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At and Harriet
At this time Harriet wrote in a letter which after their finally landing in India was sent to her mother:
At the end of the book, Harriet Vane finally accepts Wimsey's proposal of marriage.
" At age 14, each of the children began their training: the brothers with the plantation's master in carpentry, and Harriet as a spinner and weaver.
At her retrial the prosecution presents no case and Harriet is set free.
At the time, Harriet had moved with her family into a home near the campus of Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Maine, where her husband was now teaching.
At his parents ' 30th year anniversary, Charlie proposes to Harriet, and soon a wedding is underway.
At the Battles of Saratoga during the American Revolutionary War, Lady Harriet heard that her husband was wounded.
At this time, Harriet Jacobs and her editor, Lydia Marie Child, were trying to sell Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl.
* Early 1860s ( albumen print ) photograph of Harriet Moore At Bridgeman Art Library.
At Baylor University he met and married a fellow student named Harriet.
On the night of 8 – 9 June, action on the outer defence zone flared when Lieutenant Mark Townsend's 1 Troop ( K Company, 42 CDO ) probed Mount Harriet, killing two Argentines ( Corporal Hipolito Gonzalez and Private Martiniano Gomez ). At the same time, two platoon-size fighting patrols from 45 Commando attempted the same on Two Sisters Mountain, but the Argentine Rasit ground surveillance radar on Mount Longdon was able to detect the 45 Commando platoons, and artillery fire dispersed the force.
At that time, Doyle was a third grade teacher and a soup kitchen volunteer married to a woman named Harriet.
At this time they built the original Lake Harriet Bandshell and began sponsoring concerts at the lake.
At both Bristol and Exeter he was also engaged in school work, among his Bristol pupils being Harriet and James Martineau, Samuel Greg, and the Westminster Reviews John Bowring.
At a service conducted by Rev Henry Allon at Christ Church, on Easter Monday 1880, Newman Hall married his second wife, Miss Harriet Knipe-daughter of Henry Knipe, barrister-at-law and J. P. His first marriage had ended in a controversial divorce case which had eventually led to a decree nisi in February 1880-a time when divorce was rare.
At the time she was one of only three female producers in Hollywood, the others being Virginia Van Upp and Harriet Parsons.

At and Lane
At the very end of the novel, where Superman stands poised to destroy the United Nations, Norman McCay makes him realise that, when he abandoned Clark Kent fifteen years ago after the murder of Lois Lane by the Joker and retreated into his Superman self, he lost this instinctive morality and thus the ability to be the hero Superman.
At the age of eighteen she eloped with the actor Robert Baddeley, then on the stage at Drury Lane.
At the moment they are testing a service to 24 Lane and streets on the way to the lane which are near the Rich River Golf Club
At its centre is Highgate village, a collection of largely Georgian shops, pubs, restaurants and residential streets, interspersed with diverse landmarks such as St Michael's Church and steeple, Highgate School ( 1565 ), Jacksons Lane arts centre housed in a Grade II listed former church, the Gatehouse inn dating from 1670 and Berthold Lubetkin's 1930s Highpoint buildings.
( At that time, Kingston extended as far as Snowden Lane.
At that time, New College Lane was known as Hammer Hall Lane ( named after a hall to the east, as New College had not then been founded ), and its northern side was the old town wall.
At the 2012 festival celebrating the 100th birthday anniversary, the town of Reinerton renamed the street near Les ' birthplace to Les Brown Lane.
At the same time that this treaty was received in Washington, Pierce learned that New Mexico Territorial Governor William C. Lane had issued a proclamation claiming the Mesilla Valley as part of New Mexico, leading to protests from Mexico.
On February 11, 1899, Francis filed an application for copyright of his painting “ Dog Looking At and Listening to a Phonograph .” Thinking the Edison-Bell Company located in New Jersey, USA, might find it useful, he presented it to James E. Hough, who promptly said, “ Dogs don t listen to phonographs .” On May 31, 1899, Barraud went to the Maiden Lane offices of The Gramophone Company with the intention of borrowing a brass horn to replace the original black horn on the painting.
At the NHL draft in June Battalion rookie Philip Lane would be chosen in the 2nd round ( 52nd overall ) by the Phoenix Coyotes while Sam Carrick would be taken by the Toronto Maple Leafs in the 5th round ( 144th overall ).
At the age of 21, she moved to Cincinnati, Ohio to join her father, who had become the president of Lane Theological Seminary.
At his death, three years after his retirement from Drury Lane and the stage, he was given a lavish public funeral at Westminster Abbey where he was laid in Poets ' Corner.
At the end of the London season, Garrick, along with Peg Woffington, traveled to Dublin for the summer season at the Theatre Royal, Smock Lane.
At the end of School Lane with its intersection with Church Lane, is the village War Memorial.
At the south end of Park Lane, on the west side, gates in honour of Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother ( widow of George VI ) have been erected, bearing motifs in a freely modern interpretation from her coat of arms.
At a dinner to celebrate Pitt's birthday in 1802, Canning wrote the song ‘ The Pilot that Weathered the Storm ’, performed by a tenor from Drury Lane, Charles Dignum:
At some point before 1422, the greater part of " Lincoln's Inn ", as they had become known, after the Earl, moved to the estate of Ralph Neville, the Bishop of Chichester, near Chancery Lane.
At the start of the 1950s, Broonzy became part of a touring folk music revue formed by Win Stracke called I Come for to Sing, which also included Studs Terkel and Lawrence Lane.
: At Queenston Heights and Lundy's Lane our brave fathers, side by side
At Springer Lane, which is a former alignment of Route 44, the highway comes into the open, crossing under power lines and intersecting with former alignments of roadway, overgrown with grass.
At Half Moon Lane it then works its way back towards Herne Hill railway station where it is joined by another tributary that flows through Leigham Vale, Tulse Hill and Brockwell Park.
At the same time Lane was featured on the cover of Time, which declared her one of Hollywood's " Whiz Kids.
At first, the cell line was said to be named after a " Helen Lane " or " Helen Larson ", in order to preserve Lacks's anonymity.

At and Johnston
At the outbreak of the Civil War, Johnston was the commander of the U. S. Army Department of the Pacific in California.
At the same time Granada bosses commissioned trailers depicting famous Coronation Street fans, including former Brookside actress Sue Johnston ( Sheila Grant ).
At about 6 a. m. on April 6, 1862, when Grant's army was surprised and virtually routed by the sudden appearance of the Confederate States Army under Albert Sidney Johnston, Grant sent orders for Wallace to move his division up to support the division of Brig.
At the insistence of Johnston and of Confederate President Jefferson Davis, Sherman conditionally agreed to generous terms that dealt with both political and military issues.
At that time, the community moved to its present location upstream from the trading post and was renamed Livingston in honor of a Northern Pacific Railway stockholder and director, Johnston Livingston ( 1875 – 81 and 1884 – 87 ).
At Johnston Road the border turns north and follows it until it takes a right onto Church Road and follows it to the intersection with U. S. Route 20 ( Western Avenue ).
* " Meet Me Down At Luna, Lena " Brady, Johnston, Frantzen
At their last concert at the Greek Theatre in Berkeley, they were joined onstage by founder Tom Johnston for what was presumed to be the final rendition of his staple, " China Grove ".
At the outbreak of the Civil War, 19 of the 36 officers in the 2nd U. S. Cavalry resigned, including three of Thomas's superiors — Albert Sidney Johnston, Robert E. Lee, and William J. Hardee.
At the trade deadline, the Whalers first year General Manager Eddie Johnston made the first in a series of destructive trades by sending franchise goaltender Mike Liut to the Washington Capitals for center Yvon Corriveau.
At the end of the three year Johnston era, only seven players remained from the Whalers active roster prior to Johnston taking over as General Manager.
At this time in the Peninsula Campaign, the army was officially renamed the Army of Northern Virginia, although Johnston continued to use the name Army of the Potomac until he was wounded.
At age twenty-four, Johnston would move to Colorado where he studied law and passed the bar exam in 1891.
At the outbreak of the Civil War, Johnston enlisted as a private in the Confederate States Army.
At 2: 15pm on the afternoon of April 6 at Shiloh, Harris found General Albert Sidney Johnston slumping in his saddle and he asked the General, " General are you wounded?
At the same time, Jeff Tweedy formed Wilco with Stirratt, Johnston, and Coomer.
At the end of the 19th century, the aesthetics and philosophy of William Morris and the Arts and Crafts movement appealed to many calligraphers, including Englishmen Edward Johnston and Eric Gill.
At about the same time as Johnston, Austrian Rudolf Larisch was teaching lettering at the Vienna School of Art and published six lettering books that greatly influenced German-speaking calligraphers.
At the beginning of 1965, Dave Day and Roger Johnston, on a whim, got their heads shaved into monks ' tonsures.
At the age of six, Johnston contracted osteomyelitis and came close to losing his leg and would have done if not for the expertise of an American specialist who was touring and lecturing in Australia at the time.
At the behest of Johnston Thomas McCall, aged 64, built a replica to be presented as MacMillan's at the 1896 Stanley show and now at Dumfries Museum-presumably he needed the money ( Clayton 1987 ).
At Twickenham he designed the pavilion at Orleans House, called the Octagon Room, for a Scottish patron, James Johnston ( 1655 – 1737 ) former Secretary of State for Scotland, about 1720.
At this stage Johnston was at the peak of his career in terms of bowling average and wickets taken per match.

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