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         Sanger Margaret:     more books (23)
  1. Contemporary Authors: Biography - Sanger, Margaret (Higgins) (1879-1966)
  2. The case for birth control. prepared by Margaret H. Sanger. by Sanger. Margaret. 1879-1966., 1917-01-01
  3. The pivot of civilization / by Margaret Sanger ; preface by H.G. Wells by Margaret (1879-1966) Sanger, 1923-01-01
  4. Woman and the new race by Margaret Sanger ; with a preface by Ha by Sanger. Margaret. 1879-1966., 1920-01-01
  5. The Autobiography of Margaret Sanger (Dover Value Editions) by Margaret Sanger, 2004-05-11
  6. Margaret Sanger's Eugenic Legacy: The Control of Female Fertility by Angela Franks, 2005-01-28
  7. Margaret Sanger: Her Life in Her Words by Miriam Reed, 2003-07
  8. The Selected Papers of Margaret Sanger, Volume 1: The Woman Rebel, 1900-1928
  9. Killer Angel: A Short Biography of Planned Parenthood's Founder, Margaret Sanger by George Grant, 2001-02
  10. Margaret Sanger and the Birth Control Movement by Ronald Moore, 1995-05-30
  11. The Margaret Sanger Story: and the Fight for Birth Control by Lawrence Lader, 1975-01-14
  12. Margaret Sanger (An Impact Biography) by Elyse Topalian, 1984-02
  13. The Importance of Margaret Sanger by Deborah Bachrach, 1993-03
  14. Margaret Sanger: Pioneer of the Future by Emily Taft Douglas, 1975

81. Margaret Sanger
Translate this page Margaret Sanger (1879 - 1966). Fue la precursora norteamericana delos movimientos feministas, luchó en favor del control de la
http://ar.geocities.com/riotgrrrlnation/MargeS.html
Margaret Sanger
Mientras trabajaba como enfermera practicante con mujeres de clase media, en uno de los barrios más pobres de Nueva York, antes de la Primera Guerra, vió mujeres denigradas en su salud, corrompidas en su sexualidad y en su capacidad de cuidar a sus hijos ya nacidos. Mientras la información sobre anticonceptivos fue suprimida por influencia del clero, y los médicos aceptaban leyes que predicaban que era una ofensa criminal publicitar estos métodos, las personas educadas tenían acceso a tal información y podían usar el subterfugio de comprar productos "franceses" para la "higiene femenina", como condones y otros métodos anticonceptivos.
Fue esta injusticia la que inspiró a Sanger a desafiar a la Iglesia y al Estado en una serie de artículos llamados "Lo que cada mujer debería saber"; luego, en su propio periódico "La Mujer Rebelde"; (1914) y, finalmente, a través de clínicas de barrio que repartían a las mujeres elementos de control de la natalidad, Sanger puso en manos de las mujeres información y poder.
Un año permaneció en Europa, a fin de evitar condenas por "actos criminales severos". De regreso a Estados Unidos, Sanger continuó dando un empuje legal a su cruzada e inició una campaña social fundando una consejería sexual: la "Liga Americana para el Control de la Natalidad" (que se denominó, en 1942, "Federación de la Paternidad Planeada").

82. Directory :: Look.com
Extensive information about Sanger and the project. Margaret Sanger, 18791966Profile of the founder of the American birth control movement.
http://www.look.com/searchroute/directorysearch.asp?p=451836

83. Listings Of The World Society Issues Family Planning History
http//www.nyu.edu/projects/Sanger/ Added Nov-27-02; Margaret Sanger, 1879-1966Post Review Profile of the founder of the American birth control movement.
http://listingsworld.com/Society/Issues/Family_Planning/History/Sanger,_Margaret

84. Women's History-Margaret Sanger
One of the most controversial branches of activism was the struggle for legal birthcontrol, led by Margaret Sanger (1879–1966), a nurse from New York City.
http://teacher.scholastic.com/researchtools/articlearchives/womhst/sanger.htm
Margaret Sanger: Family Planning
At the turn of the century, American women weren't just keeping house. "We know how much we are needed in the world's affairs," said the spokesperson for the General Federation of Women's Clubs. Middle-class women were organizing clubs and political organizations to clean up society's disorder. Suffragists Alice Paul, Susan B. Anthony, and Elizabeth Cady Stanton were renewing their fight for the vote. Settlement workers Jane Addams and Lillian Wald were helping immigrants assimilate into American life. Reformers like Carrie Nation were fighting to close saloons. And other women activists were pushing for education laws, child labor restrictions, food sanitation laws, and juvenile courts. One of the most controversial branches of activism was the struggle for legal birth control, led by Margaret Sanger (1879–1966), a nurse from New York City. "Enforced motherhood," she said, "is the most complete denial of a woman's right to life and liberty." With birth control, she thought, women could develop into better mothers, better citizens. In 1916, Sanger opened the first birth-control clinic in the U.S., and went to jail for her efforts. She spent the rest of her 86 years lobbying for birth control. "A woman's body," she said, "belongs to herself alone."

85. Biography.com
Sangallo, Antonio (Giamberti) da, 1483 1546. Sanger, Frederick, 1918 . Sanger,Margaret, 1879 1966. Sanguinetti Cairolo, Julio María, 1936 . Sankara, ?
http://search.biography.com/bio_browse.pl?letter=S&num=150

86. Infoseek: Salvation
Margaret Louise Sanger 1879 1966. We do not want word to get out that we wantto exterminate the Negro population . Who spoke these words? The Klu Klux Klan?
http://www.acts1711.com/sanger.htm
Margaret Sanger
Mother of Planned Parenthood, pro-abortionist
and American Eugenics
Margaret Sanger is founder of Planned Parenthood, and the one who inspired Adolph Hitler in his views of eugenics and "murdering socially undesirable people."
Margaret Sanger, through Planned Parenthood, advocated abortions on Afro-Americans in order to eliminate what she called "socially undesirable people". This site is an excellent Afro-American response against Sanger's racist eugenics: Genocide against Afro-Americans
Vivid pictures of aborted babies
brought to us by blackgenocide.org. Caution: These are very vivid but bring home to the heart the ugliness of abortion murders.
Exposing the fascist thinking of Margaret Sanger.
Her left-wing sisters, such as Gloria Steinem, had to selectively overlook this part of Margaret Sanger when they praise her feminist achievements.Ms. Sanger began her career as a nurse and political rebel, acting in association with the International Workers of the World (IWW) and with Emma Goldman, foundress of the American Communist Party. (Ms. Goldman also mentored Roger Baldwin, founder of the American Civil Liberties Union - ACLU)
Margaret Louise Sanger
"We do not want word to get out that we want to exterminate the Negro population"
Who spoke these words? The Klu Klux Klan? Aryan Nations? The National Socialist (Nazi) Party? These are the words of Margaret Sanger, Founder of Planned Parenthood, the largest provider and promoter of legal abortion in the United States.

87. My Nursing Journey
Margaret Sanger Founder of the US Birth Control Movement 1879 1966 The sixth of 11 children, she attended Claverack College
http://www.mynursingjourney.com/margaretsanger.shtml
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Margaret Sanger
The sixth of 11 children, she attended Claverack College and then took nurse's training in New York at the White Plains Hospital and the Manhattan Eye and Ear Clinic. She was married twice, to William Sanger in 1900 and, after a divorce, to J. Noah H. Slee in 1922. After a brief teaching career she practiced obstetrical nursing on the Lower East Side of New York City, where she witnessed the relationships between poverty, uncontrolled fertility, high rates of infant and maternal mortality, and deaths from botched illegal abortions. These observations made Sanger a feminist who believed in every woman's right to avoid unwanted pregnancies, and she devoted herself to removing the legal barriers to publicizing the facts about contraception. In 1921 Sanger founded the American Birth Control League, and she served as its president until 1928. The league was one of the parent organizations of the Birth Control Federation of America, which in 1942 became the Planned Parenthood Federation of America, with Sanger as honorary chairman. Sanger, who had traveled to Europe to study the issue of birth control there, also organized the first World Population Conference in Geneva in 1927, and she was the first president of the International Planned Parenthood Federation (founded 1953). Subsequently she took her campaign for birth control to Asian countries, especially India and Japan.

88. Sanger, Margaret (b. Higgins) 1879 1966 Birth Control Advocate
Sanger, Margaret (b. Higgins), 1879 1966. Birth control advocate;born in Corning, NY The sixth of eleven children, she married
http://www.westga.edu/~physics/mil/50.htm
Sanger, Margaret (b. Higgins) B

89. Encyclopædia Britannica
Sanger, Margaret (1879–1966) US birthcontrol pioneer. Atwood, Margaret(Eleanor) (born 1939) Canadian poet, novelist, and critic.
http://www.britannica.com/search?query=margaret angela haley&fuzzy=N&ct=gen1&sta

90. Margaret Sanger

http://www.cwrl.utexas.edu/~ulrich/RHE309/vicfembios/margaretsanger.htm
Margaret Sanger Sanger was born into a large working-class family of moderate means. She adored her father, Michael Higgins, and absorbed his radical politics, but it was the fate of her mother, Anna , that propelled her into nursing and helped inspire her life-long battle to secure for women the power to control their reproductivity. Margaret watched her mother, constantly pregnant and constantly sick, succumb to tuberculosis after bearing 11 children. However, an even deeper paranoia seems to have underlain these objections. Women and maternity had been yoked, willingly or not, for the entire history of humanity. There had, of course, always been ways of circumventing the reproductive system, but these methods were neither universally known nor fully reliable. To attempt to separate the females from their reproductive functions flew in the face of society's definition of what it meant to be a woman. St. Augustine once asked, "If it is not to generate children that the woman was given to the man as a helpmate, in what could she be a help for him?" and this assumption, that women existed, not in their own right, but because of their usefulness to others, persisted in various forms until Sanger's own time and beyond. According to some, women existed to please men; for others, women were to serve the good of the species by rearing good children; others believed that it was their beneficent moral influence that justified their existence. Few feminists until the middle of the 19th century were entirely comfortable claiming that women existed as independent, self-sufficient souls. By separating women from their reproductive role, birth control implicitly asserted their autonomy and personhood.

91. Margaret Sanger (in MARION)
Margaret Sanger. Title Margaret Sanger every child a wanted child / by Nancy Whitelaw. Author Whitelaw, Nancy. Published New
http://www.ccpl.org/MARION/ABH-5087
Margaret Sanger
Title:
Author:
Published:
  • New York : Dillon Press ; Toronto : Maxwell Macmillan Canada ; New York : Maxwell Macmillan International, c1994.
Edition:
  • 1st ed.
Subject:
Series:
Material:
  • 160 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.
Note:
  • Includes bibliographical references (p. ) and index.
  • A biography of Margaret Sanger, the indomitable fighter for birth control and a feminist who asked women to take responsibility for their freedom.
ISBN:
  • System ID no:
    • ABH-5087
    Holdings:
    MAIN-Children's Room
    • CALL NUMBER: [JB] Sanger Juv Biog Available
    DOR JUV
    • CALL NUMBER: [JB] Sanger Juv Biog Available
    MTP JUV
    • CALL NUMBER: [JB] Sanger Juv Biog Available
    JI JUV
    • CALL NUMBER: [JB] Sanger Juv Biog Available
    WA JUV
    • CALL NUMBER: [JB] Sanger Juv Biog Available
  • If you have a valid library card, you may place a

    92. U.S. SENATOR BARBARA BOXER | CALIFORNIA
    Margaret Sanger , family planning advocate (1879 1966) A visiting nurse in NewYork City's Lower East Side, Margaret Sanger cared for many of the poor women
    http://boxer.senate.gov/whm/hew.html
    About Barbara Boxer Issues Newsroom Photo Gallery ... EVENT LOCATOR HONORING EXTRAORDINARY WOMEN HISTORIC TIMELINE QUIZ LINKS
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    Susan B. Anthony, activist
    Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell, physician
    Dolores Huerta, labor organizer
    Margaret Sanger, family planning advocate
    Elizabeth Cady Stanton, activist
    Lucy Stone, activist Sojourner Truth, abolitionist Dr. Chien-Shung Wu, nuclear physicist Jane Addams, While travelling through Europe, Ms. Addams visited a settlement house, which provided services to the poverty-stricken residents of London's East End. In 1889, she opened a similar facility in Chicago's poor immigrant ward. Known as Hull House, it grew to include a day nursery, trade school, library, and employment office. Along with other labor and reform organizations, she advocated justice for immigrants and blacks, tenement-house regulation, workers' compensation, and women's suffrage. In 1909, she became the first woman elected president of the National Conference of Charities and Corrections.

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