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Kathrine and Taylor's
* Address Unknown ( 1944 film ), a film based on Kathrine Taylor's novel, directed by William Cameron Menzies

Kathrine and Address
Kathrine Kressmann Taylor or Kressmann Taylor ( born 1903 in Portland, Oregon – July 1996 ) was an American author, known mostly for her Address Unknown ( 1938 ), a short story written as a series of letters between a Jewish art dealer, living in San Francisco, and his business partner, who had returned to Germany in 1932.
* Address Unknown ( novel ), a short novel by Kathrine Taylor

Kathrine and was
Catherine Parr ( Katherine, Kateryn, Katheryne or Kathrine ); ( c. August 1512 – 5 September 1548 ) was Queen consort of England and Ireland and the last of the six wives of King Henry VIII of England.
In 1967, Kathrine Switzer, who had registered as " K. V. Switzer ", was the first woman to run with a race number.
Fisher, fourth of seven children, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the son of Russian-born Jewish immigrants Gitte ( later Kathrine " Katie ") ( née Winokur ) and Joseph Tisch.
Sheriff Kathrine Mackie justified the sentence, stating that there was both " a significant risk of re-offending " and that Lord Watson offered no mitigation or explanation.
His wife, Kathrine, born in Cawker City, Kansas was a New York sophisticate who had been a fact-checker for Time magazine and an original staff member for Life magazine.
Kathrine Bukles is recorded in 1589, whilst Agnes Buckles was noted living in the parish of Livingstone in 1675, and a John Bowglase signed a document in 1684 in Overlaskeoch.

Kathrine and is
Clement is married to Kathrine Jorgensen Clement, an AHP Alumna of the Sigma Phi Chapter at Metropolitan State University, and current pilot with Delta Airlines.

Kathrine and .
* Cheetah, Katherine ( or Kathrine ) & Karl Ammann, Arco Pub, ( 1985 ), ISBN 0-668-06259-2.
Richard Mather and Kathrine Holt Mather following their participation in the Great Migration from England due to nonconformity with the Church of England.
* Sorley Walker, Kathrine.
The current line-up includes vocalists Jay Randall, Kathrine Katz of Salome, and Richard Johnson of Enemy Soil and Drugs of Faith, who also plays bass guitar.
Notable crowns of sonnets have recently been published by Linda Beirds, Andrea Carter Brown, Robert Darling, Moira Egan, Jenny Factor, Andrei Krylov, Rachael Briggs, Julie Fay, Marie Ponsot, Patricia Smith, Marilyn Taylor, Natasha Trethewey, David Trinidad, John Murillo, and Kathrine Varnes.
In addition to The Sopranos, he has appeared in Mickey Blue Eyes, Two Family House ( with Sopranos cast mates Michael Rispoli, Kathrine Narducci, Matt Servitto, Michele Santopietro, Louis Guss, Rosemary De Angelis, and Sharon Angela ), Under Hellgate Bridge, Riding in Cars with Boys.
* 2006 – 2007: Kathrine J. Schmidt ( fall ), Stephanie Vallejo ( spring )
They had a daughter named Kathrine ( nicknamed Kerry ) born in 1954.
Following the announcement of the Ranheim plans, Mayor Anne Kathrine Slungård stated that she did not want to sell Lerkendal, as she wanted public ownership of cultural infrastructure.
Kathrine Kressmann moved to San Francisco after graduating from the University of Oregon in 1924 and worked as an advertising copywriter.

Taylor's and 1938
Taylor's speech was highly contentious in part because in October 1938 the Munich Agreement was popular with the public even if subsequently it was to be reviled along with the policy of appeasement, and also because he used a non-partisan and non-political occasion to make a highly partisan, politically charged attack on government policy.

Taylor's and was
Critical reaction to the film was mostly negative, with much being made of Taylor's wildly fluctuating weight from scene to scene.
Taylor's Vice Presidential running mate, Millard Fillmore, likewise was not inaugurated.
By mid-2003, LURD controlled the northern third of the country and was threatening the capital, MODEL was active in the south, and Taylor's government controlled only a third of the country: Monrovia and central Liberia.
* The story of Thuggee was popularised by books such as Philip Meadows Taylor's novel Confessions of a Thug, 1839, leading to the word " thug " entering the English language.
After Taylor's time the site was visited by numerous travelers, almost all of whom have found ancient Babylonian remains, inscribed stones and the like, lying upon the surface.
Millard Fillmore, who became president after Taylor's death, was the last Whig to hold the nation's highest office.
Since Presidents rarely died in office, however, the better preparation for the Presidency was considered to be the office of Secretary of State, in which Webster served under Harrison, Tyler, and later, Taylor's successor, Fillmore.
* On December 13 / 14, 2011 Elizabeth Taylor's complete jewelery collection was auctioned by Christie's.
At the hotel in Boston, the rabid crowd clawed at the newlyweds, Burton's coat was ripped and Taylor's ear was bloodied when someone tried to steal one of her earrings.
Burton was not the first choice for the role of Taylor's husband.
Jack Lemmon was offered the role first, but when he backed off, Jack Warner, with Taylor's insistence, agreed on Burton and paid him his price.
was popularly likened to Burton and Taylor's real-life marriage.
Taylor's stand was unpopular among Southerners and surprised them because Taylor was a Southerner.
" Prior to Taylor's attempt, on October 19 a domestic cat named Iagara was sent over the Horseshoe Falls in her barrel to test its strength.
Antoon's 1990 production at the New York Shakespeare Festival, starring Morgan Freeman and Tracey Ullman, which was set in the old west ; Bill Alexander's 1992 RSC production at the Barbican, starring Anton Lesser and Amanda Harris, in which the Induction was rewritten in modern language, and the play-within-the-play featured actors carrying scripts and continually forgetting lines ; Delia Taylor's 1999 production at the Clark Street Playhouse, which featured an all female cast, with Diane Manning as Petruchio and Elizabeth Perotti as Katherina ; Phyllida Lloyd's 2003 production at the Globe, again with an all female cast, starring Janet McTeer as Petruchio and Kathryn Hunter as Katherina ; Gregory Doran's 2003 RSC production at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre, where the play was presented with Fletcher's The Tamer Tamed as a two-part piece, with Jasper Britton and Alexandra Gilbreath ( playing both Katherina in The Shrew and Maria ( Petruchio's second wife ) in The Tamer Tamed ); Edward Hall's 2006 Propeller Company production at the Courtyard Theatre as part of the RSC's presentation of the Complete Works, featuring an all-male cast, with Dugald Bruce Lockhart as Petruchio and Simon Scardifield as Katherina ; and Conall Morrison's 2008 RSC production at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre, starring Stephen Boxer and Michelle Gomez.
Northern Dancer stood at stud at Taylor's Windfields Farm in Oshawa, Ontario until 1969, when he was moved to Windfields ' Maryland farm, where he remained until his death.
Nijisnky, a bay horse with a white star and three white feet, was bred at E. P. Taylor's Windfields Farm in Oshawa, Ontario, Canada.
Turcotte began his career in Toronto as a hot walker for E. P. Taylor's Windfields Farm in 1959, but he was soon wearing the silks and winning races.
Deems Taylor's scenes were deleted and a much briefer voiceover narration was recorded by Hugh Douglas as the studio felt the modern audience " is more sophisticated and knowledgeable about music.

Taylor's and novel
Geoff Taylor's 1966 novel, Court Of Honor, features the Fehme being revived by a German officer and Martin Bormann ( a featured character in other semi-historical novels with post-war ' Nazi underground ' themes ) in the dying days of the Third Reich.
Taylor's first novel, At Mrs. Lippincote's, was published in 1945 and was followed by eleven more.
* Cassie Logan, fictional protagonist of Mildred D. Taylor's novel, Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry
* In Keith Taylor's novel Bard II, Koschei appears to menace Felimid mac Fal, a roving Irish bard who is the novel's lead character, and his lover Gudrun Blackhair, a female pirate chieftain.
He intended to adapt Kay Glasson Taylor's novel The Wars of the Outer March but was hired by the BBC to make the TV series Walkabout.
A picture by Watts is donated to a provincial museum by the protagonist of Elizabeth Taylor's 1953 novel Angel.
Also in 1960, a notable reviewer of Griffin Taylor's novel, Mortlake, wrote:
Taylor's 1958 novel The Travels of Jaimie McPheeters, about a fourteen-year-old and his father in the California gold rush, won the Pulitzer Prize and was purchased for a film, but eventually became a television series instead.
Perpetuated by Frank Hardy's controversial 1950 novel, Power Without Glory, this theory was strongly disputed by some, including veteran journalist Hugh Buggy who maintained that Wren was not involved in Taylor's death.
Directed by Edward Montagne, and produced by Ed Gardner for his company, Edward F. Gardner Productions, the script was by Vin Bogert, Tom McGowan, Edward Montagne and Samuel W. Taylor, based on Taylor's 1948 novel The Man with My Face.
It was during his stay in The Ivy Tree Inn ( now Taylor's Pub ) Drumsna that Trollope was inspired to write his first ( and some might claim ) best novel ; The MacDermots of Ballycloran.

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