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A Sicilian dandy claims the late Jonathan Grayson, Shirley's benefactor, is his father.
Shirley is appointed to a presidential commission on youth.
Cushing begins his birthday at his best friend's funeral and ends it in a hospital---thanks to a birthday cake from Shirley
Shirley picks up the pieces when Max falls in love with Nancy, who looks desperately for a way to tell him the feeling isn't exactly mutual.
Shirley and Cushing have one too many arguments, so Cushing quits, leaving himself jobless and Shirley caught up in a frenzy of work.
Shirley's hands are full when Barton Stone's wife throws him out of the house.
Shirley's good deed lands her in a pickle of a predicament that requires some outrageous maneuvering when she loses her secretary's nine-year-old son.
Shirley could lose her conglomerate after Barton Stone contests the will in which his uncle left Shirley control of the business.
Shirley and her parents wind up snowbound with Cushing, who was planning a cozy weekend alone with his wife.
Shirley and her chief antagonist, Cushing, are brought closer when three protesters handcuff them together.
An African prince courts Shirley, raising corporate hopes that she'll resign to emigrate.
Shirley gives nepotism new meaning when she gets her father, a striking bus driver, work as a secretary at Grayson Industries.
Shirley, a lady cabbie inherits the controlling interest In a $200 million corporation.