Sotomayor—From the Bronx to the Bench
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Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor is determined to be as frank as possible in her new memoir. More »
Hillary Clinton’s Future—Full of Possibilities
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The author, who has closely followed Hillary Clinton's career, writes that pundits are posing the wrong question about Clinton's future. More »
Myrlie Evers-Williams—Making Her Own History
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The inauguration moment that most moved the author, multimedia journalist Mary C. Curtis, came early in the ceremony. More »
My Interview with Sally Ride
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Novelist Margaret McMullan recalls the question she wishes she hadn't asked the first American woman in space, Sally Ride, who died July 23 this year. More »
New York’s Firefighting Women
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Women firefighters have served New York City for 30 years, but their numbers are still tiny in comparison to men. Recently a pioneer among them, Brenda Berkman, examined why. More »
Plunging Necklines, Helen Gurley Brown, and Me
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Legendary Cosmo Editor Helen Gurley Brown died at age 90 August 13, 2012, in New York City. Book publisher Lori Perkins here remembers an icon. More »
Nora Ephron—An Appreciation
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Author M. G. Lord knew Nora Ephron socially, but appreciated her most through Ephron's essays. She writes about why they've had only the best influence on her own writing. More »
Burmese Nobel Laureate after 21 Years
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The author recalls her time in Burma just before the military coup that kept Aung San Suu Kyi from accepting her Nobel Peace Prize for two decades. More »
Ms. Is Celebrated in the City of its Birth
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Four decades after its birth as the nation's first feminist mass-market magazine, Ms. was honored this week by the New York City Council. Shelby Knox writes of its continuing advocacy. More »
Nuns Mad As Hell
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As a group of nuns plans to crisscross the country to highlight their work with the poor and powerless, Adele M. Stan explains why we may be witnessing a catalyzing moment in U.S. Catholic history. More »






