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Mary Frances McDonald (1929–2021), Irish feminist; Mary-Frances Monroe (born 1980), American soccer player; Mary Frances Overbeck (1878–1955), American potter; Mary Frances Penick, birth name of Skeeter Davis (1931–2004), American country music singer and songwriter; Mary Frances Reynolds (1932–2016), American actress, singer, and ...
The McKittrick Hotel (also known as The McKittrick) was a performing arts venue themed as a 1930s hotel in the Chelsea neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City. It was located at 530 West 27th Street and was best known as the setting of the immersive theater production Sleep No More . [ 1 ]
Nashville and surrounding Middle Tennessee, Tennessee, United States Coordinates 36°08′21″N 86°48′09″W / 36.1393°N 86.8025°W / 36.1393; -86
Frances Mary McHie Rains (1911–2006) was an American nurse. She was the first Black woman admitted to the University of Minnesota School of Nursing. She was admitted to the School of Nursing after the Minnesota State Legislature learned of her initial rejection from the school based on race. She graduated in 1932.
Actor Kali Reis talks about the finale of the HBO series "True Detective: Night Country" and speculates on what happened to Navarro at the end of Episode Fou.
Mary Frances Earley Klotman (born 1954) is an American physician-scientist and academic administrator. She was elected as a member of the National Academy of Medicine in 2014 and became the editor of the Annual Review of Medicine in 2020. She has been the dean of the Duke University School of Medicine since 2017.
Mary Frances Platt (June 16, 1953 – September 15, 2004), sometimes written as MaryFrances Platt or mary frances platt, was an American writer and activist in the causes of disability rights, LGBT rights, feminism, and fat liberation.
After internship at Hubbard Hospital in Nashville, Dr. Matthew Walker Sr. served as a resident in surgery and gynecology at the George W. Hubbard Hospital of Meharry Medical College and was an instructor in surgery, gynecology, orthopedics, anesthesia, and areas of eye, ear, nose and throat. Walker held these positions from 1936 until 1938.