Word: daughters
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Despite being the daughter of a former Miss Rhode Island, Sinnott said she didn’t plan on following in her mother’s footsteps until recently...
...Reception,” a play by L.M. Vincent, a young psychologist, Blair (Priour), comes to Meg’s (Woods) Boston apartment. He plans to sabotage the engagement of Meg’s daughter Melissa (Anna I. Polonyi ’10), for whom Meg is throwing an engagement party and with whom Blair has been in love since high school. A delightfully quirky mix of guests arrives throughout the day, including a broke businessman turned porn writer (Steve Sweeney), a giggly southern belle whose past is not as chaste as it seems (Rebecca M. Harrington...
...course, English customs and governmental procedures are completely alien to Paramount, and so he enlists the aid of his eldest daughter, Princess Zara (Charlotte Munson, another great singer), who returns from school in England and brings with her four representatives of English society to help Utopia along in its transformation...
...opportunity to cash in while helping out. Students for Mitt, a Romney initiative, will allow any registered student who raises more than $1,000 for Romney to receive a 10 percent cut of the proceeds. Students for Mitt is the brainchild of Romney’s youngest son and daughter-in-law, Craig and Mary Romney, and any student over 18 can apply to join the program. Students must be screened and approved by both Craig and Mary Romney to participate. Students collect donations by distributing a username and password to an online account, which keeps track of the contributions...
...perspective of different characters, and then chooses to leave things in the stylistically most awkward of places: the defensive hands of the bored reader. Constance Barton is haunted by the fear of death through childbirth, pursued by visions of ghosts and demons coming to harm her 4-year-old daughter, Angelica. Blaming her husband’s malignant intentions, she turns to the advice of a neighborhood spiritualist. The ghost story is told first from the perspective of Constance, then of spiritualist (and proto-feminist) Anne Montague, then of Joseph Barton, father and husband, and finally of Angelica Barton herself...