Barbara Williams as Muriel Walker, Martin Walker's wife.
Walker's wife, Muriel, is in Fairfax.
Muriel, would you do something for me?”?
Muriel liked to be the first.”.
In that case, you can always take Muriel.
Thank you so much, Muriel.
Muriel, hi! Delighted to meet you.
I almost thought he said a school Muriel.
Muriel Robin dreams of becoming a specialized veterinary assistant(ASV).
Muriel won't let me smoke in the house anymore.
And I know that you and Muriel have had a tough go of it.
The second teacher, this time in high school, was a version of Muriel Spark's charming character Miss Jean Brodie.
Your values are your animating force, because, according to the poet Muriel Rukeyser,“The universe is made of stories, not atoms.”.
Not so long ago, people like my Aunt Muriel thought of sunburn as a necessary evil on the way
to a“good base tan.”.
Andy Warhol painted his
iconic soup cans on the advice of his friend, Muriel Latow, who advised him to paint“something you see every day.”.
It annoyed him to go out in the ministry in another language, whereas before he loved preaching in his native language, French,” says Muriel.
But a few days later Muriel, reading over the Seven Commandments to herself,
noticed that there was yet another of them which the animals had remembered wrong.
Amelia's sister, Muriel Earhart Morrissey, gave enough credence to the first theory that
she wrote to Emperor Hirohito for reassurance that Japan had nothing to do with Amelia's disappearance.
The second woman, Muriel Amelia Eady,
was a co-worker he confessed to killing in 1944 after luring her to his house with a promise of a mixture that would cure her of bronchitis.
Historian Muriel Chamberlain notes that after the First World War:
diplomatic history replaced constitutional history as the flagship of historical investigation, at once the most important, most exact and most sophisticated of historical studies.
Jean Brodie is a fictional character in the Muriel Spark novel The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie(1961);
and in the play and 1969 film of the same name-both by Jay Presson Allen-which were based on the novel, but radically depart from it in the interest of theatre and poetic licence.