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She and was
She was amazingly light, and so relaxed in his arms that he wasn't even sure she was conscious.
She was carrying a quirt, and she started to raise it, then let it fall again and dangle from her wrist.
She glanced around the clearing, taking in the wagon and the load of supplies and trappings scattered over the ground, the two kids, the whiteface bull that was chewing its cud just within the far reaches of the firelight.
She said, and her tone had softened until it was almost friendly.
She had picked up the quirt and was twirling it around her wrist and smiling at him.
She was quick.
She brought up her free hand to hit him, but this time he was quicker.
She regarded them as signs that she was nearing the glen she sought, and she was glad to at last be doing something positive in her unenunciated, undefined struggle with the mountain and its darkling inhabitants.
She was sure she would reach the pool by climbing, and she clung to that belief despite the increasing number of obstacles.
She was bewildered.
She was standing in a thick grove.
She already knew this unwholesome, chilling atmosphere that was somehow grotesquely alive.
She was glad, completely and unselfishly glad, to see that things were working out the right way for both Sally and Dan.
She was still hugging the stained coat around her, so I said, `` Relax, let me take your things.
She was wearing nothing beneath the coat.
She was standing with her back to the glass door.
She was just not able to break the spell.
She was telling herself that this might just be her reward at the end of a long meaningful search for truth.
Meredith was irritated when the Grafin knocked at his door and told him, `` She is a great beauty!!
She confessed she was unhappy, he asked was it her husband??
She began to explain, `` There was this poet, in Italy '' He interrupted, `` Please don't judge all poets ''.
She was like charcoal, he thought -- dark, opaque, explosive.

She and showgirl
She played a wisecracking showgirl who becomes a rival to the film's star, singer Belle Baker.
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 introduced Keeler to the owner, Percy Murray, who hired her almost immediately as a topless showgirl.
She began her career as a Las Vegas showgirl.
She starred as veteran showgirl Gloria Joyce in the made-for-TV movie The Third Girl From the Left ( 1973 ), and played Eva in Satan's Triangle ( 1975 ).
She had a slightly unusual serious acting role in Party Girl ( 1958 ), where she played a showgirl who became involved with gangsters and a crooked lawyer, although it did include two dance routines.
She had a small role as a showgirl in the 1971 James Bond film Diamonds Are Forever, played a topless dancer in The Working Girls ( 1974 ), and purportedly posed for the cover of Tom Waits's 1976 album, Small Change.
She later was a featured showgirl in the Vive Paris Vive show at the Aladdin Hotel.
She then studied at Los Angeles Valley Community College, before moving back to Las Vegas and pursuing a career as a showgirl.
" She appeared as former showgirl Sally Durant Plummer in the Encores!
When it failed to stir up much interest, Babb instead focused on the one scene of female nudity, using a photo of Leeds in a showgirl outfit, and retitled it " She Shoulda Said ' No '!
The winner was Ziegfeld showgirl Gladys Glad, and on July 11, 1929, the two were wed. She divorced him in 1932, but after a year the two remarried on the same date as their original wedding, and they remained wed until his death from a coronary thrombosis in Cedars of Lebanon Hospital in Los Angeles.

She and New
She and her husband had formerly lived in New York, where she had many friends, but Mr. Flannagan thought the country would be safer in case of war.
She was the daughter and sole heiress of either a cattle baron or an oil millionaire and, having arrived in New York with a big bank roll, became a dabbler in various fields.
She came to New York from Detroit as a teenager, but with a `` sponsor '' instead of a chaperone.
She had talked her `` boy friend '' into sending her to New York to take a screen test.
She had lost a bottle of opium -- but that was on the trip from New Orleans.
She wouldn't go back to New York as Maude suggested ; ;
She also was the original GOP national committeewoman from New Jersey in the early 1920s following adoption of the women's suffrage amendment.
She is state chairman for the New Mexico Tuberculosis and Cancer Associations.
) She has since turned to Bellini, whose opera `` Beatrice Di Tenda '' in a concert version with the American Opera Society introduced her to New York last season.
She is also the author of articles that have been published in the New York Times and Newsweek.
She was the food editor of The New York Times Magazine and the editor of T Living, a quarterly publication of The New York Times.
She has uncovered the politics behind the New York City Greenmarket, and was among the first to publish a long-form article in a major American newspaper about Ferran Adria of El Bulli.
She founded The New York Baroque Dance Company ( http :// www. nybaroquedance. org /) in 1976 with Ann Jacoby, and the company has since toured internationally.
She emigrated from England with her parents in 1871 when she was 18, where they settled in Brooklyn, New York.
" She studied privately with William Sartain, a friend of Eakins and a New York artist invited to Philadelphia to teach a group of art students, starting in 1881.
She attended the Professional Children's School, in New York City, and made her professional theatre debut in a 1966 production of The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, starring Tammy Grimes.
She made her professional debut on the New York stage, appearing in Beside Herself alongside Melissa Joan Hart, at the Circle Repertory Theatre.
She served as president of the New York branch.
She commuted between London to be with her husband, and New York, where she was blacklisted and thus rendered unemployable during the Red Scare of 1919-1920.
She does not classify her music as belonging to the New Age genre.
She is currently working as a consultant for Girardi & Keese, the New York law firm Weitz & Luxenberg, which has a focus on personal injury claims for asbestos exposure, and Shine Lawyers in Australia.
She and her two brothers were coming to America to meet their parents, who had moved to New York two years prior.
She used her Miss America scholarship money to study acting at HB Studios in New York City before moving to Hollywood to pursue a film and television career.
She also produced retellings of Old Testament and New Testament stories.

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