Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Edwards v. Canada (Attorney General)" ¶ 2
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Emily and Murphy
* March 14 – Emily Murphy, Canadian woman's rights activist ( d. 1933 )
Members include Naive John, Mark D, Elsa Dax, Paul Harvey, Jane Kelly, Emily Mann, Udaiyan, Peter McArdle, Peter Murphy, Rachel Jordan, Guy Denning and Abby Jackson.
His best friend, Yale ( Michael Murphy ), married to Emily ( Anne Byrne ), is having an affair with Mary Wilkie ( Diane Keaton ); her ex-husband and former teacher, Jeremiah ( Wallace Shawn ), also appears.
During his first year in office, he established the Governor General's Award in Commemoration of the Persons Case, recognizing the efforts of Emily Murphy and others to ensure that Canadian women would be constitutionally recognized as persons.
Emily O ' Reilly is an author and former journalist and broadcaster who became Ireland's first female Ombudsman in 2003, succeeding Kevin Murphy.
Emily Murphy of Edmonton, Canada, preceded her by some three and a half years.
Canada holds the distinction of having made the first appointment in the then British Empire of a woman as a magistrate, namely Emily Murphy, who was sworn in as a police magistrate in the Women's Court of the City of Edmonton ( Alberta ) on 19 June 1916.
In 1919, the magazine moved from monthly to fortnightly publication and ran a notable exposé of the drug trade by Emily Murphy.
He was the son of Thomas George Cecil Edwards and Emily Edwards ( born Murphy ).
* March 14 — Emily Murphy, women's rights activist, jurist and author, first woman magistrate in Canada and in the British Empire ( died 1933 )
* Emily Murphy ( the British Empire's first female judge );
( Front row, L – R ): Muir Edwards, daughter-in-law of Henrietta Edwards | Henrietta Muir Edwards ; J. C. Kenwood, daughter of Judge Emily Murphy ; William Lyon Mackenzie King | Mackenzie King ; Nellie McClung.
In 1927, McClung and four other women: Henrietta Muir Edwards, Emily Murphy, Louise McKinney and Irene Parlby, who together came to be known as " The Famous Five " ( also called " The Valiant Five "), launched the " Persons Case ," contending that women could be " qualified persons " eligible to sit in the Senate.
She was one of The Famous Five ( also called The Valiant Five ), with Irene Parlby, Henrietta Muir Edwards, Emily Murphy and Louise McKinney.
Emily Murphy ( born Emily Gowan Ferguson ; 14 March 186817 October 1933 ) was a Canadian women's rights activist, jurist, and author.
Emily Murphy was born the third of six children in Cookstown, Ontario to wealthy landowner and businessman Isaac Ferguson and his wife – also named Emily.
Statue of Emily Murphy in the monument to The Famous Five ( Canada ) | The Famous Five, Parliament Hill, Ottawa
Emily Murphy, one of the " Famous Five " who fought the " Persons Case " in the 1920s, once lived in Forest where her husband was an Anglican minister.
# redirect Emily Murphy
In June 2003, Emily O ' Reilly succeeded Murphy in both posts.
* Salem State University, -- Spring 2011, directed by Britt Mitchell, assistant directed by Emily Laverdiere and Kevin Murphy Walunas
McKinney became one of " The Famous Five " ( also called " The Valiant Five "), along with Irene Parlby, Henrietta Muir Edwards, Emily Murphy and Nellie McClung
Married since 1994 to Roy W. Murphy ( NHS class of 1977 ) she has three children, Emily, Megan, and Patrick.

Emily and was
Mainly because the re-publication of The Tenant of Wildfell Hall was prevented by Charlotte Brontë after Anne's death, she is less known than her sisters Charlotte, author of four novels including Jane Eyre, and Emily, author of Wuthering Heights.
Around 1831, when Anne was eleven, she and Emily broke away from Charlotte and Branwell to create and develop their own fantasy world, Gondal.
Anne was particularly close to Emily especially after Charlotte's departure for Roe Head School, in January 1831.
Within a few months, Emily unable to adapt to life at school, was physically ill from homesickness.
In August 1824, Charlotte was sent with three of her sisters, Emily, Maria, and Elizabeth, to the Clergy Daughters ' School at Cowan Bridge in Lancashire.
It was addressed by Labour MPs Jon Trickett, Emily Thornberry, John McDonnell ( politician ) | John McDonnell, Michael Meacher, Diane Abbott and Jeremy Corbyn, and Elfyn Llwyd of Plaid Cymru and Angus MacNeil of the Scottish National Party.
She rightly believed that Tony had murdered Liam, however, no one believed her except Tony's enemy Jed Stone, who was lodging with Emily Bishop.
It is said that during a visit to Alde House around 1860, one evening while sitting by the fireside, Elizabeth and Emily Davies selected careers for advancing the frontiers of women's rights ; Elizabeth was to open the medical profession to women, Emily the doors to a university education for women, while 13-year-old Millicent was allocated politics and votes for women.
Emily was the third eldest of the four surviving Brontë siblings, between the youngest Anne and her brother Branwell.
Emily Brontë was born on 30 July 1818 in Thornton, near Bradford in Yorkshire, to Maria Branwell and Patrick Brontë.
After the death of their mother in 1821, when Emily was three years old, the older sisters Maria, Elizabeth and Charlotte were sent to the Clergy Daughters ' School at Cowan Bridge, where they encountered abuse and privations later described by Charlotte in Jane Eyre.
Emily was subsequently removed from the school along with Charlotte and Elizabeth.
When Emily was 13, she and Anne withdrew from participation in the Angria story and began a new one about Gondal, a large island in the North Pacific.
1841, when Emily was twenty-three: another from 1845, when she was twenty-seven.
At seventeen, Emily attended the Roe Head girls ' school, where Charlotte was a teacher, but managed to stay only three months before being overcome by extreme homesickness.
Emily became a teacher at Law Hill School in Halifax beginning in September 1838, when she was twenty.
The Brontë sisters had adopted pseudonyms for publication: Charlotte was Currer Bell, Emily was Ellis Bell and Anne was Acton Bell.
" Biographical Notice of Ellis and Acton Bell " that their " ambiguous choice " was " dictated by a sort of conscientious scruple at assuming Christian names positively masculine, while we did not like to declare ourselves women, because ... we had a vague impression that authoresses are liable to be looked on with prejudice " Charlotte contributed 20 poems, and Emily and Anne each contributed 21.
Although a letter from her publisher indicates that Emily was finalizing a second novel, the manuscript has never been found.

0.406 seconds.