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Margaret and Wolfe
* Wolfe, Margaret Ripley.
Contributors to Imprimis have included Jeb Bush, Ward Connerly, Dinesh D ' Souza, Milton Friedman, Jack Kemp, Irving Kristol, David McCullough, Richard John Neuhaus, Ronald Reagan, Margaret Thatcher, Clarence Thomas, and Tom Wolfe.
* " Beauty is in the eye of the beholder ", a phrase from the 1878 novel Molly Bawn by Margaret Wolfe Hungerford
* Author Margaret Wolfe Hungerford, who wrote numerous Victorian era novels, lived in Bandon until her death of typhoid fever on 24 Jan 1897.
The five people who show up for the party-Jennifer Jenzen ( aka Sara Wolfe ) ( Ali Larter ), Eddie Baker ( Taye Diggs ), Melissa Margaret Marr ( Bridgette Wilson ), Dr. Donald Blackburn ( Peter Gallagher ), and Pritchett himself-aren't the ones he invited.
* In Thomas Wolfe's Look Homeward Angel after the outbreak of WWI, when adolescent Eugene, encouraged by his teacher, Margaret Leonard, devours stories of wartime courage ( R. Brooke's " If I Should die ..." and R. Hanky's A Student in Arms ", and fueled by these stories, composes his own, to the ever-present literary-referenced commentary by Wolfe.
Among today's prominent southern writers are Tim Gautreaux, William Gay, Padgett Powell, Pat Conroy, Fannie Flagg, Randall Kenan, Ernest Gaines, John Grisham, Mary Hood, Lee Smith, Tom Robbins, Tom Wolfe, Wendell Berry, Cormac McCarthy, Ron Rash, Chris Offutt, Barry Hannah, Anne Rice, Edward P. Jones, Barbara Kingsolver, Margaret Maron ,, R. B.
Wycherly was born Margaret De Wolfe in London, England of American parents, Dr. and Mrs. J. L. De Wolfe.
Under Ms Lortel's guidance The White Barn premiered plays ( many of which enjoyed successful transfers to commercial theatres ) such as: George C. Wolfe and Lawrence Bearson's Ivory Tower with Eva Marie Saint ( 1947 ); Sean O ' Casey's Red Roses for Me ( 1948 ); Eugene Ionesco's The Chairs ( 1957 ); Archibald MacLeish's This Music Crept by Me Upon the Waters ( 1959 ); Edward Albee's Fam and Yam ( 1960 ); Samuel Beckett's Embers ( 1960 ); Murray Schisgal's The Typists ( 1961 ); Adrienne Kennedy's The Owl Answers ( 1965 ); Norman Rosten's Come Slowly Eden ( 1966 ); Paul Zindel's The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds ( 1966 ); Terrence McNally's Next ( 1967 ); Barbara Wersba's The Dream Watcher starring Eva Le Gallienne ( 1975 ); June Havoc's Nuts for the Underman ( 1977 ); David Allen's Cheapside starring Cherry Jones ( which Ms. Lortel later co-produced at the Half Moon Theatre in London ); and Margaret Sanger's Unfinished Business, starring Eileen Heckart ( 1989 ).

Margaret and Hungerford
Lady Margaret was born at Farleigh Hungerford Castle in Somerset, the only surviving daughter of the George Plantagenet, 1st Duke of Clarence, and the former Isabella Neville, elder daughter of Richard Neville, 16th Earl of Warwick, and Anne Beauchamp, his wife, who inherited the Earldom of Warwick.
His daughter Elizabeth married, as his first wife, William de Botreaux, 3rd Baron Botreaux ( 1389 1462 ), whose sole heiress was his daughter Margaret Botreaux who married Robert Hungerford, 2nd Baron Hungerford.
The owner of Corsham Court in the mid-seventeenth century was the commander of the Parliamentarian New Model Army in Wiltshire ; his wife, Lady Margaret Hungerford, built what came to be known as the Hungerford Almshouses in the centre of town.
In 1462, Margaret de Botreaux, 4th Baroness Botreaux, the 3rd Baron's daughter inherited the title and, because she outlived both her son and grandson, it then passed on her death to her great-granddaughter, Mary Hungerford, as 5th Baroness Botreaux.
* Margaret Hungerford, 4th Baroness Botreaux ( d. 1477 )

Margaret and Irish
* 1945 Margaret Hassan, Irish aid worker ( d. 2004 )
There were no arrests, trials or executions connected to the plot, though an Irish woman named Margaret was found to be romantically involved with a Native American ; she was voted to be stigmatised and he was whipped.
* Anne Boleyn, Queen consort to King Henry VIII of England ; Irish paternal grandmother Margaret Butler
* 1985 The Anglo-Irish Agreement is signed at Hillsborough Castle by British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and Irish Taoiseach Garret FitzGerald.
* 1984 Brighton hotel bombing: The Provisional Irish Republican Army attempt to assassinate Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and her cabinet.
* October 12 The Provisional Irish Republican Army ( PIRA ) attempts to assassinate Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and the British Cabinet in the Brighton hotel bombing.
The following day, a single press report, written by Anderson's rival Irv Kupcinet, claimed that Margaret had referred to the Irish as " pigs ".
There in November 1895, he met Margaret Elizabeth Noble, an Irish lady, who would later become Sister Nivedita.
His maternal grandfather, James Stanihurst, had been speaker of the Irish parliament, and his father Arnold Ussher was a clerk in chancery who married Margaret Stanihurst.
Tagore wrote down the English translation of the song and along with Margaret Cousins ( an expert in European music and wife of Irish poet James Cousins ), set down the notation at Madanapalle in Andhra Pradesh, which is followed only when the song is sung in the original slow rendition style of singing.
* Margaret Kelly Leibovici ( 1910 2004 ), Miss Bluebell, Irish dancer
In 1984, he was injured in the Provisional Irish Republican Army's bombing of the Conservative Party Conference in Brighton, and his wife Margaret was left permanently disabled.
Samuel Cunard was the son of Abraham Cunard who was originally from Germany and raised a Quaker and Margaret Murphy, who was raised as an Irish Catholic who were Loyalists to the British Crown who came to Halifax in 1783.
* Margaret Kelly Leibovici ( 1910-2004 ), nicknamed " Miss Bluebell ", Irish dancer and founder of the Bluebell Girls
The results of the fifteen by-elections were cited by Unionists as a rejection of the Agreement by the Northern Irish electorate, but the action did not succeed in persuading the government of Margaret Thatcher to repeal the accord.
Margaret ’ s parents were Irish immigrants who settled in Pennsylvania.
Although the Unionist parties spurned his invitation to join, and the Forum ’ s conclusions proposing various forms of association between Northern Ireland and the Republic were rejected outright by British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, the Forum provided the impetus for the resumption of serious negotiations between the Irish and British governments, which culminated in the Anglo-Irish Agreement of November 1985.
For the Scottish, English, and Irish volumes, he worked with the BBC and folklorists Peter Douglas Kennedy, Scots poet Hamish Henderson, and with the Irish folklorist Séamus Ennis, recording among others, Margaret Barry and the songs in Irish of Elizabeth Cronin ; Scots ballad singer Jeannie Robertson ; and Harry Cox of Norfolk, England, and interviewing some of these performers at length about their lives.
Born in Chicago, Illinois, United States, Young was the son of an Irish immigrant father, Thomas E. Young, and an American mother, Margaret Fife.
Margaret " Peg " Woffington ( 18 October 1720 28 March 1760 ) was a well-known Irish actress in Georgian London.
He had married a fiercely nationalistic woman from Tipperary, Margaret Browne, and their daughter is the Irish poet Máire Mhac an tSaoi.
His period in Foreign Affairs was overshadowed by a comment made after an Anglo-Irish summit between Haughey and Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, when he spoke of Britain and Ireland being able to bring about Irish unity within ten years, a comment which infuriated the British and Northern Ireland unionists and which undid much of the goodwill achieved by the summit.
Daniel Shays was born in 1747 in Hopkinton, Massachusetts, the son of two Irish immigrants, Patrick and Margaret ( Dempsey ) Shays.

Margaret and novelist
Financial backers included Sir Mark Thatcher, son of former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and possibly the British novelist Jeffrey Archer.
Margaret Mitchell did not originate them and a young novelist can scarcely be faulted for not knowing what the majority of mature, professional historians did not know until many years later.
With his wife's consent, Wells had affairs with a number of women, including the American birth control activist Margaret Sanger and novelist Elizabeth von Arnim.
* 1915 Margaret Walker, American novelist and poet ( d. 1998 )
* 1939 Margaret Atwood, Canadian poet, novelist, critic and essayist
** Margaret Atwood, Canadian novelist
* February 17 Margaret Truman, American novelist and only child of U. S. President Harry S. Truman and Bess Truman ( d. 2008 )
* October 25 Margaret Ayer Barnes, American playwright, novelist, and short-story writer ( b. 1886 )
* April 8 Margaret Ayer Barnes, American playwright, novelist, and short-story writer ( d. 1967 )
Jane Goodall was born in London, England in 1934 to Mortimer Herbert Morris-Goodall, a businessman, and Margaret Myfanwe Joseph, a novelist who wrote under the name Vanne Morris-Goodall.
Margaret Eleanor Atwood, ( born November 18, 1939 ) is a Canadian poet, novelist, literary critic, essayist, and environmental activist.
* Canadian novelist and poet Margaret Atwood re-envisioned the myth of Helen in modern, feminist guise in her poem " Helen of Troy Does Countertop Dancing ".
Arguably, the best-known living Canadian writer internationally ( especially since the deaths of Robertson Davies and Mordecai Richler ) is Margaret Atwood, a prolific novelist, poet, and literary critic.
Margaret Drabble ( 1939-) is a novelist, biographer and critic, who has published from the 1960s until this century.
Amongst the strongest critics of Froude's biographical work was novelist Margaret Oliphant, who wrote in the Contemporary Review of 1883 that biography ought to be the " art of moral portrait painting " and described the publication of Jane Carlyle's papers as the " betrayal and exposure of the secret of a woman ’ s weakness.
Other notable journalists, editors and cartoonists on the staff of Sun papers include Richard Ben Cramer, Russell Baker, Michael Sragow, John Carroll, James Grant, Turner Catledge, Rodney Crowther, Price Day, Margaret Dempsey-McManus-McKay, Edmund Duffy, J. Fred Essary, Thomas Flannery, Jack Germond, Mauritz A. Hallgren, David Hobby, Gerald W. Johnson, Kevin P. Kallaugher ( KAL ), Frank Kent, William Manchester, sportscaster Jim McKay, novelist Laura Lippman, columnist and correspondent Thomas O ' Neill, Hamilton Owens, Drew Pearson, Phil Potter, Louis Rukeyser, David Simon, Raymond S. Tompkins, Paul W. Ward, Mark Skinner Watson, Jules Witcover, Rafael Alvarez and Richard Q. Yardley.
Douglas Richard Hurd, Baron Hurd of Westwell, CH, CBE, PC ( born 8 March 1930 ), is a British Conservative politician and novelist, who served in the governments of Margaret Thatcher and John Major between 1979 and his retirement in 1995.
* Margaret Oliphant 19th century novelist and historical writer ; lived at Clarence Crescent.
* July 18 Margaret Laurence, novelist and short story writer ( d. 1987 )
** Margaret Gibson, novelist and short story writer ( d. 2006 )
Margaret Widdemer ( September 30, 1884 July 14, 1978 ) was a U. S. poet and novelist.
Margaret Edith Weis ( born March 16, 1948 in Independence, Missouri, United States ) is a fantasy novelist who, along with Tracy Hickman, is one of the original creators of the Dragonlance game world and has written numerous novels and short stories set in fantastic worlds.
* Margaret Laurence, Canadian novelist
Margaret Frazer is the pen name of an historical novelist known for more than twenty mystery novels and a variety of short stories.
A close friend of the noted Canadian novelist Margaret Laurence, she participated in several public forums with Laurence and presided at Laurence's 1986 funeral.

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