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Her and grandfather
Her family hailed from Arkansas, where her great-grandparents and her maternal grandfather, Henry Eliot, were born into slavery.
Her father's grandfather had fled France during the Revolution, going first to Saint-Domingue, then New Orleans, and finally to Cuba where he helped build that country's first railway.
Her maternal grandmother was the Italian-born fashion designer Elsa Schiaparelli, and her maternal grandfather was Count Wilhelm de Wendt de Kerlor, a Theosophist and psychic medium.
Her parents ' marriage had been arranged by Dangereuse with her paternal grandfather, the Troubadour.
Her family lived on a homestead, Ivy Green, that Helen's grandfather had built decades earlier.
Her grandfather, Motilal Nehru, was a prominent Indian nationalist leader.
Her grandfather, Russell Crawford Mitchell, of Atlanta, enlisted in the Confederate States Army in July 1861, and was later severely wounded at the Battle of Sharpsburg.
Her maternal grandparents were of mixed European and Eastern Cherokee ancestry ; of particular importance to her as a child was her grandfather, Calvin Clinton Copeland, who was a great source of inspiration and guidance to her as a young child, offering a more pantheistic spiritual alternative to her father and paternal grandmother's traditional Christianity.
Her grandfather had been an organist at Westminster Abbey.
Her maternal grandfather was the Ban of Slavonia Count Herman II of Celje, whose parents were Count Herman I of Celje and Catherine of Bosnia, who apparently descended also from Nemanjić kings of Serbia and from Catherine of Hungary, a daughter of Stephen V of Hungary.
Her mother's maternal grandfather was an Italian immigrant ; her mother's other ancestry is Scottish, Irish, and a small amount of Greek.
Her paternal grandfather was of Sicilian descent, and her paternal grandmother was a descendant of Mayflower pilgrim William Brewster.
Her son Vaballathus ( Latin from Aramaic, Wahballat " Gift of the Goddess ") inherited the name of Odaenathus ’ paternal grandfather.
Her paternal grandfather, Juan de Toledo, was a marrano ( Jewish convert to Christianity ) and was condemned by the Spanish Inquisition for allegedly returning to the Jewish faith.
Her paternal grandfather, John Claus Peters, was the son of German immigrants, Claus Peters and Caroline Catherine Eberlin.
Her father was a descendant of the Taliaferros of Virginia ; her paternal grandfather, Edward Bennett Close, a stockbroker and director of the American Hospital Association, was first married to Post Cereals ' heiress Marjorie Merriweather Post.
Her curiosity was piqued because she actually had a grandfather whom her family had lost touch with, and whose initials matched those given in the email.
Her alcoholic grandfather physically abused her and Solanas ran away and became homeless.
Her mother's family had left Germany before World War II to avoid the Nazi regime ( Newton-John's maternal grandfather was Jewish, and her maternal grandmother was of paternal Jewish ancestry ).
Her maternal grandfather was David Greer, a RIC sergeant in Castlewellan, County Down, Ireland in the 1880s and who later became a land steward to the Annesley family ( wealthy landlords who built the town of Castlewellan ).
Her maternal grandfather was Zibeon the Hivite son of Seir the Horite.
Her grandfather was an immigrant from England in 1908.
Her grandfather was killed fighting against her uncle, Edward IV of England, at the Battle of Barnet.
Her grandfather had been born a slave and had experienced emancipation in the 1860s.
Her mother was Mary Cadwalader Rawle ( 1850 – 1923 ) whose maternal grandfather was John Cadwalader ( 1805 – 1879 ) and father was lawyer William Henry Rawle ( 1823 – 1889 ).

Her and Colin
Her big-screen directorial debut came with the film Then She Found Me, in which she also starred, with Colin Firth and Matthew Broderick.
Sir Colin Campbell, DL, FRSA, an academic lawyer, was the Vice Chancellor of the University of Nottingham, England and served until 2006 as Her Majesty's First Commissioner of Judicial Appointments.
Her funeral was attended by " hundreds of mourners " including film director Neil Jordan and actors Cillian Murphy and Colin Farrell.
Her more recent film work includes Before the Rains, an Indian-US co-production directed by Santosh Sivan, and Pride and Glory with Edward Norton and Colin Farrell.
Her book Angus Lost was featured prominently in the movie Ask the Dust ( 2006 ), starring Colin Farrell and Salma Hayek, in which Farrell's character teaches Hayek's character, a Mexican, to read English using Flack's book.
Her marriage to Willie Abbott collapses under the weight of his alcoholism and her marriage to Colin Burke ends in tragedy when Burke dies in a car accident.
Her adoptive father, Colin, was a wartime Evacuee who survived the sinking of the SS City of Benares by a German U-Boat.
* Siew Shaw Her and Colin Ng
Then Labour Party Member of Parliament for Hull North, Kevin McNamara, brought up the issue in the House of Commons, asking the Prime Minister, Margaret Thatcher, whether she would refer the matter to the Security Commission, and asking the then Attorney-General and Conservative MP Michael Havers, whether he would ask the Director of Public Prosecutions to investigate allegations published in Lobster, and prosecute Mr. Colin Wallace, for revealing details of secret service operations against Her Majesty's Government.
Her career breakthrough was as April in The Brothers ( 1972 – 76 ), which also featured her first husband, Colin Baker.

Her and Wall
Her first sound film was The Hole in the Wall ( 1929 ), co-starring Edward G. Robinson.
Her brothers were William Jerrold " Jerry " Smith ( engineer, 1929 – 2003 ) and Murray Lee Smith ( teacher and minister, 1932 – 2003 ) and her sister is Lillian Allethea Smith Wall ( born 1936 ).
Her articles have appeared in the New York Times, The Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, Newsweek, People, Ladies Home Journal, McCall's, Los Angeles Times and The Chicago Tribune.
Her work includes articles for magazines and newspapers around the world ( e. g., Wall Street Journal, International Herald Tribune, The Independent ( UK ), The Irish Times, The Toronto Globe and Mail, The LA Times, La Jornada ( Mexico ), The Review of the International Red Cross, Columbia University ’ s Journal of Politics and Society ) and chapters to numerous books ( e. g., This I Believe: The Personal Philosophies of Remarkable Men and Women, edited by Jay Allison and Dan Gediman book is the result of the “ This I Believe ” series on National Public Radio ; The Satanic Bible By Caesar 999 ; A Memory, A Monologue, A Rant, and A Prayer, edited by Eve Ensler ; Lessons from our Fathers, by Keith McDermott ; Girls Like Us: 40 Extraordinary Women Celebrate Girlhood in Story, Poetry and Song, by Gina Misiroglu ; The Way We Will be 50 Years from Today: 60 of the World ’ s Greatest Minds Share Their Visions of the Next Half-Century, edited by Mike Wallace ).
Her ashes were immured in the Kremlin Wall, beside Polina Osipenko's, on Red Square.
Her father, Christopher Billopp Wyatt, Jr., was a Wall Street investment banker, and her mother, the former Euphemia Van Rensselaer Waddington, was a drama critic for the Catholic World.
Her accuser, describing her as " a three-penny upright ," testified as follows: " As I stood against the Wall, came behind me, and with one hand she took hold of.
Her Sky Cathedral works often took years to create ; Sky Cathedral: Night Wall, in the collection of the Columbus Museum of Art, took 13 years to build in her New York City studio.
Her news, business and feature stories have appeared in The Wall Street Journal, Congressional Quarterly, The Associated Press, CNBC. com and Entrepreneur. com, among other publications.
Her first published story was " Shatter the Wall " in Galaxy in 1962.
Her book, Stolen Innocence, written with former FLDS member, Elissa Wall, was published in 2008 by Harper Collins and debuted at Number 4 on The New York Times bestseller list.
According to The Wall Street Journal ( February 19, 1999, p. A18 ), " Her friend Norma Rogers, a nurse who had accompanied her on the trip ", found Broaddrick distraught shortly after the time of the alleged attack.
Her first book, Use the News: How to Separate the Noise from the Investment Nuggets and Make Money in Any Economy ( 2001 ) ISBN 978-0-06-662086-2, appeared on both the The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and USA Today bestseller lists.
Her other books are the The 10 Laws of Enduring Success ( 2010 ) ISBN 978-0-307-45253-5 and The Weekend That Changed Wall Street ( 2011 ) ISBN 978-1-59184-351-1.
Her work has been featured in publications such as the Wall Street Journal, Reader's Digest, US News and World Report, The Washington Post, and Good Housekeeping, and she has been profiled on American radio and television programs such as CBS ' 48 Hours, and James Dobson ’ s Focus on the Family.
Her articles have appeared in the Washington Post, the Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal Asia, The Weekly Standard, Humanitarian Affairs Review, and The Forward.
Her poems appeared in the anthologies Hauling Up the Morning, Wall Tappings, Igniting a Revolution: Voices in Defense of the Earth, Seeds of Fire, and in her chapbook, Rescue the Word.
Her plots and settings were unconventional with Freudian psychology, witchcraft ( notably in The Devil at Saxon Wall and The Worsted Viper ) and the supernatural ( naiads and Nessie, ghosts and Greek gods ) as recurrent themes.
Her other film credits include Wall Street, Bloodhounds of Broadway, Rising Sun, City Hall, Eve's Bayou and The Peacemaker.
Her work on this story led The Wall Street Journal to hire her.
Her journalism has appeared in The New York Times, O the Oprah Magazine, Vogue and MORE, The Wall Street Journal and The Huffington Post.
Vicious Whisper is described as a Japa-Brit ( half Japanese half British ) witch and singer whose real name is Victoria Whisper but her friends call her V. Her songs have strong anti-business sentiments attached to them ( i. e. " Napalm on Wall Street "; these songs seem quite the opposite of her personality ) and she normally floats around a stadium with her on tour.
Her writings have also appeared in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Newsweek, and Jewish newspapers nationwide.
Her essays on Iranian issues appear in the New York Times, the Washington Post, the Wall Street Journal and on NPR.

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