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Mother Earth was an American anarchist journal that described itself as "A Monthly Magazine Devoted to Social Science and Literature". Founded in early 1906 and initially edited by Emma Goldman , an activist in the United States, it published articles by contemporary activists and writers in Europe as well as the US, in addition to essays by ...
The first issue of Mother Earth journal was published in 1933. It borrowed its title from the original magazine of that name by Emma Goldman and others, which was published from 1906 to 1917. The couple John G. Scott and Jo Ann Wheeler were the editors of all seventeen issues of Mother Earth journal, which they published until 1934.
"Mother Earth" (novella), a science fiction story by Isaac Asimov Mother Earth, a magazine founded by anarchist Emma Goldman; Mother Earth, a journal published by anarchists John G. Scott and Jo Ann Wheeler
In 2012, Ogden Publications re-branded Natural Home & Garden as Mother Earth Living after the merger with the more popular magazine The Herb Companion [3] and re-directed the domain naturalhomeandgarden.com to motherearthliving.com. In 2006, Ogden Publications acquired Natural Home. [4] Editor-in-chief Robyn Griggs Lawrence explained:
Emery was born in Los Angeles where her parents had gone in search of employment after being displaced from their home in Washington state by a crop failure. Emery grew up as a rancher's daughter in Montana after her parents moved there during her infancy (her father, Carl Harshbarger, had worked as chauffeur for Dorothy Lamour in Los Angeles ...
The attempted robbery took place just before 5 a.m. on Dec. 9, according to ABC News' Washington affiliate KOMO. It involved a flatbed truck backing into and shattering the front windows of the ...
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Mother Earth image, 17th century alchemical text, Atalanta Fugiens. The pre-Socratic philosophers abstracted the entirety of phenomena of the world as singular: physis, and this was inherited by Aristotle. [citation needed] The word "nature" comes from the Latin word, "natura", meaning birth or character [see nature (philosophy)].