Women Travelers
by Willie Mao Kneupper A Victorian traveler, Marianne North, imposed on herself the task of painting all the world’s tropical flora. In 1882, over 800
by Willie Mao Kneupper A Victorian traveler, Marianne North, imposed on herself the task of painting all the world’s tropical flora. In 1882, over 800
Women and minorities are rare in the sciences. Why? And what can be done about it? On the Issues Interviews Paul E. Gray, President, Massachusetts
by Helen M. Stummer Worrying about my tires seems appropriate, consistent. No matter what I do, if it is important or meaningful, my car runs badly.
by Esty Dinur A Wish for Cambodia: The Khmer Rouge takeover of Cambodia spelled an end to the good life and the beginning of what is
by Irene Davall She grabbed the ringing phone and said brusquely “Flo Kennedy here.” The caller, who spoke with a soft southern drawl, identified herself as
by Roberta Kalechofsky Contrary to popular conception, the identity of the Palestinian Arabs as a nationality is a recent phenomenon. As has often been observed, it
by Phyllis Chesler On December 1,1988 I was one of the women who prayed aloud with a Torah at the Western Wall for the first time
by Bill Strubbe Every Friday afternoon at 1:00, while most Jerusalem residents are caught in the throes of their preparations for the onset of Shabbat
by Merle Hoffman Iam a child of the holocaust, a survivor of sorts, a kind of surrogate sufferer. I have never smelled the burning flesh
by Eleanor J. Bader One afternoon in October, in the tiny village ofHawwara, off the Nablus Road, American visitors found two she-goats, two kids and five
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“Merle Hoffman has always known that in a democracy, we each have decision-making power over the fate of our own bodies. She is a national hero for us all.” —Gloria Steinem
In the wake of the Supreme Court overturning Roe V. Wade and a country divided, Merle Hoffman, a pioneer in the pro-choice movement and women’s healthcare, offers an unapologetic and authoritative take on abortion calling it “the front line and the bottom line of women’s freedom and liberty.”
Merle Hoffman has been at the forefront of the reproductive freedom movement since the 1970s. Three years before the Supreme Court legalized abortion through Roe v. Wade, she helped to establish one of the United States’ first abortion centers in Flushing, Queens, and later went on to found Choices, one of the nation’s largest and most comprehensive women’s medical facilities. For the last five decades, Hoffman has been a steadfast warrior and fierce advocate for every woman’s right to choose when and whether or not to be a mother.