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Page "Homer Davenport" ¶ 1
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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 Harpers
She later helped John Brown recruit men for his raid on Harpers Ferry, and in the post-war era struggled for women's suffrage.
She writes for The Guardian, The Observer, The Mail on Sunday, Harpers & Queen and the New Statesman.
She also received honorable mentions for her short stories in 1927 (" Night Club " Harper's Magazine September 1927 ), 1931 (" Good Wednesday ", Harpers ), and 1932 (" Football Girl ", College Humor, October 1931 ).
She heard the rifle shot with which abolitionist John Brown was killed, in Harpers Ferry, West Virginia.
She didn't much like the idea of the Harpers running a day care center, and often tried to persuade them both to return to their former careers, always to no avail.
She has been a cover girl for Marie Claire, Harpers & Queen and Cosmopolitan.
She has worked with many leading fashion photographers including Patrick Demarchelier, Steven Meisel, Steven Klein, Nick Knight, Mario Testino, David Sims, Bryan Adams, Nadav Kander and featured in magazines including Vogue, W, Elle, Harper's Bazaar, Harpers & Queen, i-D, and Visionaire.

She and Weekly
She was ranked first on Entertainment Weekly < nowiki >'</ nowiki > s list in 1994 ; first on Fox News ' list in 2005 ; eighth on CityNews ' list in 2008 ; and was included in Time < nowiki >'</ nowiki > s list of the " 10 Best Moms Ever ".
She published a story in her paper ( Woodhull and Claflin's Weekly ) on November 2, 1872, claiming that America's most renowned clergyman was secretly practicing the free-love doctrines which he denounced from the pulpit.
She was recognized as one of the 50 most beautiful female inventors of all time by Inventors Weekly magazine.
She can occasionally be heard filling in for regular presenters on 774 ABC Melbourne radio, notably filling in for a two-week period in 2005 following the departure of Virginia Trioli, and has written for Australian Women's Weekly.
She told Entertainment Weekly that " I didn't want to be the girl who posed in Playboy and then — by the waymade some music.
She also published short fiction in the New York Morning Telegraphs Sunday supplement and in the pulp magazine All-Story Cavalier Weekly.
She worked for Computer Weekly from 1985-9, New Scientist from 1989-91 and The Independent from 1991-5, before moving into television.
She won the Best New Children's Book Series Award in 1997 in Publishers Weekly.
She has contributed writing to many publications, including Glue ( in which she had a column called " Because I Said So "), UR Chicago, Ben Is Dead, J. D. s, and the LA Weekly.
She was written off the series during the first season after just ten episodes ; Entertainment Weekly suggested that it had been due to a lack of chemistry between Delaney and star David Caruso.
" In reviewing her second album Ciara: The Evolution, Jody Rosen of Entertainment Weekly writes " Ciara's comfort with rave-inspired beats sets her apart from Cassie, Amerie, Rihanna, and other would-Beyoncés ... singing is nimble throughout: She whispers, coos, wails, and reels off speedy syncopations worthy of Beyoncé herself.
She has modeled for several magazines, including Life & Style Weekly, Us Weekly, Star, OK !, Stuff, People, Maxim ( and made the Maxim Hot 100 list in 2005 ), Spanish Marie Claire, Von Dutch, Von Dutch Watches, Salon City, Macy's, Famous Stars and Straps, Lucky, Ed Hardy, Kinis Bikinis, Beverly Hills Choppers, and Merit Diamonds.
She originally appeared as a warrior in black in Prime Rose, comic series in Weekly Shōnen Champion, which was later adapted into an animated movie in 1983.
She remarks that the " human Bible " is " little better than US Weekly.
She also had a short manga series about long track speed skating that ran in Weekly Shōnen Jump in 2005.
She made her debut in July 2003 with the publication of her first manga series Continue and is known for her work, D. Gray-man, which began serialization in Shueisha's Weekly Shōnen Jump in May 2004.
She is best remembered as the wife and helpmate of Robert “ Fighting Bob ” La Follette -- a prominent Progressive Republican politician both in Wisconsin and on the national scene — and as co-editor with her husband of La Follette ’ s Weekly Magazine.
She posed on the cover of several mainstream magazines such as Entertainment Weekly, Lucky, Maxim, Glamour, and InStyle and has had several endorsement deals, one of her latest endorsements is for Op's fall campaign OPen Campus.
She then moved to Manchester and took a job as a secretary, supplementing her income by writing a regular column for the British Weekly, and by reading and reviewing books for a publisher.
She told Entertainment Weekly that the episode was a chance for her and her husband " to spread the vegetarian word to a wider audience.
She was the founding editor of Cleo, a high-circulation magazine aimed at women aged 20 to 40 that was frank about sexuality ( and, in its infancy, featured nude male centrefolds ), and later as the editor of the more sedate Australian Women's Weekly.
She is the youngest person to ever be appointed editor of the Weekly, which was then per capita, the largest-selling magazine in the world.
She started her career at Australian Consolidated Press, owned by the Packer family, working as a copy girl at the Australian Women's Weekly, then became a cadet journalist on The Daily Telegraph and The Sunday Telegraph in Sydney.

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