Woman's Work in AmericaAnnie Nathan Meyer Arno Press, 1972 - 457 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 45
Página 270
... Union , with a membership of nearly two hundred thousand , whose greatly beloved president , Frances E. Willard , is as ear- nest an advocate of the ballot for woman as a temperance meas- ure , as she is for prohibition . * Before she ...
... Union , with a membership of nearly two hundred thousand , whose greatly beloved president , Frances E. Willard , is as ear- nest an advocate of the ballot for woman as a temperance meas- ure , as she is for prohibition . * Before she ...
Página 301
... Union of Denver , a branch of the International Cigar - Makers ' Union , admitted women to membership and made no distinc- tion on account of color . Through the efforts of the union , the hours of labor were reduced from ten to eight ...
... Union of Denver , a branch of the International Cigar - Makers ' Union , admitted women to membership and made no distinc- tion on account of color . Through the efforts of the union , the hours of labor were reduced from ten to eight ...
Página 302
... union help had only three women in three separate print- ing establishments as against one hundred and nineteen men ; while in the non - union , the proportion was forty - eight women against eighty - five men . Since the investigations ...
... union help had only three women in three separate print- ing establishments as against one hundred and nineteen men ; while in the non - union , the proportion was forty - eight women against eighty - five men . Since the investigations ...
Contenido
INTRODUCTION | 1 |
CHAPTER | 2 |
THE EDUCATION OF WOMAN IN THE WESTERN STATES | 54 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 15 secciones no mostradas
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Términos y frases comunes
admission admitted American application appointed Association authority became become Boston called century church co-education committee course Court demand duties England entered equal established examinations existence fact factory female girls give given graduates held higher hospital hundred important Indian industrial influence institutions instruction interest labor ladies learned lectures less letter Mary means medicine meetings Michigan Miss nature never offered opened opportunity organized passed person Philadelphia physicians position practice present president profession question received record regard says secure social society South success thousand tion town United University vote woman women writes York young
Referencias a este libro
Beyond Her Sphere: Women and the Professions in American History Barbara Jean Harris Vista de fragmentos - 1978 |
Give Us Bread But Give Us Roses: Working Women's Consciousness in the United ... Sarah Eisenstein Sin vista previa disponible - 1983 |