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At 100, Miriam Todd still works 50 hours a week at her furniture store in New Jersey. She shares her simple tips for a long life and why she won't retire.
Miriam Adelson (née Farbstein; born 10 October 1945) is an Israeli-American physician, businesswoman, and political donor. She was married to Sheldon Adelson , founder of the Las Vegas Sands casino company and the Israel Hayom newspaper, from 1991 until his death in 2021.
Miriam Toews (/ ˈ t eɪ v z / ⓘ; born 1964) OM is a Canadian writer and author of nine books, including A Complicated Kindness (2004), All My Puny Sorrows (2014), and Women Talking (2018). She has won a number of literary prizes including the Governor General's Award for Fiction and the Writers' Trust Engel/Findley Award for her body of work.
Read these positive quotes to start your day off on a happy note. Find short sayings for every situation, from heartbreak to making big life changes. 60 Positive Quotes for Life - Quotes About ...
Trigg, Mary. "To Work Together for Ends Larger than Self": The Feminist Struggles of Mary Beard and Doris Stevens in the 1930s." Journal of Women's History 7#2 (1995): 52–85. online; Trigg, Mary K. Feminism as Life's Work: Four Modern American Women through Two World Wars (Rutgers University Press, 2014) xii + 266 pp. online review
Tom Hanks talked about his most popular movie lines that fans like to say to him, ranging from films like "Forrest Gump" to "Apollo 13."
Edelman in 2010. Edelman was the first African-American woman admitted to The Mississippi Bar in 1964. [10] [11] [3] She began practicing law with the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund's Mississippi office, [12] working on racial justice issues connected with the civil rights movement and representing activists during the Mississippi Freedom Summer of 1964. [13]
Helen Todd and her colleagues campaign for women's suffrage. Todd, as a factory inspector, discussed how the right to vote would gain for working women and society "bread and roses"–referring to greater income, and life's roses. The first mention of the phrase and its meaning appears in The American Magazine in September 1911.