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"heartlessness" Definitions
  1. behaviour or an attitude that shows no sympathy for other people

80 Sentences With "heartlessness"

How to use heartlessness in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "heartlessness" and check conjugation/comparative form for "heartlessness". Mastering all the usages of "heartlessness" from sentence examples published by news publications.

But his heartlessness consists merely of unwillingness to help those in need.
But we don&apost talk about the heartlessness of not enforcing the border.
The mindlessness and heartlessness of the travel ban should humiliate us, not you.
"The heartlessness of the Bavarian bureaucracy towards Mr. Trump's grandfather is reminiscent of the heartlessness of the president towards illegal immigrants in America," said Walter Rummel, the director of the state archive in nearby Speyer, where the unsuccessful immigration file of Friedrich Trump is kept.
We learn their names, and see evidence of tenderness and folly as well as steely heartlessness.
It showed a shocking lack of compassion, if not outright heartlessness toward the Americans suffering on the island.
"The heartlessness of House Republicans knows no bounds," Pelosi said Tuesday, pointing to the most recent weather events.
You are strong and always a positive influence and I hope one day, this misogyny and heartlessness will end.
The part of their behavior that's most morally worrisome, as you recount it, isn't their hypocrisy, it's their heartlessness.
Even for an administration whose immigration policy is defined by cruelty, Sessions's unilateral move stands out for its heartlessness.
A caveat: While drugs might be useful in cultivating intentional heartlessness, alcohol may have the reverse effect on women.
Where grime is verbose and cathartic, U.K. drill traffics in a cool heartlessness, a sense of menace that wafts and oozes.
But things that Manson himself did do not show the kind of torture or heartlessness that some of his followers showed.
He's ridiculed on both sides for his heartlessness — but cheered by a band of white voters who helped put him in office.
For Mr. Roof, the decision meant that the jury would learn almost nothing about him beyond the brutal heartlessness of his crime.
The lovers themselves are identically clad goons, desperate to break out of what seems to be an endless loop of heartlessness and cruelty.
It was the kind of barbarism and heartlessness that undergirds much of America's development, yet it was regarded as an act of charity.
That editorial was published just after a stunning expose on how even ICE agents were horrified by the heartlessness of McKinsey's consultant mercenaries.
It was a reflection of Trump's growing frustration that the family separation crisis roiling his administration has led to accusations of child abuse and heartlessness.
It takes a special sort of heartlessness to create a conspiracy video about a teenage survivor of one of the deadliest school shootings in US history.
It was hard for me to fathom that my own family, who is otherwise quite liberal and thoughtful, could sustain such heartlessness about Muslims in Kashmir.
The complete heartlessness of some species of sea spider is, presumably, a result of gut peristalsis taking over the oxygen-distribution job entirely, rendering that organ redundant.
For one day in spring, behaviors that are normally considered socially unacceptable – pranks, deception, even heartlessness – become temporarily socially acceptable, made lighter by the prospect of laughter.
This dynamic brought back the sting to negotiations within Europe, along with old chestnuts about northern heartlessness and southern profligacy, eroding an already thin sense of European solidarity.
" He also accused the firm of heartlessness, noting that Benchmark had "executed its plan at the most shameful of times: immediately after Kalanick experienced a horrible personal tragedy.
As a society we will be judged by how we treat the most vulnerable among us, and the draconian policy being contemplated here betrays a decidedly un-American heartlessness.
His grievances include not only the cynicism of the politicians who oversee health care but also the increasing heartlessness of a country that has no patience or room for immigrants.
His expressions of concern for the DACA "dreamers" comes as much of America worries about the fate of these young people and their deportation looms as a remarkable act of heartlessness.
The president's complaints about not being appreciated remind us that he takes everything personally and that his personal qualities of heartlessness and intellectual dishonesty will hobble his response to our suffering.
Eventually, for the media and politicians of all stripes to alternately celebrate and slander them as the tides of national opinion ebb and flow becomes not so much heartlessness as mere pragmatism.
In recent years, survivors of sexual assault haven't had to endure the kind of heartlessness Fallon faced when she was forced to pay out of pocket for care associated with being attacked.
The other reason why it was a wall to wall story, as Gillian mentioned just a couple of minutes, is the fact that you saw some heartlessness from folks in the Trump administration.
"The U.S. Government is waging a war on refugee families that has reached a new level of heartlessness and hate," said Alex Mensing, a spokesman for the organizing group, from Pueblo Sin Fronteras.
AGAINST EMPATHY: The Case for Rational Compassion, by Paul Bloom (Ecco/HarperCollins, $26.99.) Bloom is not making a case for heartlessness, but arguing for a kind of rational compassion — a mixture of caring and detached cost-benefit analysis.
The motions — and emotions — of everyday life are a theme buried in the subtext of "Frankenstein" as a monster struggling to understand the heartlessness of daily life around him as he tries to connect, but ultimately dances toward tragedy.
Another camp of interventionists criticizes what it sees as President Obama's weakness, heartlessness and strategic myopia, and wants the United States to stand up to Russia and assert its intention to remain a major geopolitical player in the region.
Trump's flamboyant heartlessness, his pure rage, is exacerbated by him belonging to a party that aims to sabotage social services, cut taxes for rich, deregulate the economy, and build up the military at the expense of all other government functions.
A guaranteed avalanche of advocacy ads filled with pictures of elderly poor people and front page editorials in every mainstream newspaper bashing "Republican heartlessness" aren't easy for politicians to take when they see their careers measured solely by momentary swings in public opinion.
A YouTube clip earlier this year showing the graceless manner in which bosses of Carrier, a maker of air-conditioners, told its workforce that it was moving production to Mexico seemed to confirm every fear about the exodus of jobs and the heartlessness of capitalism.
Why this is a big thing: Big Tech is under unprecedented scrutiny on both sides of the Atlantic, and the apparent optics of heartlessness toward homeless people — some of the most visible victims of the tech juggernaut — make Amazon's aggressive posture against the tax risky.
Those who believed Genghis to be a tyrant of monstrous heartlessness have thus lately come to think otherwise: Weatherford's writings present us revisionist history on a grand scale, but one as scrupulously well researched (with ample endnotes) as such an intellectual overhaul needs to be.
" To support his case that city officials ought to do something, Mr. Keller added the argument that won him a starring role as the face of technology-industry heartlessness: "I shouldn't have to see the pain, struggle and despair of homeless people to and from my way to work every day.
CANNES, France — The 69th Cannes Film Festival, an event this year defined by peerless highs and embarrassing lows, ended on Sunday when the Palme d'Or was awarded to "I, Daniel Blake," a film about a carpenter with a heart condition up against the heartlessness of bureaucracy, from the veteran British director Ken Loach.
House Democrats, urged on by immigration rights groups, had pushed hard, hoping to leverage White House fears of another damaging shutdown into a softening of the president's hard-line immigration policies that they say have torn apart families, wrenched productive workers from the communities they have lived in for years and infused a heartlessness into official American immigration policy.
That government, which was led by the Congress party, paid a heavy political price for its heartlessness in the 2014 parliamentary elections; the B.J.P. won the elections in large part because Mr. Modi promised to make the government more responsive to the needs of Indians who were left behind by a government dogged by corruption scandals and widely considered rudderless.
The bulk of the novella is taken up by flashbacks to 1945, concerning Farringdon and the Club. The narrative slowly builds up to the unfolding of a tragedy that killed Joanna Childe, the elocution instructor, and led to Farringdon's conversion through the evil heartlessness he perceived in Selina's behavior.
Alarmed, Cunxiao and Qiuyue berate Bufan for his heartlessness and infidelity and Buqun righteously hits Bufan for Xinya. Unable to face his family, Bufan flees. Drifting in the streets, Bufan is overwhelmed by thoughts of suicide and walks into the path of a car, only to be saved by Xinya who arrives in the nick of time. Bufan repents.
Finally realising her danger, she seeks help from Martin at his country estate, but he shuts the front door in her face. Several gunshots are heard. Martin's wife, Elsa (Mady Christians), is appalled by her husband's heartlessness. Max and Heinrich learn of Griselle's death in a short letter in which Martin states only that she is dead.
Unfortunately, Ivanov is unable, and unwilling, to pay for the trip. He is heavily in debt and already owes Zinaida Lebedeva 9000 roubles. Ivanov is criticised for heartlessness and for spending time with the Lebedevs instead of his seriously ill wife. At the end of Act One, Ivanov departs to visit the Lebedevs, and unbeknown to him is followed by Anna and Lvov.
And she torments him. He must feed her, read to her, bring her cider from the deep cellar (one glass at the time), maintain her voluminous correspondence with servants he has long ago forgotten, try on a mitten she has been knitting and unravelling for years, tend the earaches she develops from constant experiments... until the monotony and heartlessness of their life together shatters in a bloodbath.
According to legend they originated as the three loaves of bread of a heartless woman who would not help a starving miner. With the words ("I'd rather my three loaves became stones") she spurned the miner, whereupon the loaves grew into giant stones and squashed the woman into the mossy earth. The granite blocks were considered a warning against heartlessness. At the Dreibrodesteine is checkpoint no.
Octavia figures out Clarke and Lexa knew about the missile, and Lexa decides she needs to be killed to protect that secret. Clarke stops the attempted murder. She confronts Lexa about her plan and her facade of heartlessness, and Lexa reveals she has feelings for Clarke. As they wait for the deadly fog to clear, Lexa informs Clarke she does trust her and will no longer try to hurt Octavia.
The play was impossible equally to stage and to discuss, forgotten and obscure. Academic critics of the first half of the 20th century continued to approach The Country Wife gingerly, with frequent warnings about its "heartlessness", even as they praised its keen social observation. At this time nobody found it funny, and positive criticism tried to rescue it as satire and social criticism rather than as comedy. Macaulay's "licentious" Mrs.
Read founded Fire + Ice in 1991 after several years as a member of Sol Invictus. According to their sole website, "The heartlessness of the modern commercial consumer society ruins the lives of many. FIRE + ICE takes the purity and philosophy of early music and melds it into a message redolent with powerful seeds of honour, truth, loyalty and the bond of true friendship." The band website hosted by Runa-Raven Press News Magazine.
In Portugal it was re-cast by RTP Memória. La Piovra is still considered to be the most famous Italian television series in the world, and all seasons received widespread public approval, with an average of 10 million and a peak of 15 million viewers. The show presents an extremely realistic portrayal of the violence and heartlessness of members of organized crime, and this remains the most distinctive feature of the production to this day.
Isabel Reyes (Rhian Ramos) is an infamous soap opera villain in the country. Everyone simply loathes Isabel which makes her the most condemned personality in the world of television. But by some weird twist of fate, Isabel’s life turns upside down when she encounters a near-death accident. The wicked antagonist experiences a sudden change of heart and being the top kontrabida of her soap opera, Isabel couldn’t just deliver her heartlessness and cruelty in front of the camera.
He was the first senior British politician to back the EU proposal for a quota to take in refugees during the Mediterranean crisis. He called for the UK to accept up to 60,000 non-EU refugees to help with the influx. He attended the Refugee solidarity march in London in September 2015 and gave the opening speech. In the 2016 Liberal Democrat Spring Conference, Farron accused the government of cowardice and heartlessness over their current refugee policy.
In her final mention of Prince John in her diary, Queen Mary wrote simply "miss the dear child very much indeed." She gave Winifred Thomas a number of John's books, which she had inscribed, "In memory of our dear little Prince." "Lala" Bill always kept a portrait of Prince John above her mantelpiece, together with a letter from him that read "nanny, I love you." In recent years, Prince John's seclusion has been brought forward as evidence of the "heartlessness" of the Windsor family.
The front of this sarcophagus only shows ten Niobids, but two more are depicted on either side of it. There are also two bearded Pedagogues shown trying to save the Niobids on the front and a nurse on the left trying to do the same on the front, along with Niobe herself on the left trying to protect one of her daughters. The lid depicts all 14 corpses stacked on top of one another in a disorderly fashion, emphasizing the heartlessness of this tragedy.
Engaged was revived in New York in 1886, with Agnes Booth again playing Belinda, opposite Herbert Kelcey as Cheviot. The reviewer in The New York Times noted that "the laughter was almost incessant", but wondered if what he saw as the author's heartlessness would prevent Gilbert's plays from lasting. After Gilbert's lifetime there were London revivals of Engaged at the Embassy Theatre in 1929;"Embassy Theatre", The Times, 16 April 1929, p. 14 the Old Vic in 1975 by the National Theatre company;Cushman, Robert.
Meanwhile, Lillian reads an article about Reuben's stage play, dedicated to Derek's memory. Gareth's only response is to make sure the stage play has no affiliation with the film he now owns the rights to, or else they'd have to sue. Incensed at Gareth's heartlessness, Lillian lashes out at him and vows to reverse the contracts that she had made for Gareth. Concluding that her chance to have children has passed her by, Lillian abandons Gareth and seeks Reuben out at the theater, where he and Derek met.
Following the event, many major Western media outlets covered the event with the quotation marks around the word "terrorism," some in the article's headline, some in the body, and some in both.People's Daily Online, 4 March 2014 "Western media coverage of Kunming's terror attack shows sheer mendacity and heartlessness" , 4 March 2014.Dawn, Yiqin Fu, 5 March 2014 "Chinese are angry at western media’s portrayal of the Kunming attack" , 5 March 2014. China accused Western commentators, with their focus on Uyghur rights, of hypocrisy and double standards on terrorism.
"No poem gives me such an idea of the heartlessness of Nature. The poem is Death within and Summer without—light girdling darkness—and it leaves a picture and impression on the mind never to be effaced." The poem of "The House of Death" is unequalled in its tragic beauty and sweetness. It was apropos of this volume that in one of his letters to her Robert Browning said he had closed the book with music in his ears and flowers before his eyes, and not without thoughts across his brain.
They were best known for their extravagant parties and were associated with such places as the Café Royal and The Cave of the Golden Calf, London's first nightclub. The group made a common pledge to be "unafraid of words, unshocked by drink, and unashamed of 'decadence' and gambling". The group reveled in drink, blasphemy, gambling, drug-taking, chloroform ("chlorers") sniffing, and other kinds of decadent behaviour. While the group's principal purpose was the pursuit of pleasure, their default attitude was one of cynical heartlessness, that at times was downright cruel.
In an act of divine intervention, the Imperial Court of Heaven descends upon the competition and reveal that in another life, Chow was a heavenly assistant to the Kitchen God, before being sent to Earth to live as a human as punishment for revealing culinary secrets to mankind. Moved by his sorrow and his humbleness, they forgive him. They then transform Chow's former business partner into a form befitting his treachery: a bulldog. As for Bull, he is given a gaping hole on his chest, possibly symbolizing his heartlessness (whether he is killed by this is never revealed).
The death of Kim Moo-jung meant the fall of the coastal wave, which was one of the powers of North Korea. When Kim Moo-jung was killed in 1952, the coastal wave he led was destroyed by the August 1956 sectarian case and the 1958 Choi Chang-ik purge. Since then, Kim Il-sung's one-man dictatorship was established. However, Kim Il-sung highly praised the activity in the memoir "With the Century" by describing the fact that heartlessness played a large role in the independent movement in North Korea and the achievements of the Communist Party of China.
He is appeared to pick heartlessness rather than continually thoroughly considering circumstances amid the session of Capture the Flag, picking a group worked for control, however losing when Four's quicker group wins. While not preparing the starts he has requested one individual to watch out for the control room which Four controls when he is satisfaction preparing new individuals to Dauntless. Eric endeavored to slaughter Tobias by holding a gun to his head when he was thought to be under the simulation. However, Tris immediately hauled her firearm out and debilitated to shoot him before he could shoot Tobias.
Caroline was a figurehead for the growing radical movement that demanded political reform and opposed the unpopular George. By August, Caroline had allied with radical campaigners such as William Cobbett, and it was probably Cobbett who wrote these words of Caroline's: The day before the trial was due to start, an open letter from Caroline to George, again probably written by Cobbett, was published widely. In it, she decried the injustices against her, claimed she was the victim of conspiracy and intrigue, accused George of heartlessness and cruelty, and demanded a fair trial. The letter was seen as a challenge, not only to George but to the government and the forces resisting reform.
When President Shehu Shagari called for all the foreigners to leave Nigeria, it created the worst international crisis since the end of the civil war in January 1970 and implemented a search of commercial, industrial and residential buildings to ensure their departure which caused tension with neighboring countries and international allies. The United States State Department described Nigeria's actions as "shocking and violation of every imaginable human right". The European Economic Community also criticized it and Pope John Paul II called it ""a grave, incredible drama producing the largest single, and worst human exodus in the 20th century". British politician Michael Foot sent a letter to the Nigerian High Commissioner in London, saying ""an act of heartlessness, and a failure of common humanity".
Back in the Buteau home, the greedy couple turn their attention to Fouan, whose obstinacy in remaining alive has become a serious financial drain. One night while Fouan is asleep, they steal into his bedroom and smother him; finding he is still alive, they set fire to him, while arranging the scene to look like an accident (their story is accepted by the local community). The Buteaus refuse to pay Jean the money for Françoise's share of the family home, which is now rightfully his as her next-of-kin. Horrified by his suspicions regarding both his wife's and Fouan's deaths, and by the heartlessness of those around him, Jean returns to his wandering, and leaves the region for good.
When President Shehu Shagari called for all the foreigners to leave Nigeria, it created the worst international crisis since the end of the civil war in January 1970 and implemented a search of commercial, industrial and residential buildings to ensure their departure which caused tension with neighboring countries and international allies. The United States State Department described Nigeria's actions as "shocking and violation of every imaginable human right". The European Economic Community also criticized it and Pope John Paul II called it ""a grave, incredible drama producing the largest single, and worst human exodus in the 20th century". British politician Michael Foot sent a letter to the Nigerian High Commissioner in London, saying ""an act of heartlessness, and a failure of common humanity".
It has to serve as our fresh fountain of knowledge and reverse our knowledge deficit. It has to be a laboratory of ideas, where old ideas are given the reverence of immutability, and where new ideas are given a tolerant eye. It must improve the quality of our democracy by helping break the monopoly of power of the elites and by halting their heartlessness to the many who cannot exercise their rights due to involuntary poverty." In closing, he said that "the UP must maintain its academic freedom, for any institution that searches and stands for truth, that resists expressions of liberty, that holds sacrosanct the right to inquire will most likely be scorned in a society where the powers that reign take comfort in the uniformity of ideas and shun multiformity of thoughts.
Robert Pardi of TV Guide said of the series; "Engrossing in a middlebrow sort of way, this straightforward thriller, originally broadcast on British television in 2001, confirms one's worst suspicions about the heartlessness of all governments. Screenwriter Gerald Seymour gets a little too wrapped up in the mechanics of the espionage plot to lend the hero's plight much suspense, but the timely subject matter does add extra heft to a film that's caught somewhere between provocative political melodrama and standard action bash." Many also noted at the time of broadcast that Kemp's character in the series was very similar to that of his Ultimate Force character Henry "Henno" Garvie. Kemp later revealed that it was his performance in A Line in the Sand which earned him the part of Henno.
The radical MP William Cobbett voted against the Act, asserting that the poor had an automatic right to relief and that the Act aimed to "enrich the landowner" at the expense of the poor. The 'Tory Radical' Richard Oastler personally lobbied Tory leaders (including the Duke of Wellington) to oppose the Act. Oastler's objections were that the Act pursued aims dictated by political economy by un-Christian treatment of the poor (and particularly of the married poor: "whom God hath joined together let no man part asunder"), and to ensure this was done with consistent heartlessness was setting up an unconstitutional body. Oastler told the Duke "if that Bill passes, the man who can produce the greatest confusion in the country will be the greatest patriot, and I will try to be that man".
Although Mr Norris Changes Trains was a critical and popular success, Isherwood later condemned it, believing that he had lied about himself through the characterisation of the narrator and that he did not truly understand the suffering of the people he had depicted. In his introduction to an edition of Gerald Hamilton's memoir Mr Norris and I (1956) Isherwood wrote: > What repels me now about Mr Norris is its heartlessness. It is a heartless > fairy-story about a real city in which human beings were suffering the > miseries of political violence and near-starvation. The "wickedness" of > Berlin's night-life was of the most pitiful kind; the kisses and embraces, > as always, had price-tags attached to them, but here the prices were > drastically reduced in the cut-throat competition of an over-crowded market.
A tent at the Occupy London encampment in the City of London The book includes an editor's note, a brief section providing legal advice for American Occupy activists, and five sections written by Chomsky himself. Occupy opens with an editor's note written by Greg Ruggiero, in which he explains the basics to Chomsky's views on the Occupy movement, drawing quotes from his various public speeches in order to do so. Ruggiero also discusses Occupy's success in the United States, stating that it has helped to change media discussions by introducing terms like "the 99%" into popular discourse and also by bringing national attention to the plight of the impoverished. He remarks that the protest movement has not only helped to highlight the "heartlessness and inhumanity" of the socio-political system, but that it has also helped to provide solidarity with those "being crushed" under that system.
Easy Mode with 18 songs Normal Mode with 16 songs Hard Mode with 16 songs Double Mode with 20 songs TechnoMotion Song Lists (including the 2nd Dance Floor version): A Man Tales - Honey Family Another Truth - Novasonic Ba Kkwo (Change) - Lee Jung-hyun Broken Heart - Koyote Bump - NRG C.O.C. (Choice of Cinderella) - Keoun So-young Closely - S#arp Cyber Lover - Turbo Dream - Hyun Seung-min Emotion - Yoo Chae-yeong First Love (Techno Mix)- Clon Flower - Yoo Chae-yeong Freedom - O-24 Funky Tonight - Clon Gagaai - S#arp Get Up - Baby V.O.X. Hatred - Novasonic Heartlessness - Chae Jung-an I'm A Trashman - N.EX.T Killer - Baby V.O.X. Loner - T.T.MA Love Story - See U Party Party - Koyote Pierrot - Lee Hyun-do Recollection - Turbo Shadow - NRG Starian - Duke Staring At The Sun - The Offspring (international song) Tell Me Tell Me - S#arp The Disappointed Love - Koyote Wa! (Come On!) - Lee Jung-hyun Win Win - The Bros.
The Mammoth Book of Jack the Ripper, p. 421, Ed. Maxim Jakubowski and Nathan Braund. Jakubowski and Braund state that the major problem with Stephenson as a suspect is that the idea is heavily reliant on his own testimony, both as to "the depth of his heartlessness and iniquity and as to his activities". Whilst Cremers, the principal witness, was closely linked to Aleister Crowley and Stephenson's "air of mystery and his somewhat theatrical, throwaway boast of wickedness" seem to anticipate Crowley's own romancing, the statements about blood and candles may have been theatrical props specifically designed to have the effect which they had - to frighten two impressionable women.The Mammoth Book of Jack the Ripper, p. 449, Ed. Maxim Jakubowski and Nathan Braund. Author Ivor Edwards also named Stephenson as the Ripper in his book, Jack the Ripper's Black Magic Rituals published by Penny Publishing (2001) and Blake Publishing (2002).
Of all the early modern Lords of Clancahill Donal III has the misfortune of having the worst popular reputation, for a single alleged act of appalling brutality, utter heartlessness and disregard for humanity which is still legendary in the countryside to this day: the hanging of Dorothy Forde, which damaged the local reputation of O'Donovan of Clancahill for centuries. As it is most often told, and as set forth in various depositions following the outrages on Protestants circa the 1640s, Dorothy had lent a sum of money to Donal, but when she later asked for it to be repaid he incomprehensibly hanged her, with the aid of his brother-in-law Teige-an-Duna MacCarthy, from the tower of Castle Donovan to eliminate her claim. Ford's family, who were Protestants, cursed O'Donovan and his direct line until they were extinct. The hanging was said to have caused a braon sinsir or "corroding drop," said to be her tears, to drip from the castle until the last of O'Donovan's line were gone,.
Mitch Barrett (Alan Ladd) is a former Confederate soldier emigrating to the West whose wife Ellie (Rachel Stephens) dies in childbirth in a small cattle town in Arizona because of what Mitch sees as the heartlessness of three local men – George Caldwell the hotel keeper (Henry Norell), Sam Giller the general store owner (John Alexander) and Ole Olsen the sheriff (Karl Swenson). Unhinged by Ellie's death, he plots to get his revenge by robbing the local bank of $100,000 deposited by a rich cattleman, thus ruining the town. He accepts the job of deputy sheriff, then murders the sheriff so that he can take his place. To help him carry out the elaborately- planned robbery, he recruits four people: Dan Keats (Don Murray), an alcoholic ex-Confederate soldier who scrapes a living drawing portraits of the customers in saloons; Sir Harry Ivers 'of the Lancaster Ivers' (Dan O'Herlihy), an upper-class-sounding English pickpocket; Julie Reynolds (Dolores Michaels), a prostitute who hopes for enough money to go East and make a respectable life for herself; and Stu Christian (Barry Coe), a ruthless gunman.

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