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Page "Elsie Inglis" ¶ 4
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She and returned
She said it was after she returned from her vomiting spell in the back yard that Mrs. Borden told her to wash the windows.
She took postgraduate work at the University of Grenoble in France and then returned to London to work on market research with an advertising firm.
She returned with her children to Italy with Germanicus ’ ashes.
She returned to Rome to avenge his death and boldly accused Piso of the murder of Germanicus.
She returned home at Christmas, 1839, joining Charlotte and Emily, who had left their positions, and Branwell.
She had heart surgery in the United States and returned to Gorky in June 1986.
She returned to Haworth in January 1844 and used the time spent in Brussels as the inspiration for some experiences in The Professor and Villette.
She returned to theater in the early 1990s, and to Broadway as Charlotte Cardoza in Titanic.
She returned to Pittsburgh to teach theater at the University of Pittsburgh and at the Pittsburgh Musical Theater's Rauh Conservatory as well as to perform in Pittsburgh theatre until her death on September 9, 2004.
She left the production on December 30, 2007, and later returned from August 26, 2008 until the production closed on January 11, 2009.
She impressed the Pope so much that he returned his administration to Rome in January 1377.
She also returned to number one on the country charts later in 2005 by lending her distinctive harmonies to the Brad Paisley ballad, " When I Get Where I'm Goin '".
" She was allowed to see Thomas only for 40 minutes in the morning but returned in the afternoon and, in a drunken rage, threatened to kill Brinnin.
She returned home and Anne took her place.
She returned to New York in May 1957, where she reunited with Fiorello four months before he died.
She managed to enter England in early 1941, and from there returned to India without completing her studies at Oxford.
She was elected to the Office of State Attorney in November 1978 and was returned to office by the voters four more times.
She returned the following January and gained support from two men of standing: Jean de Metz and Bertrand de Poulengy.
She later returned again as Alexx Woods for more guest appearances in the episodes " Out of Time " on September 21, 2009 and " Bad Seed " on October 19, 2009.
She is returned some six and a half years later.
She returned to the London stage in May 2009 to play the lead role in Wallace Shawn's new play, Grasses of a Thousand Colours at the Royal Court Theatre.
She returned in guest roles in one episode each in Blackadder the Third and Blackadder Goes Forth.
She returned to play Queenie in the Christmas special Blackadder's Christmas Carol and a special edition for the millennium Blackadder: Back and Forth.
She was so heartbroken when she returned to her homeland that her relatives were seriously worried about her health.
She never again returned to St. Petersburg.

She and Edinburgh
She was cloned by Ian Wilmut, Keith Campbell and colleagues at the Roslin Institute and the biotechnology company PPL Therapeutics near Edinburgh in Scotland.
She also performed at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, where she met Ben Elton.
She hosted a section of the Live 8 concert in Edinburgh, Scotland, in 2005.
She did, however, greet a numbers of Canada's Royal Family, including the Queen and her husband, Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh ; The Queen Mother ; and Prince Andrew and Sarah, Duchess of York.
She was brought up under the care of the chief of her clan, the MacDonalds of Clanranald, and was partly educated in Edinburgh.
She was at first home schooled, then from 1892 to 1894 she attended St. George's School in Edinburgh.
She arrived in France from Scotland in 1548 aged six, via the French King's favourite palace at Saint Germain en Laye near Paris, and remained in France until 1561, when she returned to her homeland-sailing up the Firth of Forth to Scotlands Capital, Edinburgh, on 15 August that year.
She had a keen interest in opera, was a trustee of the National Library of Scotland, a board member of the Edinburgh International Book Festival, a trustee of the Scottish National War Memorial, and a non-executive director of Scottish Television.
She died in Edinburgh, and was survived by her sons Ninian and Mungo Dunnett.
She currently writes regularly for Scottish newspapers including the Edinburgh Evening News.
She served as bridesmaid at the wedding of her cousins, the then-Princess Elizabeth and The Duke of Edinburgh, on 20 November 1947.
She was already the first cousin of Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, and then also became his aunt, due to his 1947 marriage to Princess Elizabeth, later Queen Elizabeth II.
She gave her last concerts at the Edinburgh Festival in 1949 and in Bournemouth later the same year.
She received a first class honours degree from Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh, and an MPhil in ' International relations and Ballistic studies ' from the University of Cambridge, where she was part of Darwin College.
She was buried at Kensal Green in north west London, before being reinterred in 1927 at Mount Vernon, Liberton, Edinburgh.
She continued at the University of Edinburgh, graduating in 1932, and published her first paper, on the asymptotic periods of integral functions, in 1935.
A more common sentiment was expressed by the review of She in Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine: " Mr. Rider Haggard is not an exquisite workman like Mr. Louis Stevenson, but he has a great deal of power in his way, and rougher qualities which are more likely, perhaps, to ' take the town ' than skill more delicate ".
Although the reviewer of She in Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine considered it better than King Solomon's Mines, he opined, " Mr. Rider Haggard has not proved as yet that he has anything that can be called imagination at all ...
She was a 17-year-old law student at Edinburgh University and a spectator at an amateur championship in Nairn, at which Montgomerie destroyed the field.
She was brought to Edinburgh to be investigated by John Maitland, 1st Earl of Lauderdale and the Privy Council of Scotland, and arrangements were made to have her and her immediate family lodged in the Canongate Tolbooth.
She was formerly the Labour Member of Parliament for Edinburgh Pentlands.
She stood down at the 2005 election, allowing Alistair Darling to contest the new Edinburgh South West seat.
She trained for the Scottish Bar in Edinburgh from 1980, being admitted to the Faculty of Advocates in June 1982.
She was renamed HMS Edinburgh in 1721, rebuilt twice in 1721 and 1744, before being broken up in 1771.
She also walked from Edinburgh to London in a straight line in 1998, for a television series and her book, As the Crow Flies.

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