Average rating of the most matched results:
Joanne Simpson, Herman badillo, Buffalo, NY
Horrible person and rotten teacher, nobody likes her
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Joanne simpson, HERMAN BADILLO BILINGUAL ACADEMY PS #76, Buffalo, NY
Horrible teacher and person
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ms mcgarrity, is187, is 187, new york, NY
LMAO
I'd like to post a picture of her snatch, but my phone doesn't have th...
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ms mcgarrity, is187, new york, NY, ms mcgarrity, is187, new york, NY
She's so fat she even ate the wrappers.
i never got candy from her (she must have ate them all)
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ms mcgarrity, is187, new york, NY
I like it when fat girls jiggle!
i was on an airplane until I saw msmcgarrity took 2 seats, and the sea...
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Mrs. McGarrity Christa McAuliffe I.S. 187, Brooklyn, NY, 11219
Nah she made my grad ego from a 89 to a 72 in 1 assignment where I got 5/10.She gives me barely anytime to do work.And just today she yapped so much about her husband friend being rich from computer science and took 30 minutes and 15 minutes was left for us to do 2 assignments
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Mrs. McGarrity Christa McAuliffe I.S. 187, I.S.187, Brooklyn, NY, 11219
Gravitational pull is the force that a massive object uses to attract other objects toward it. The more mass an object has, the stronger its gravitational pull becomes. For example, Earth has a strong gravitational pull that keeps people, water, and the atmosphere from floating away into space. Very massive objects like the Sun or planets pull nearby objects into orbit, such as moons or smaller planets. Gravitational pull also depends on distance—the closer two objects are, the stronger the pull between them. This force plays an important role in keeping the universe organized and holding celestial bodies together.
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