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Rebecca Boggs Roberts (born 1970) is the Curator of Programming at Planet Word, and was formerly an American journalist. She was one of the hosts of POTUS '08 on XM Radio, which offered live daily coverage of the 2008 presidential election.
Rebecca Roberts (born 18 December 1994), is a Welsh strongwoman and grip athlete, current UK's Strongest Woman 2023 & 2024 [1] and winner of the 2021 and 2023 World's Strongest Woman competition. She regained the title of 'World's Strongest Woman' after winning at the Official Strongman games in West Virginia December 2023, becoming one of only ...
Zoe Leonard (born 1961), photography of New York City, photos of the fictional Fae Richards for the film The Watermelon Woman; Rebecca Lepkoff (1916–2014), street scenes on the Lower East Side of Manhattan in the 1940s; Isa Leshko (born 1971), fine art photographer known for her Elderly Animals series; Sherrie Levine (born 1947 ...
A strongwoman is a woman who performs feats of strength in a show or circus, ... Rebecca Roberts: UK / Wales: 2017– 15 3 20.0% 7 Jill Mills: USA: 2001–2005 3 2
As of Rosalind Goodrich Bates, Women in Red has 141 featured pictures, making up 1.73% of the total number thereof. This count does not include any featured pictures of, by, or otherwise related to women that were featured before the project's start (and is a bit patchy throughout, honestly, because it's hard to decide if non-Women in Red women ...
World's Strongest Woman (later known as Strongwoman World Championships, World's Strongest Lady and United Strongmen Women's World Championships) is an annual strongwoman contest, and considered the pinnacle for female competitors and recognized as the world championships, and was held during the same time and same location as WSM from 2001 to 2003.
Richelle Mead (b. 1976, United States), nv.; L. T. Meade (1844–1914, Ireland), girls' writer; Teresa Meana Suárez (born 1952, Spain), feminist activist, teacher ...
The Feminine Gaze: a Canadian compendium of non-fiction women authors and their books, 1836–1945. Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 2001. includes brief biographies of 473 writers; Fister, Barbara, ed. Third World Women's Literatures: A Dictionary and Guide to Materials in English. Westport, CT: Greenwood, 1995.