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Mildred Gordon (1922 – January 4, 2015) was the founder and Executive Director of the Foundation for Feedback Learning (FFL) and co-founder of the Ganas intentional community. [1] She was the Communications Director of ActivistSolutions.org. [ 2 ] [ 3 ]
Gordon was an editor of the Tucson Citizen newspaper and a publicist with 20th Century Fox from 1935 to 1942, and later served as a Federal Bureau of Investigation counter-intelligence agent during World War II for three years. [2] Mildred Gordon was a teacher and an editor for Arizona Highways magazine.
Mildred Gordon was born the daughter of Judah and Dora Fellerman in Stepney in 1923. [1] Judah was of Dutch Jewish descent, Dora from a Bessarabian Jewish family. [2] Her father and grandfather were stallholders in Watney Market; her father also served as a member of Stepney Borough Council.
Mildred Gordon continued to draw an annual salary of $40,000 as the executive director of FFL. [25] In 2007 the legal address of FFL changed from Ganas headquarters on Staten Island to Brooklyn, and the same year FFL's tax return declared only $15,550 in total revenue and $75 in direct public support. [26]
Mildred Gordon may refer to: Mildred Gordon (politician) (1923–2016), British Labour Party Member of Parliament Mildred Gordon (writer) (1912–1979), American crime fiction novelist
Produced by Walt Disney Productions, the film was based on the 1963 novel Undercover Cat by Gordon and Mildred Gordon. The title song was written by the Sherman Brothers and sung by Bobby Darin. That Darn Cat! was Hayley Mills' last film of the six she appeared in for the Walt Disney Studios until she returned in 1986 for three Parent Trap films.
Here are Mildred Kirschenbaum’s simple tips for healthy longevity: Limit medications When her cholesterol was a little high, she told her doctor she wanted to lower it with diet rather than with ...
Undercover Cat is a novel by Gordon and Mildred Gordon, about a cat who assists the FBI in tracking down a pair of bank robbers. [1] It was first published in 1963 by Doubleday. It has been adapted to a live-action Disney film twice, as That Darn Cat! (1965) and That Darn Cat (1997).