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Page "Wanda Sykes" ¶ 6
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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 correspondent
" She attended seven different public schools, and was a correspondent student of the Society to Encourage Studies at Home but studied only until she was fifteen.
She also became a special correspondent for The Tyra Banks Show, starting in early February 2007.
She teamed up with the American photographer David E. Scherman, a LIFE correspondent on many assignments.
She spent five years as a Tribune national correspondent based in Atlanta.
She then was as a correspondent and producer for Tribune Entertainment's Now It Can Be Told, an investigative news program.
She became the network's Sydney-based correspondent and anchored Squawk Australia, thus replacing Jeffrey James.
She frequently appeared on The Oprah Winfrey Show as a correspondent and on the Fridays Live segments in Chicago as a semi-regular / regular panelist.
She and Richard were living at Greystone at the time, with Orwell working in Paris as a war correspondent for The Observer.
She met her husband, Todd Purdum, the national editor for Vanity Fair and a former White House correspondent and Los Angeles bureau chief for the New York Times, during the 1992 presidential campaign.
She began serving as correspondent in the Times Washington bureau in 1986.
She worked for the United Press and post-1958 successor United Press International ( UPI ) for 57 years, first as a correspondent, and later as White House bureau manager.
She became the White House UPI correspondent in January 1961.
She was White House correspondent for the Gannett News Service.
She wore form-fitting apparel so tight that one French correspondent suggestively described her as, " molded into her ... dress like a dagger in its sheath.
She serves as special correspondent for ABC News, contributing to ABC World News, Nightline, 20 / 20, Good Morning America, This Week and primetime news specials.
She worked as a journalist, becoming political correspondent at the Manila daily newspaper Voz de Manila.
She became a correspondent and adviser to many political leaders, including Samuel Adams, John Hancock, Patrick Henry, Thomas Jefferson, George Washington and especially John Adams, who became her literary mentor in the years leading to the Revolution.
She worked as a grade school teacher from 1934 to 1973 and became a correspondent for the Muskegon Chronicle in 1951, which lasted until 1972, the year before she retired from teaching elementary school.
She served as the network's State Department correspondent from 1998 until March 2006.
She later became a correspondent for nationwide news-magazine shows including West 57th ( 1985 – 89 ) and 60 Minutes ( 1989 – 91 ).
She moved to ABC initially as a correspondent for the news-magazine show Turning Point ( 1993 – 97 ).
She is currently a contributor to Dateline NBC and a correspondent on Rock Center with Brian Williams.
She then became a popular local television newscaster at KYW-TV, the former NBC affiliate ( now CBS ) in Philadelphia, and a Washington correspondent for NBC News.
She became the first black woman to be a paid correspondent for a mainstream white newspaper.
She worked as a journalist, working for the BBC as a studio manager and then became Welsh correspondent for the Guardian and Observer newspapers during 1964-79.

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