Rae hendrie biography of barack
Georgia White (she/her) was born in Sheffield, England. Her passion for acting began at a very young age creating and putting on shows with her sister for their family in their living room. At the age of six she began her training at Stagecoach Performing Arts School, appearing in multiple professional productions of the Lyceum Theater's Joseph and The Amazing Technicolour Dreamcoat. This passion for acting resulted in Georgia pursuing a degree in American Theatre Arts at Rose Bruford College in London. During her time there she attended a semester abroad at Clemson University in South Carolina. For her dedication to her craft she was listed on Clemson's President List in and featured in a Dairy Queen Commercial. During her three years at Rose Bruford in London she trained in many different areas including acting with Steve Dykes, voice with Gemma Maddock, accent with Nancy Wigglesworth, acting through song with Christopher Dickens, Shakespeare with voice coach Michael Corbidge for the Royal Shakespeare Company, and movement and acting on camera with Laura De Carteret. During her time in London, Georgia also attended multiple workshops with casting directors including Rowland Beckley, Rae Hendrie, Ella Holmes, Leo Wolfe, Finnian Tweed, Marin Hope, Ben Cogan, Lucy Amos and Manuel Puro. Now relocated to Vancouver, Canada, Georgia strives to further her acting career with the goal to tell important stories to wide audiences, and dive into gritty and interesting characters. With an adventurous spirit, she looks forward to enjoying all of the beautiful activities Canada has to offer, and enjoys spending time with her family and friends and exploring new places.
Biographical Sketch of Kathleen Washburn McGraw Hendrie
By Jayne Crowther
University of Delaware
Kathleen Washburn McGraw was born February 12, in Michigan to William A. and Harriet Robinson McGraw. Her father was a successful businessman and in September, , she married George Trowbridge Hendrie whose family business included Detroit railroad and banking interests. After high school she attended classes at the University of Michigan in the College of Literature, Science and the Arts in[1]
Hendrie's mother was a prominent member of the very political Twentieth Century Club, Woman's City Club and the League of Women Voters in Detroit. Since her mother was prominent in the voting rights movement it is not surprising that Hendrie adopted that cause as her own. Both mother and daughter were charter members of the Michigan Branch of the Congressional Union in and were present at its founding in October Hendrie continued her work with the National Woman's Party and served on its National Advisory Council. Along with Michigan women Betsey (Mrs. Paul) Reyneau and Ella (Mrs. Frederick) Aldinger, Hendrie held a banner outside the White House in April, with Woodrow Wilson's war message claiming democracy meant the governed have a right to a voice in their governance. All three women were photographed then and again on May 6, by Detroit newspapers.[2]
After the passage of the Nineteenth Amendment, Hendrie continued her participation in a variety of women's organizations. She served for two years as the President of the Twentieth Century Club from to She was also the Chairperson of the Michigan Branch of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom which she continued to support through She maintained her interest in equal rights for women as the Chairperson of the Michigan Committee of the National Woman's Party focusing on equality fo Nancy Cartwright FBA FAcSS is Professor of Philosophy at Durham University and a Distinguished Professor at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD). At Durham she is also co-Director of the Centre for Humanities engaging Science and Society. In the first half of her career at Stanford University she specialised in the philosophy of the natural sciences, especially physics; in the second half, at the London School of Economics and now Durham and UCSD, she has specialised in philosophy and methodology of the social sciences with special attention to economics. Her current research focusses on objectivity and evidence, especially for evidence-based policy, and on improving policy predictions. Her research interests include philosophy and history of science (especially physics and economics). Cartwright has worked extensively in modelling, causal inference, causal powers, and objectivity, evidence, especially for evidence-based policy [EBP] and the philosophy of social technology. Her recent work, for the project ‘Knowledge for Use’ [K4U], investigated how to use scientific research results for better policies. She has worked with others on projects in this area on education, child protection and international development. Professor Cartwright has written a number of books: A Philosopher Looks at Science (), The Tangle of Science: Reliability beyond Method, Rigour, and Objectivity,Nature the Artful Modeler: Lectures on Laws, Science, How Nature Arranges the World, and How We Can Arrange It Better (), Improving Child Safety: deliberation, judgement and empirical research [with E Munro, J Hardie & E Montuschi] (), Evidence: For Policy and Wheresoever Rigor is a Must (), Evidence Based Policy: A Practical Guide to Doing it Better [with J Hardie] (), Causal Powers: What Are They? Why Do We Need Them? What Can be Done with Them and What Cannot (), Measuring Causes: Invariance, Modularity and the Causal Markov Condition (), Hunting Cause .