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The National Federation of Press Women (NFPW) was organized May 6, 1937, when Helen Miller Malloch and other members of the Illinois Woman's Press Association (IWPA organized in 1885), along with women from five other states and the District of Columbia, who met at the Chicago Women's Club in order to promote communication between women writers ...
A collection of poems about Santa Fe, New Mexico (written during her tenure as Poet Laureate of Santa Fe), And They Called it Horizon, was published by Sunstone Press in 2010. Martinez's chapbook-length hybrid work (poetry and prose), "A Hundred Little Mouths", premiered in November 2015 with Susan Silton's "Whistling Project" at SITE Santa Fe.
The Non-Partisan Council worked with the NAACP, The Urban League, The United Office and Professional Workers of America, The National Association of Graduate Nurses, the American Federation of Churches, the Colored Women's Club, the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters and Auxiliary, and the New York Voter's League. [8]
Oct. 30—Albuquerque Journal captured the "General Excellence" award at the 114th convention of the New Mexico Press Association in Albuquerque on Saturday as well as first-place awards in news ...
Dec. 22—While sifting through nearly 350 entries in this year's Pasatiempo Writing Contest, one thing became clear: Santa Fe — and New Mexico — fosters a strong community of writers. Based ...
Women's Press Organizations, 1881-1999. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 9780313306617. Pfeffer, Miki (2011). "An Enlarging Influence: Women of New Orleans, Julia Ward Howe, and the Woman's Department at the Cotton Centennial Exposition, 1884-1885". University of New Orleans Theses and Dissertations. 1339.
In the summer of 1881, three correspondents of Washington, D.C. frequently met in council to discuss plans for the organization of a press club. So earnest were their convictions, that they called a meeting of the writers of the city, which, by the courtesy of Jane H. Spofford, was held in the parlors of the Riggs House, July 10, 1882.
Susie Rayos Marmon (née Dawa-Go-Mai-Tsa, 1877–1988) [1] was an American educator, oral historian, and storyteller, and supercentenarian [2] who was committed to the education of children at Laguna and Isleta Pueblos, New Mexico, United States.