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Examples

  • And while Wehle seems more like a good friend than the lover of Cornell she is revealed as, Wehle has a sharp intelligence on stage that keeps the smallest of the four roles well defined.

    Michael Giltz: Theater Review: Not So Grand Manner 2010

  • Helen Goldmark was born September 4, 1859, the eldest daughter of Regina (Wehle) and Joseph Goldmark, both of whom had immigrated to the United States in 1849.

    Helen Goldmark Adler. 2009

  • She was just a few yards off, leaning against her locker, talking to Sarah Wehle, who was doing some sort of animated song and dance, trying to elicit a happy reaction from Saskia, who just looked so sad, standing there, chewing her sandy blond hair.

    Nothing Like You Lauren Strasnick 2009

  • She was just a few yards off, leaning against her locker, talking to Sarah Wehle, who was doing some sort of animated song and dance, trying to elicit a happy reaction from Saskia, who just looked so sad, standing there, chewing her sandy blond hair.

    Nothing Like You Lauren Strasnick 2009

  • She was just a few yards off, leaning against her locker, talking to Sarah Wehle, who was doing some sort of animated song and dance, trying to elicit a happy reaction from Saskia, who just looked so sad, standing there, chewing her sandy blond hair.

    Nothing Like You Lauren Strasnick 2009

  • Born February 21, 1874, Pauline was the ninth of ten children of Polish and Czech Jewish immigrants, Joseph and Regina (Wehle) Goldmark.

    Pauline Goldmark. 2009

  • She was just a few yards off, leaning against her locker, talking to Sarah Wehle, who was doing some sort of animated song and dance, trying to elicit a happy reaction from Saskia, who just looked so sad, standing there, chewing her sandy blond hair.

    Nothing Like You Lauren Strasnick 2009

  • Wehle thinks that in America, even before the war, industrial concentration was leading to political concentration and that the states were losing their relative political importance.

    The Psychology of Nations A Contribution to the Philosophy of History G.E. Partridge

  • Wehle, who was “breaking up” her father's north field, was just plowing down the west side of his land?

    The end of the world 1872

  • And Wehle had noticed the work on the garden-bed, the call to the house, and the starting of Julia on the path toward

    The end of the world 1872

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