most from the holiday, for example the manufacturers of ties, tobacco pipes, and any traditional present to fathers.
She is also featured in the Disney on Ice shows Princess Classics and Princess Wishes, as a princess, despite her lack of royal ties.
She was also the first female solo artist to receive the award and ties with Radiohead as the most nominated artist, though Radiohead have never won the prize.
She always fought passionately for a free and independent press and to maintain Malta's ties with Britain and the Commonwealth.
She felt an initial attraction to a Nazi student group that advocated " a kind of socialism " until their questioning about her Jewish ties made their anti-Semitism clear, and she returned immediately to the United States.
She has golden hair, and wears a blue shirt with gray ties, a blue hat, a red skirt, and red shoes.
She lures Rusty to the school infirmary, where she verbally abuses him, ties him to an exam table and anally rapes him with a strap-on dildo.
She has bright, blonde hair, which she wears in long pigtails without any visible hair ties, and a black unibrow.
She was also a devout Catholic with strong ties to the Jesuits, including her personal confessor, Gabriel Malagrida.
She voted for Kenneth Clarke, who was in favour of stronger ties with the EU as opposed to a right-wing eurosceptic, William Hague.
She has close ties to Bonus Pastor Secondary School in Bromley, accepting one pupil every year for work experience, which includes work within the constituency and the Houses of Parliament.
She has a long cow ’ s tail that she ties under her skirt in order to hide it from men.
She decides on Rolling Stone magazine as an unbiased, honest media source with no ties to the government, and the book ends as she arrives to tell them her story.
She has close ties with the Buendias throughout the whole novel, helping them with her card predictions.
" She wished also to avoid family ties, and her decision to live in France after 1903 may have been the result of her desire to escape the overpowering personality of her famous brother, although, according to art historian David Fraser Jenkins, " there were few occasions when she did anything against her will, and she was the more ruthless and dominating of the two.
She filmed her two scenes for Follow the Boys then both stars severed ties with Universal, as Eddy was upset with how Phantom of the Opera turned out.
She began to see Edmund Grey, whose hot and cold behaviour left her angry and his obsession with discovering his lineage and birthright strained the ties between them.
She still possessed the bloodstone locket Belasco gave to her, implying that she still had ties to Limbo.
She navigates to the nearest dock and quickly ties up her vessel, not damaging the dock at all.
She tricks a third-year witch, Griselda Blackwood, into looking under her bed for an imaginary beetle where Mildred ties her up and takes her cat.
She also has close ties to the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty.
She joined the Raad van Verzet, a resistance movement that had close ties to the Communist Party of the Netherlands.
She tries to warn Gail but she is convinced that she is indeed senile and refuses to believe her, cutting all ties with Audrey.

She and Edmund
She was portrayed as Belphoebe or Astraea, and after the Armada, as Gloriana, the eternally youthful Faerie Queene of Edmund Spenser's poem.
She married Edmund Mortimer, son of Edmund Mortimer, 3rd Earl of March, and died in 1413.
She was an ally of her husband's most trusted adviser, the deeply distrusted Eadric Streona, ealdorman of Mercia, and he took her side, but she was opposed by Æthelred's oldest surviving son, Edmund Ironside, and his allies, who naturally regarded him as the heir.
She was the widow of John V of Brittany, with whom she had had four daughters and four sons ; she and Henry had only one son Edmund, called Labourde, who was born and died in 1401.
She married ( 1 ) Crown Prince Rudolf of Austria and then ( 2 ) Elemér Edmund Graf Lónyay de Nagy-Lónya et Vásáros-Namény ( created, in 1917, Prince Lónyay de Nagy-Lónya et Vásáros-Namény ).
She was also a younger sister to Edward IV of England and Edmund, Earl of Rutland as well as an older sister to Margaret of York, George Plantagenet, 1st Duke of Clarence and Richard III of England.
She and her husband Dr. Edmund W. Gordon were instrumental in founding the Tubman Child Health and Guidance Clinic in Harlem, New York and Psycho-Educational Diagnostic Clinic for children-Part of Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center.
She appeared as Nefertiti in the Italian production of Nefertiti, Queen of the Nile ( 1961 ) with Edmund Purdom and Vincent Price.
She is also a descendant of the Delano family and Edmund Rice, a 1638 immigrant to Massachusetts Bay Colony.
She also decides that her prayers as a dope fiend are not being heard by the Virgin, but still decides to go upstairs to get more drugs, but before she can do so, her son, Edmund, and her husband, James, return home.
She accuses Edmund of attempting to get more attention by blowing everything out of proportion.
She also confides to James that Edmund does not love her because of her drug problem.
She had two younger brothers, Edmund and Roger, and two younger sisters, Eleanor and Alice.
She also thought about plans for another Mary Westmacott novel and wrote to Edmund Cork saying that, as she was well ahead of her normal writing schedule, she had gone over the Miss Marple novel thoroughly, ‘ as a lot of it seemed to have dated very much ’.
" She mixed with the literary and social elites of London society, and her acquaintances included Samuel Johnson, Edmund Burke, Hester Thrale Piozzi, and William Windham.
She also had a relationship with Edmund Sylvers ( lead singer of The Sylvers singing group ).
She had ten children: Horatio Nelson ( born 8 December 1822 ); Eleanor Phillipa ( born April 1824 ); Marmaduke Philip Smyth ( born 27 May 1825 ); John James Stephen ( 13 February 18271829 ); Nelson ( born 8 May 1828 ); William George ( born 8 April 1830 ); Edmund Nelson ( 1831 ); Horatia Nelson ( born 24 November 1833 ), Philip ( born May 1834 ) and Caroline ( born January 1836 ).
She was, however, involved in the school's Dramatic Society where she worked closely with the academic Edmund Colledge who both directed and acted in several of the society's productions.
She wrote to the literary critic Edmund Wilson, who had agreed to edit the book, musing on his legacy.
She introduced him to the work of Gerda Alexander, the famous German-Danish somatic teacher, and also to Edmund Rochdieu, a Swiss psychologist and direct student of C. G.
She bore eight children: Joan ( 1558 ), Margaret ( 1562 – 63 ), William ( 1564 – 1616 ), Gilbert ( 1566 – 1612 ), Joan ( 1569 – 1646 ), Anne ( 1571 – 79 ), Richard ( 1574 – 1613 ), and Edmund ( 1580 – 1607 ).
She had five children by her marriage to Edmund Mortimer:
She was a direct descendant of Edmund Rice an early Puritan immigrant to Massachusetts Bay Colony.
She was daughter of Edmund Langton ( 1841 – 1875 ) and his second wife Charlotte Wedgwood.

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