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She tries to make good on her promise, following different avenues searching for a cure for his cancer.
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She and tries
She tries clumsily to tell him that she is not in love with him but that she loves him dearly as a friend.
She tries to escape the cabin, only to get killed by the woods themselves ( in a similar fashion Cheryl got raped in the first film ).
She is on a mission when she does not follow orders from her superior and tries to stop their target from choking.
She makes her way to Bletch's machine gun and tries to kill herself, but at the last moment, Samantha shows up and taunts her.
She responds by pumping Samantha full of lead, while Wynyard in a drugged stupor performs tries to kill Robert before accidentally killing himself.
She portrays Diana, a fan of The Beatles band member John Lennon ; she tries unsuccessfully to meet him.
She tries to console Amelia, but Amelia responds angrily, disgusted by Becky's flirtatious behaviour with George and her lack of concern about Captain Crawley.
She quickly realizes that Ribaldi is not the monster everyone believes him to be, and tries to help him learn to be kinder and happier.
Later, however, during a duck race ( a fund-raising event with plastic ducks " racing " down a small river ), Carrie confides in Helen: She knows all ( or almost everything ) about her husband's flings and, by taking a lover herself, tries to get back at him.
She has never seen Vandergroat hurt anyone unless it was in a fair fight but after he loosens Kemp's saddle cinch and tries to push him off a high mountain pass, Lina's sympathies for Kemp grow.
She tries to unlock the door with the key in her purse, then enters through the garden, proving she is unaware of the hidden key.
She wakes up, sees a stuffed leopard looking at her, and tries to pick up a glass of water, but drops it.
She kills a former servant, fakes a kidnap-murder and tries to frame a distant relative with an interest in the Dawson estate, and almost kills Miss Climpson.
She and make
She drew on all her resources of mind and heart to help them -- to make them at home in the world ; ;
She was wearing a brown cotton dress, cut across the hips in a way that was supposed to make her look slimmer, a yoke set into the skirt and flaring pleats below.
She wanted to make a more equitable distribution of it among the groups that would benefit the most ; ;
She had come to make her peace with the past, and of that past this ancient of the earth was only a kind of shadow.
She set out to make sure that no Jewish child anyplace in the world had to live in a place such as this ''.
She would see them, looking just as they had in the books, and this would make up a part of her delight.
She would have a year in which to make up her mind, to choose a mate from a list selected by her gapt.
She gives him food, and speaks to him, urging him not to " have on his conscience the staggering burden of needless bloodshed " ( verse 31, NIV ) and reminding him that God will make him a " lasting dynasty " ( verse 28 ).
She herself died in 1558, and in 1559 Elizabeth I reintroduced the 1552 book with a few modifications to make it acceptable to more traditionally minded worshippers, notably the inclusion of the words of administration from the 1549 Communion Service alongside those of 1552.
She continued to make minor and frequently nostalgic period musicals such as Starlift, The West Point Story, On Moonlight Bay, By the Light of the Silvery Moon, and Tea For Two for Warner Brothers.
She had just enough time to warn her husband to take care of their child and make sure that he did not pick flowers.
She offered very limited aid to foreign Protestants and failed to provide her commanders with the funds to make a difference abroad.
She has changed it to make reference to " Jock Stewart ", one of her relatives, and there are no Irish references.
She used the opportunity to denounce Christianity as irredeemable for women and to call for women ( and men ) to make an exodus from the Church.
She wrote of the Americans, " The boy learns to make advances and rely upon the girl to repulse them whenever they are inappropriate to the state of feeling between the pair ", as contrasted to the British, where " the girl is reared to depend upon a slight barrier of chilliness ... which the boys learn to respect, and for the rest to rely upon the men to approach or advance, as warranted by the situation.
She had not given Orwell much notice about this operation because of worries about the cost and because she expected to make a speedy recovery.
She regarded most attempts to make historical studies more female-inclusive as being artificial in nature, and an impediment to progress.
She also believes that too much money has been diverted away from the juvenile court system and believes that the government should find some way to make the juvenile courts work effectively so as to prevent problems in troubled children and adolescents before these problems are exacerbated by the time these adolescents reach adulthood .< ref >
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