Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Mary L. Smith (born August 28, 1962) is an American lawyer, senior executive, and civic leader in private and public sectors. She served as the CEO of the Indian Health Services from October 2015 to February 2017, a $6 billion national healthcare system with 15,000 employees, 26 hospitals and over 50 clinics.
Marie "Mary" Clement (February 16, 1863 – July 9, 1944), also known under several aliases, was a Luxembourgish-born American serial killer who poisoned her parents and two of her sisters at their home in Dubuque, Iowa. [1]
Smith was born Mary Winifrid Parker on 29 February 1904, in Bury, Lancashire, [1] to Helen Durley (née Yates) and her husband Henry Wilfred Parker, [3] being their third child, and only daughter, of four. At the time of the 1911 census, the family lived at The Elms, Walshaw Road, Bury. [4]
Mary Lou Clements-Mann (September 17, 1946 – September 2, 1998) was the founder and first Director of the Center for Immunization Research at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and is well known for her work in the areas of HIV and influenza vaccine research.
Strutt inherited his title on the death of his father in 1919, becoming the 4th Baron Rayleigh. He had married twice: firstly on 5 July 1905 Lady Mary Hilda Clements, daughter of Robert Clements, 4th Earl of Leitrim (she died 1919), and secondly, in 1920, Kathleen Alice, daughter of John Coppin-Straker of Northumberland. He had five children ...
Mary Greenleaf Clement was born on September 22, 1830, [2] in Hopkinton, New Hampshire, the daughter of Baptist minister Rev. Joshua Clement [3] and his wife Eliza (Harvey) Clement. [4] [5] Her parents totally abstained from the use of alcohol and opposed slavery.
In 1717, Keill married Mary Clements, a woman 25 years his junior and the daughter of an Oxford bookbinder. The marriage created great scandal at the time as Clements was from a lower class. [3] On 31 August 1721, Keill died in London from a sudden illness, possibly food poisoning.
Mary Louise Ware (née Smith; born 1937) is an African-American civil rights activist. She was arrested in October 1955 at the age of 18 in Montgomery, Alabama for refusing to give up her seat on the segregated bus system.