Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Edith Iglauer was born in Cleveland, Ohio, on March 10, 1917, to a family of German Jewish descent.She transferred to the Hathaway Brown School for Girls and subsequently pursued a bachelor's degree in political science at Wellesley College, followed by further education at the Columbia University School of Journalism.
His major interest was hauling around large buildings on ice roads between mining camps. Denison's exploits were the topic of Edith Iglauer's nonfiction book, Denison's Ice Road (1974). [5] On May 6, 1998, John Denison was awarded the Order of Canada for his work on the ice roads in the 1950s-1970s. [6] [7]
Iglauer is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Bruce Iglauer (born 1947), American music industry executive; Edith Iglauer (1917–2019), American non-fiction writer; Helen Iglauer Glueck (1907–1995), American physician
While visiting her married sister in Washington, D.C., Edith met Norman Galt (1864–1908), a prominent jeweler of Galt & Bro. The couple married on April 30, 1896, and lived in the capital for the next 12 years. In 1903, she bore a son who lived only for a few days. The difficult birth left her unable to have more children. [23]
Edith Iglauer: 1917–2019: 101: American writer [92] William Arthur Irwin: 1898–1999: 101: Canadian journalist and diplomat [93] Mohammad-Ali Jamalzadeh: 1892–1997: 105: Iranian writer [94] Elizabeth Jenkins: 1905–2010: 104: English novelist [95] Satya Mohan Joshi: 1920–2022: 102: Nepalese writer and scholar [96] Muhammad Ibrahim Joyo ...
Edith Thompson was born Edith Jessie Graydon on 25 December 1893, at 97 Norfolk Road in Dalston, London, the first of the five children of William Eustace Graydon (1867–1941), a clerk with the Imperial Tobacco Company, and his wife Ethel Jessie Graydon (née Liles) (1872–1938), the daughter of a police constable.
Category Winner Nominated Fiction: David Adams Richards, Nights Below Station Street: Margaret Atwood, Cat's Eye; Joan Clark, The Victory of Geraldine Gull; Mark Frutkin, Atmospheres Apollinaire
Helen Iglauer Glueck (1907–1995) was an American physician known for her research in blood chemistry that linked bleeding disorders in newborns with a lack of Vitamin K in breast milk. Glueck graduated from Walnut Hills High School in Cincinnati, Ohio in 1925.