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Margaret Hadley Foster (May 18, 1843 – January 13, 1920) was a journalist and clubwoman, known for being Houston's first paid librarian. [1] [2] The Lyceum had been a private men's reading club which voted to admit women in 1887. [3] Foster was hired as its first librarian at $25 per month. [3]
Born in Reigate and educated at the Kerri School, Margaret Jackson was one of few women admitted to medical school in the aftermath of World War I, first at University College and later, for clinical medicine, at the London Hospital, where her father Wilfred Hadley was a Consultant Physician. There, she met Lawrence ("John") Nelson Jackson MC ...
Don't You Dare Read This, Mrs. Dunphrey is a 1996 young adult novel written by Margaret Peterson Haddix.It tells the story of high school student Tish Bonner through journal entries assigned throughout the year by her English teacher, Mrs. Dunphrey, and follows her as her life slowly begins to spin out of control through familial and social troubles.
"We talk about women's issues and women's health issues all the time," says George, whose older daughter Lucy first read the book around age 10. George wasn’t surprised that Lucy loved the story ...
An Alabama woman with the rare condition of two uteruses, and who became pregnant in each uterus earlier this year, gave birth to twins last week a day apart.
A woman in Alabama with a rare double uterus has given birth to two healthy daughters in two days following her “one in a million pregnancy”.. Kelsey Hatcher, 32, spent 20 hours in labour ...
Further biographical details of Mary Welsh Hemingway can be found in the numerous Hemingway biographies, and in Bernice Kert's The Hemingway Women. [2] In her later years, Mary moved to New York City, where she lived in an apartment on 65th Street. After a prolonged illness, she died in St. Luke's Hospital at age 78, on November 26, 1986.
The covers sold the books: Midwood's novels were not great literature, but were generally very entertaining. Many pages contained sex scenes, described as pornographic, full of insinuations and veiled references. [1] Although romances and melodramas were of more interest to women, the target audience of companies like Midwood and Beacon was men ...