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She and rejoined
" She rejoined the Conservative Party the next day, but he did not.
She rejoined her co-stars for Dynasty: The Reunion, a 1991 miniseries that concluded the series which had been left with a cliffhanger ending after its abrupt cancellation.
She rejoined the University Players for most of its 18-week 1930-31 winter season in Baltimore.
She rejoined the Zurich Polytechnic in April 1898, where her studies included the following courses: differential and integral calculus, descriptive and projective geometry, mechanics, theoretical physics, applied physics, experimental physics, and astronomy.
She rejoined the Government in 2003 as Minister for the Arts in the Department for Culture, Media and Sport, and caused further comment when she admitted that she did not know much about contemporary art.
She revealed how she had used her powers to save Black Bolt's life, and then rejoined the Fantastic Four.
She rejoined her family when her father took a position as Rector of the University of Canterbury, New Zealand when she was 13.
She rejoined the government in 2003 on appointment to the Government Whips Office again.
She never recovered the full use of it but later rejoined the crew.
She rejoined the Slade but found her drawing and painting courses were becoming less satisfying.
She later rejoined The Guardian.
She rejoined the staff of the Daily Bugle as an investigative reporter whose newfound courageous assertiveness and investigative skill impressed her colleagues.
She also rejoined the Titans for a brief period during the " one year gap ".
She was forced to resign from the party in February 1999 because of the allegations against her but rejoined in November 1999.
She rejoined New Democracy on 21 May 2012, ahead of the parliamentary election in June.
She later rejoined the group after a battle with the Brotherhood of Evil and the return of Cyborg.
She later rejoined Canada AM, hosting alongside J. D.
She last aired April 26, 2005 and rejoined All My Children a few months later.
Yoshiko and Sachiko are still the main components in the band, and now Akiko Omo has rejoined the band as the bass guitarist ( She originally joined the 5. 6. 7. 8's in the early 1990s ).
She rejoined on 10 November 2005, saying that the Labor Party is very much a part of " who she is ".
She came to her senses and rejoined the Outsiders briefly.
She rejoined the Conservative Party in 2004, and is patron of the UCL Conservative Society.
She appeared on the show from 1980 to 1984, took most of the 1984-1985 season off and rejoined the cast for 1985-1986.
She left party politics in 1992, but rejoined the same party in 1997 and was later its President between 2000 and 2008.

She and BBC
She has been called " the world's most famous sheep " by sources including BBC News and Scientific American.
She gained wider recognition for her music in the 1986 BBC series The Celts.
She also played the lead role in the first production in English of Federico Garcia Lorca's The House of Bernarda Alba, at the ANTA Playhouse in New York in 1951, and a BBC production of Lorca's Blood wedding ( Bodas de sangre ), broadcast on June 2, 1959.
She was portrayed by Ursula Howells in the 1974 BBC miniseries Fall of Eagles.
She was featured in a UFO documentary that Williams did for BBC Radio 4 in April and took part in a field investigation he did in Trout Lake, Washington in August 2008.
She was also portrayed by Brenda Bruce in the 1978 BBC TV series The Devil's Crown, which dramatised the reigns of her son and grandsons.
She collaborated with novelist and playwright Michael Frayn on the BBC programmes Beyond a Joke ( 1972 ) and Making Faces ( 1975 ).
She appeared in " Equal Opportunities ", a 1982 episode of the BBC series Yes Minister, playing a senior civil servant in Jim Hacker's Department.
In 2007, she guest-starred in the Doctor Who audio play I. D .. She played the role of Sybil Ramkin in a BBC radio adaptation of Guards!
She also erroneously refers to her employer as the ' British Broadcasting Company ' ( the C in BBC actually standing for ' Corporation ').
She had a romantic role in the BBC television film Langrishe, Go Down ( 1978 ), with Jeremy Irons and a screenplay by Harold Pinter from the Aidan Higgins novel, directed by David Jones, in which she played one of three spinster sisters living in a fading Irish mansion in the Waterford countryside.
She has narrated various classical music recordings ( notably Mendelssohn's A Midsummer Night's Dream, and Britten's Canticles-The Heart of the Matter ), and has appeared in numerous BBC Radio broadcasts as well as commercials.
She also did a voice over for the BBC series Posh Nosh as a voice-over usually saying " From the Posh Nosh range ( a faux product ).
She won an American People's Choice Award for voicing the wicked Fairy Godmother in the DreamWorks animated film Shrek 2, but more recently she has written and starred in another two BBC sitcoms, Jam and Jerusalem and The Life and Times of Vivienne Vyle.
She was interviewed on her experience of sitting for a portrait for painter Lucian Freud in the BBC series Imagine in 2004.
She was a contestant on the BBC Radio 4 panel game My Word!
She has published numerous comic and satirical novels, and written radio and TV plays for the BBC.
She made her first appearance at the BBC Proms in 1990, and has appeared regularly since.
She has also made a documentary on Delius for BBC Two.
She also appeared in the 2007 Robbie the Reindeer BBC TV animations filmed in aid of Comic Relief.
She appeared opposite Katharine Hepburn and Laurence Olivier in the award-winning 1975 television film Love Among the Ruins and had a recurring role as Gran in the BBC comedy series Till Death Us Do Part.
She played Mrs Wembley in the BBC comedy series On the Up, which starred Dennis Waterman and ran from 1990 to 1992.
She was the subject of the 1973 BBC miniseries A Picture of Katherine Mansfield starring Vanessa Redgrave.
She was nominated for BAFTA Awards on five occasions, and won twice, for her work in the film The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie ( 1969 ), and for the television production Mrs. Palfrey at the Claremont, a BBC Play for Today broadcast in 1973.
She was one of the lead vocalists for The Zimmers, a 40-member band set up as a result of a BBC documentary on the treatment of the elderly.

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