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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.
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
Edith B. Price: 1897–1997: 100: American author of children's books [154] Carl Rakosi: 1903–2004: 101: American Objectivist poet [155] Joana Raspall i Juanola: 1913–2013: 100: Spanish writer [156] Naomi Replansky: 1918–2023: 104: American poet [157] Madeleine Riffaud: 1924–2024: 100: French poet, journalist and member of the French ...
I Live Under a Black Sun is a novelized biography of Jonathan Swift by poet Edith Sitwell. [1] Her debut novel , it is a modernist work, and was published in 1937, straddling her productive period of poetry in the 1920s and the 1940s.
Free Live! is the first live album by English rock band Free.It was rush-released by Island Records to commemorate the band, who had broken up in April 1971. Possibly because of the publicity caused by their breakup (which had also earned them a successful parting single "My Brother Jake" that same month) the album was a hit, reaching No. 4 in the UK Albums Chart. [2]
British anthropologist and writer Edith Durham has suggested that the Kanun likely dates back to the Bronze Age. [26] Other scholars have suggested that it retains elements from Indo-European prehistoric eras. [27] Others further have conjectured that it may derive from ancient Illyrian tribal laws. [28]
Advertisement for The River of Romance, noting it was an adaptation of the E. J. Rath novel Sam. E.J. Rath is the pseudonym of writer Edith Rathbone Jacobs Brainerd (1885 – January 28, 1922) who was assisted with many of her writing projects by her husband Chauncey Corey Brainerd (April 16, 1874 – January 28, 1922), a Washington D.C. correspondent for the Brooklyn Daily Eagle.
Edie Huggins (August 14, 1935 – July 29, 2008) was an American television reporter, journalist and broadcaster.In 1966, Huggins became one of the first African-American women to report on television in Philadelphia, remaining a fixture on WCAU-TV for 42 years; the longest consecutive television run of any Philadelphia TV news reporter in history.