November 2024 Newsletter – Engineering Legends
The early women engineers in the U.S. had to deal with a good deal of prejudice. They faced discrimination, disbelief that they could be engineers, and other hardships. Click here to read the newsletter.
October 2024 Newsletter – Talk Show Hosts
The media has a tremendous influence on our lives; talk show hosts often become a member of the family. Two of the women profiled in Her Story: A Timeline of the Women Who Changed America became influential and well known talk show hosts. Click here to read the...
September 2024 Newsletter – Olympic Women
Women on Team USA excelled at the 2024 Olympics in Paris. Twenty-six of the forty gold medals and sixty-nine of the 126 total medals won by Team USA were won by women. Click here to read the newsletter.
August 2024 Newsletter – Women of Steel
Women involved in manufacturing and construction may have been rare in U.S. history - or invisible - but they did exist. Rebecca Webb Lukens ran a steel manufacturing company in the 1800s. Click here to read the newsletter.
July 2024 Newsletter – A Statue and a Film
In May of 2024, a plaza and statue were unveiled honoring Sojourner Truth at the location in Akron, Ohio where she gave her iconic speech in 1851, "Ain't I a Woman?" Also in May, a movie came out titled Young Woman and the Sea profiling the story of swimmer Gertrude...
June 2024 Newsletter – 2024 Presidential Medal of Freedom Recipients
In early May 2024, President Biden awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom to 19 people including women profiled in Her Story: A Timeline of the Women Who Changed America. The Presidential Medal of Freedom is the nation's highest civilian honor; it is presented to...
May 2024 Newsletter – Children’s Book Authors from the 1940s
For decades women have written children's books that have become classics. In this newsletter, we focus on two authors who were writing in the 1940s. Click here to read the newsletter.
April 2024 Newsletter – Puerto Rican Changemakers
On March 5, 2024, Jill Tietjen's latest book was released. It is the memoir of Dr. Antonia Novello, titled Duty Calls: Lessons Learned from an Unexpected Life of Service. Click here to read the newsletter.
March 2024 Newsletter – Legacies
In the last few months, we have lost two women who are profiled in Her Story: A Timeline of the Women Who Changed America: Sandra Day O'Connor and Chita Rivera. Both were significant pioneers in quite different areas of expertise. Click here to read the newsletter.
February 2024 Newsletter – Women On Quarters – 2025 #2
The United States mint announced the women who will be featured in 2025 on the American Women Quarters (the last year of the program). In January of 2024, we profiled Althea Gibson and Juliette Gordon Low. In this month's newsletter, we feature Stacey Park Milbern,...
January 2024 Newsletter – Women on Quarters – 2025
The United States Mint has announced the women who will be featured in 2025 on the American Women Quarters (the last year of the program). They are Althea Gibson, Juliette Gordon Low, Stacey Park Milbern, Vera Rubin, and Ida B. Wells. Click here to read the...
December 2023 Newsletter – A Stamp and a Book
In the Fall of 2023, multiple women profiled in Her Story: A Timeline of the Women Who Changed America were featured in the news. Former U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg's face graced a U.S. postage stamp. Click here to read the newsletter.
November 2023 Newsletter – 2024 Quarters #2
In last month's ENewsletter, we profiled Patsy Mink, Pauli Murray, and Mary Edwards Walker - three of the five women whose likenesses will be on the 2024 Quarters. This month we tell you about the others who are planned for 2024: Celia Cruz, and Zitkala-Sa. Click here...
October 2023 Newsletter – 2024 Quarters
The women to be featured on the 2024 Quarters have been announced. They include Patsy Mink, Pauli Murray, Mary Edwards Walker, Celia Cruz, and Zitkala-Sa. Click here to read the newsletter.
September 2023 Newsletter – Number 1 Albums
In July of 2023, Taylor Swift became the first female artist and the first living artist in nearly six decades to have four albums on the Billboard Top 10 in the same week. Click here to read the newsletter.
August 2023 Newsletter – Armed Services Leaders
In July 2023, it was announced that Admiral Lisa Franchetti was going to be nominated as the Chief of Naval Operations. If confirmed, this would make her the first woman to be a Pentagon service chief and the first female member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Click...
July 2023 Newsletter – Jockeys
In June 2023, Jena Antonucci, horse trainer, made history when the horse she works with, Arcangelo, won the Belmont Stakes, one of three races of the Triple Crown. She is the first female trainer whose horse has won a Triple Crown race. Click here to read the...
June 2023 Newsletter – Legacies
So far in 2023, we have lost three of the women featured in our book Her Story: A Timeline of the Women Who Changed America: Marianne Mantell, Patricia Schroeder, and Tina Turner. Click here to read the newsletter.
May 2023 Newsletter – Celebrating Mother’s Day
The first Mother's Day was celebrated on May 9, 1914 as proclaimed by President Woodrow Wilson. He asked Americans to say a "Thank you" to their mother and to all mothers. Click here to read the newsletter.
April 2023 Newsletter – Celebrating Native American Women’s Accomplishments
In 2021, Deb Haaland, of the Laguna Pueblo in New Mexico, became the first Native American Secretary of the Interior. Click here to read the newsletter.
March 2023 Newsletter – In Memoriam #2
In this month's ENewsletter we profile two women featured in our book Her Story: A Timeline of the Women Who Changed America who played important roles in getting it to publication - both separately and together: Madeleine Albright, who wrote the foreword, and Steffie...
February 2023 Newsletter – in Memoriam
In this month's ENewsletter we profile two women featured in our book Her Story: A Timeline of the Women Who Changed America who died in 2022: Angela Lansbury and Barbara Walters. Click here to read the newsletter.
January 2023 Newsletter – American Women Featured on 2023 Quarters #2
The five American women who will be featured in 2023 as part of the American Women Quarters Program are Bessie Coleman, Edith Kanaka'ole, Eleanor Roosevelt, Jovita Idár and Maria Tallchief. This month we feature Jovita Idár and Maria Tallchief. Click here to read the...
December 2022 Newsletter – American Women Featured on 2023 Quarters
The five American women to be introduced in 2023 as part of the American Women Quarters Program include Bessie Coleman, Edith Kanaka'ole, Eleanor Roosevelt, Jovita Idar, and Maria Tallchief. Click here to read newsletter.
November 2022 Newsletter – Surgeon Generals
The United States Surgeon General serves to protect the health of the country and is also the overseer of the United States Public Health Service. The first female U.S. surgeon general, #14, was Dr. Antonia Novello. Click here to read the newsletter.
October 2022 Newsletter – Young Women
It might be surprising to you that among the more than 850 women profiled in Her Story: A Timeline of the Women Who Changed America are a few young women in their pre-teens or teen years whose accomplishments were so important. Click here to read the newsletter.
September 2022 Newsletter – Mary McLeod Bethune Now in Statuary Hall
National Statuary Hall in the United States Capitol building in Washington, D.C., contains 100 statues - two from each state. The addition of Florida's sculpture of Mary McLeod Bethune to Statuary Hall during 2022 now brings the total number of women represented to...
August 2022 Newsletter – Title IX “She-roes”
The year 2022 marks 50 years since the passage of Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972. Click here to read the newsletter.
July 2022 Newsletter – Authors’ Choice
Smithsonian Magazine recently featured two amazing women from our book Her Story: A Timeline of the Women Who Changed American: Shirley Temple Black and Octavia Butler. We thought we would share some of their accomplishments as well. Click here to read the...
June 2022 Newsletter – Education Advocates
Higher levels of education have consistently led to better lives. In this month's newsletter, we profile two advocates for education: Fanny Jackson Coppin and Grace Hoadley Dodge. Click here to read the newsletter.
May 2022 Newsletter – Hall of Famers Surmounting Obstacles
On May 3, 2022, a new book, Over, Under, Around, and Through: How Hall of Famers Surmount Obstacles, co-written by Jill Tietjen, co-author of Her Story: A Timeline of the Women Who Changed America, will be released by Fulcrum Publishing. Click here to read the...
April 2022 Newsletter – Secretaries of State
In this month's ENewsletter we pay tribute to Madeleine Albright, the first female Secretary of State in the U.S., who died in March 2022. We also celebrate and recognize the two women (to date) who have followed in her footsteps: Condoleezza Rice and Hillary Clinton....
March 2022 Newsletter – Dancers and Choreographers
In this month's newsletter, we profile two women who have made their mark in the fields of dance and choreography: Agnes de Mille and Cleo Parker Robinson. Click here to read the newsletter.
February 2022 Newsletter – Entertainers
Following up from our January 2022 Newsletter, we feature actress and entertainer Betty White who died shortly before her 100th birthday. We also feature Katherine Dunham, an entertainer and anthropologist, who also accomplished so much in her long life. Click here to...
January 2022 Newsletter – In Memoriam 2021
During December 2021, we lost three of the women profiled in our book Her Story: A Timeline of the Women Who Changed America. In memoriam, we feature Joan Didion and Sarah Weddington in this month's ENewsletter. We will pay tribute to amazing actress and entertainer...
December 2021 ENewsletter – Women in Cosmetics
Did you know that one hundred years ago in the U.S. there was a lipstick war? The issue was whether respectable women could wear lipstick or not. Click here to read the enewsletter.
November 2021 ENewsletter – Social Reform Advocates
Women have been in the forefront of many social reform movements during the history of our country. The movements to which we are referring include civil rights, suffrage, the elimination of child labor, disability rights, assistance to survivors of sexual assault,...
October 2021 ENewsletter – Women Religious Leaders
In September, the holiest days in the Jewish calendar were celebrated. Of course, in December, we will celebrate one of the holiest days of the Christian calendar. Now both Christians and Jews have women clergy. Click here to read the newsletter.
September 2021 ENewsletter – Women on U.S. Quarters
With the Circulating Collectible Coin Redesign Act of 2020, the U.S. Congress directed the Treasury to design and issue coins in each of the years 2022 through 2025 that feature accomplished U.S. women. Click here to read the newsletter.
August 2021 ENewsletter – Women in Aviation
The U.S. Congress has spent much of 2021 working on a bill to fund improvements and repairs to our country's infrastructure - the underpinning of our standard of living and quality of life. Click here to read the newsletter.
July 2021 ENewsletter – Summer Olympics Athletes
It looks like the 2020 Olympics will take place in July 2021 in Tokyo, Japan after a delay caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. Olympic athletes hone their skills for years in order to compete in many different types of events. Click here to read the newsletter.
June 2021 ENewsletter – Psychologists
Sadly, the recent pandemic has resulted in psychological issues for many. Women psychologists have long been involved in seminal developments in psychology. Click here to read the newsletter.
May 2021 ENewsletter – Violinists
Music and the arts have suffered tremendously during the current pandemic. Yet they are so important to our life and culture. Click here to read the newsletter.
April 2021 Newsletter – National Medal of Science Recipients
The National Medal of Science, regarded with the National Medal of Technology and Innovation as the U.S. equivalents of the Nobel Prize, is awarded by the President of the United States. Click here to read newsletter.
March 2021 Newsletter – Women on Postage Stamps
We were delighted to purchase U.S. postage stamps issued in 2021 featuring nuclear physicist Chien-Shiung Wu, who we profiled in our April 2016 ENewsletter. Click here to read newsletter.
February 2021 Newsletter – Black History Month
In 1976 President Gerald Ford declared February as Black History Month. It has been celebrated each year since. Read the newsletter here.
January 2021 Newsletter – 2020 National Women’s Hall of Fame Inductees (continued)
In last month's ENewsletter we told you about Mary Church Terrell and Toni Morrison, who were among the six outstanding women inducted into the National Women's Hall of Fame in December. Click here to read the newsletter.
2020 National Women’s Hall of Fame Inductees
The National Women's Hall of Fame is having a special virtual induction ceremony in December 2020. Click here to read the newsletter.
Opera Singers – November 2020 ENewsletter
In this time of the COVID pandemic, cultural institutions are precluded from their normal activities. This includes opera, theater, the ballet and the symphony. Click here to read the newsletter.
CEOs – October 2020 ENewsletter
Two very significant business announcements occurred in September 2020: Citigroup announced that Jane Fraser will become its chief executive officer in February 2021 and Kathryn Farmer became the CEO of BNSF Railway. Click here to read the newsletter.
Scientific Legacies – September 2020 ENewsletter
Two scientific pioneers have died within recent months - physicist Betsy Ancker-Johnson and molecular biologist Flossie Wong-Staal. Both helped blaze the trail for the women in the sciences. Click here to read the enewsletter.
Publishers – August 2020 ENewsletter
As of July 2020, Simon & Shuster has a female publisher: Dana Canedy. Upon her appointment, Canedy became the first African American to lead a major publishing imprint. Click here to read the newsletter.
Flag Makers – July 2020 ENewslettter
Independence Day - the Fourth of July - will be here in a blink of an eye. We will fly our nation's flag proudly as we remember the Revolutionary War days and our independence from Great Britain. Click here to read ENewsletter.
Technology Pioneers – June 2020 Newsletter
During the 2020 pandemic, many people have been able to work from home. This radical change in our working environments has been possible because technology and video conference software is readily available and easy to use - and the spectrum exists to support it....
Oklahomans – May 2020 Newsletter
Because of COVID-19, the times we are in today evoke comparisons to the Great Depression of the 1930s. Click here to read the newsletter.
Healthcare Heroines – April 2020 ENewsletter
As all of us around the world focus on keeping ourselves healthy and not overwhelming the healthcare system, we remember two women whose pioneering efforts helped in earlier health crises: Gladys Dick and Florence Seibert. Click here to read the newsletter.
Summer Olympics Athletes – March 2020 ENewsletter
Simone Biles, who will be competing in the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, is the most decorated athlete in the history of gymnastics' world championships. Click here to read the enewsletter.
Photographers – February 2020 ENewsletter
A recent article on Dorothea Lange with her signature photo of "Migrant Mother" prompted us to write this month's enewsletter on two women photographers: Frances Benjamin Johnston and Dorothea Lange. Click here to read the newsletter.
Television Pioneers – January 2020 ENewsletter
As in every other field of endeavor, television also has its women pioneers. Characters on television, particularly women characters, evolved as society evolved. Click here to read the newsletter.
Composers – ENewsletter December 2019
Would you consider composing music to be a traditionally men's field? Surprisingly, over the centuries it has been difficult for women to succeed in this male-dominated field. Not that women didn't have the ability or passion for this endeavor. This month we feature...
Biographical Movie Subjects – November 2019 ENewsletter
Two feature films and one documentary released in 2019 have featured women who are among those profiled in our book. The film titles are Judy, Harriet and Miss America By Day, whose subjects are Judy Garland, Harriet Tubman and Marilyn Van Derbur Atler,...
Pulitzer Prize Winners – October 2019 ENewsletter
Toni Morrison won the Pulitzer Prize in Fiction, as well as the Nobel Prize in Literature. The first black woman of any nationality to win the Nobel Prize in Literature, her citation reads “who in novels characterized by visionary force and poetic import, gives...
Dancers – September 2019 ENewsletter
The arts, including dance, are an important part of our culture. Women have innovated in dance theory, founded whole new schools of dance and thrilled us with their beauty and grace. Who can forget Ginger Rogers who did everything Fred Astaire did, except...
Newspaper Editors – August 2019 ENewsletter
Newspapers have been important sources of information during much of this country’s history. In this month’s ENewsletter we profile two women who ran newspapers and made historic contributions in those roles: Mary Katherine Goddard and Katharine...
College Presidents – July 2019 ENewsletter
Women’s contributions to education which include everything from endowing the schools to running them have occurred at every level from pre-school through graduate school. In this month’s ENewsletter we profile two women who served as college presidents, where...
Fashion and Dressmaking – June 2019 ENewsletter
Until the mid-1800s, people were not able to purchase clothing commercially or in sizes to fit them. Maternity clothing would not be commercially available until the early 1900s. Two women who contributed enormously to advances in dressmaking and clothing...
Women in Baseball – May 2019 ENewsletter
It’s springtime and for many sports fans, thoughts turn to baseball. In a previous ENewsletter, we profiled two amazing women in baseball – Effa Manley and Linda Alvarado. Effa Manley was the first woman elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame (2006); she...
2019 Inductees into the National Women’s Hall of Fame – April 2019 ENewsletter
The National Women’s Hall of Fame announced its 2019 Inductees in early March. They include AIDS researcher Flossie Wong-Staal, who was profiled in our July 2017 ENewsletter, Jane Fonda and Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor. Let’s discover more about...
Entrepreneurs – March 2019 ENewsletter
Women have started businesses for centuries both in order to earn money to support their families and to satisfy their own economic objectives. This month we profile two entrepreneurs: Polly Bemis and Linda Alvarado. Polly Bemis’s resilience and...
Judges – February 2019 ENewsletter
The recent movies RBG and On the Basis of Sex demonstrate some of the hurdles U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg had to overcome. In this month’s ENewsletter, we profile two other legal pioneers: Florence Allen and Constance Baker Motley. A woman of many...
Women, Art and Museums – January 2019 ENewsletter
Women artists, like women in every endeavor, have been overlooked throughout history. In this month's ENewsletter we feature two women whose contributions to the arts and culture are enduring: Georgia O'Keeffe and Wilhemina Holladay, both of whom have been inducted...
Women in Statuary Hall – December 2018 ENewsletter
National Statuary Hall in the United States Capitol building in Washington, D.C., contains 100 statues - two from each state. Of that total, nine (9%) are women - Helen Keller (Alabama), Dr. Florence Sabin (Colorado), Frances Willard (Illinois), Maria Sanford...
Nobel Laureates – November 2018 ENewsletter
November ENewsletter Nobel Laureates Very exciting news came in October 2018 - women were going to share the Nobel Prize in Chemistry and the Nobel Prize in Physics! Donna Strickland, one of the trio to be awarded the 2018 Nobel Prize in Physics works at the...
Pianists – October 2018 ENewsletter
Beautiful: The Carole King Musical, honoring composer, musician, and singer Carole King, is currently playing on Broadway. This month’s e-newsletter not only features Carole King but another musical sensation as well, Hazel Harrison. Enjoy reading...
Food Glorious Food! – September 2018 ENewsletter
Ella Brennan, a well-known, well respected New Orleans restaurant owner, nurtured celebrity chefs, but didn't believe it appropriate to worship them, "A restaurant is not a church, where you have to be quiet and kneel," she said. Brennan, whose family owned more than...
Playwrights – August 2018 ENewsletter
Young Jean Lee is the first Asian-American woman to have her play performed on Broadway. This occurred in July when Straight White Men opened. Lorraine Hansberry was the first AfricanAmerican woman author with a play on Broadway when A Raisin in the Sun opened in...
Women on U.S. Postage Stamps – July 2018 ENewsletter
During 2018, the United States Postal Service has selected two women to be featured on U.S. postage stamps. These stamps have already been released; they feature Lena Horne and Sally Ride. Let's learn more about these amazing women! For over seventy years, actress,...
Political Firsts – June 2018 ENewsletter
May 2018 was a month in which women achieved firsts in politics and government. Gina Haspel became the first female director of the Central Intelligence Agency, after her confirmation by the U.S. Senate. Stacey Abrams became the first African-American woman to win a...
Sunday School Pioneers – May 2018 ENewsletter
Public education as we know it in the United States was not available prior to the middle of the 1800s. Women led education reform in many areas including in the establishment of Sunday Schools. In this month’s enewsletter we feature two Sunday School...
Robotics – April 2018 ENewsletter
One area of technological focus in the twenty-first century is using robots to do work that is either tedious for, or dangerous to humans. Like every other field of endeavor, women are involved in developing, refining, and improving robots. In this month’s enewsletter...
February 2018 ENewsletter – Extraordinary Entertainers
Only twelve artists have achieved the entertainer’s equivalent of ‘horsedom’s’ Triple Crown – EGOT (Emmy, Grammy, Oscar and Tony Awards) and four of them are women. The four are Rita Moreno, Helen Hayes, Audrey Hepburn, and Whoopi Goldberg. In this month’s enewsletter...
January 2018 ENewsletter – Household Inventors
A series of exhibits on inventors and discoverers was recently put together for Google Arts and Culture. These exhibits featured women inventors and discoverers in medicine, science, engineering, health and beauty, and the household. In this month’s...
December 2017 ENewsletter – Poet Laureates
Tracy K. Smith, the new poet laureate of the U.S., assumed her one-year term of office in September 2017. She stands on the shoulders of other women who have filled that office and the predecessor office. These women include Gwendolyn Brooks who served as Consultant...
November 2017 ENewsletter – Opera Singers
A recent performance of the opera Madame Butterfly triggered the thought to profile opera singers in this month’s enewsletter. This art form originated in Italy in the 1500s; even today it delights audiences and enriches us culturally. We are pleased to profile...
October 2017 ENewsletter – Race Car Drivers
Business Week recently featured an article on the economics of racing cars. It highlighted Julia Landauer, referred to as the best female racer since Danica Patrick. Do you know that Shirley Muldowney and Janet Guthrie actually paved the way for Danica Patrick and...
September 2017 ENewsletter – Labor Advocates
The recent book, The Radium Girls, tells the story of illnesses suffered by the women who painted radium on dials in the early part of the twentieth century. It speaks of a time when few workplace regulations were in place to protect employees. Dr. Alice Hamilton is...
August 2017 ENewsletter – Emmy Winners
It’s Emmy season! Although most of us think of Emmys as recognizing acting on television, there are multiple other categories of Emmy awards. In this enewsletter, we profile two of the many amazing women who have received Emmys in recognition of their significant...
July 2017 – ENewsletter Research Scientist
The recent obituary of Dr. Angela Hartley Brodie was titled “Scientist Paved Way for a Breast-Cancer Treatment.” Dr. Brodie’s accomplishments are significant and she stands on the shoulders of those who came before her. In this enewsletter we profile two research...
June 2017 HerStory ENewsletter – New Yorkers
June 2017 Her Story ENewsletter New Yorkers - The recent release of the documentary "Citizen Jane" profiling the influence that journalist and activist Jane Jacobs had on the development of New York City leads her to be profiled in this month's ENewsletter. Another...
May 2017 Her Story ENewsletter Singers
May 2017 Her Story ENewsletter Singers On the occasion of what would have been Ella Fitzgerald's 100th birthday, we are pleased to profile her as well as Billie Holiday in this month's ENewsletter. Both Fitzgerald and Holiday have been inducted into the National...
April 2017 Her Story ENewsletter National Women’s Hall of Fame 2017 Inductees, Continued
In early February, the National Women's Hall of Fame announced the ten 2017 Inductees. In our March ENewsletter, we profiled Lorraine Hansberry and Temple Grandin. In this month's ENewsletter, we profile Clare Boothe Luce and Sherry Lansing. To read the enewsletter,...
National Women’s Hall of Fame 2017 Inductees – March 2017 ENewsletter
In early February, the National Women’s Hall of Fame announced the ten 2017 Inductees. In this month’s ENewsletter, we profile two of the women who will be officially inducted in September 2017 in Seneca Falls, New York: Lorraine Hansberry and Temple Grandin. ...
Journalists – February 2017 ENewsletter
The recent passing of British journalist Clare Hollingworth, who reported the outbreak of World War II, reminds us that women have played key roles in reporting news. Although the role of newspapers is diminishing today, for a long time people got their information...
Astronomers – January 2017 ENewsletter
The publication of The Glass Universe and the release of the movie, Hidden Figures, as well as the recent death of astronomer Vera Rubin reminds us to share the stories of three historical women astronomers. In this ENewsletter, we learn about Maria Mitchell,...
Astronauts – December 2016 ENewsletter
Fascination with space travel has intrigued generations, probably for millennia. More recently, every rocket launch and NASA mission has inspired awe. Many of us are still enthralled by science fiction movies including the Star Wars and Star Trek episodes. Let's...
Physicians – November 2016 ENewsletter
As many of us make our health insurance decisions for 2017, we decided to profile women physicians in this Enewsletter, specifically Antonia Novello and Susan Love. Read the newsletter here
Civil Rights Activists – October 2016 ENewsletter
In recognition of the honor being bestowed on the six women members of the 'Little Rock Nine' - they will be the sponsors of the new U.S. Navy submarine - the USS Arkansas - we profile civil rights activists - Rosa Parks and Fannie Lou Hamer. For the full...
Abstract Painters – September 2016 Newsletter
The Denver Art Museum is currently hosting a Touring Exhibit entitled "The Women of Abstract Expressionism." Two abstract painters are profiled in this newsletter. For the full newsletter click here
Youth Organization Founders – August 2016 Newsletter
Many of the women reading this newsletter will have spent some of their formative years either as Girl Scouts or in a 4-H club. Studies show, in fact, that 70% of today's women leaders were Girl Scouts in their youth! What readers may not know is that both of these...
Advocates for Animals – July 2016 Newsletter
Women have been at the forefront of many social issues. These included suffrage for all, property rights, labor reforms, expansion of mental health facilities, helping immigrants with their adjustment, and, of course, educational reforms. Now, attention can be...