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Philadelphia steel worker Al Schmid has no intention of marriage until he meets Ruth Hartley. Al is impressed by Ruth and the couple fall in love. After the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Al joins the Marines. Before his departure, Al proposes marriage to Ruth on the train station platform. Al is assigned to fight in the Pacific War.
Schmid eventually recovered partial sight in one eye, but problems with his leg during the cold winters led him to retire in 1957 and move to St. Petersburg, Florida, with his wife and two sons. Al Schmid died of bone cancer on December 1, 1982. On December 6, he was buried at Arlington National Cemetery. His wife Ruth was also buried in ...
October 1943 to Alfred Stephen London Hartley and to Muriel Mavis Hartley – known as Pixie - (née Burton) in Salisbury (now Harare) in what was the British colony of Rhodesia, now Zimbabwe. Pixie’s family was among the 1820 settlers in South Africa and moved to Rhodesia in 1922 where Ruth's grandfather, Alfred Ernest Hartley bought a farm.
Ruth Horowitz: 1910–1997 Also known as Ruth Hartley. [163] Ruth Winifred Howard: 1900–1997 Developmental psych. Her main research focused on the development of triplets. She was one of the first women to earn a PhD in the area of psychology. She also earned a PhD in child development. [164] Ethel Dench Puffer Howes: 1872–1950
Ruth Price Hartley Mosley (September 23, 1886 – August 14, 1975) was an American nurse, businesswoman, and civil rights activist. In 1910, she became the first black woman to be the head of a nursing department. [1] Mosley was also one of the first women to be licensed as an embalmer.
Ruth Schmid is a Swiss orienteering competitor. She won a bronze medal in the relay at the World Orienteering Championships in 1981, together with Annelies Meier , Irene Bucher and Ruth Humbel . [ 1 ] [ 2 ]
Dr. Ruth Westheimer is an icon who has completely transformed the way America talks about sex. If you were around in the ’80s, you likely heard at least a snippet of her radio show and, in the ...
Ruth Grossenbacher-Schmid in 1992. Ruth Grossenbacher-Schmid (born 13 September 1936 in Cape Town, South Africa; originally from Obererlinsbach, canton of Solothurn) is a Swiss politician of the Christian Democratic People's Party (CVP). She was a member of the National Council for the canton of Solothurn from 1991 to 1999.