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Page "Martha Plimpton" ¶ 20
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She and co-founded
She co-founded the Rosa L. Parks Scholarship Foundation for college-bound high school seniors, to which she donated most of her speaker fees.
She also co-founded the women's rights journal, The Revolution.
She co-founded the Red Army Faction ( Rote Armee Fraktion ) in 1970 after having previously worked as a journalist for the monthly left-wing magazine Konkret.
She concentrated much of her energy on the struggle to improve women's opportunities for higher education and in 1871 co-founded Newnham College, Cambridge.
She also co-founded the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design.
She and Leo Jogiches co-founded the Social Democratic Party of the Kingdom of Poland ( SDKP ) ( later Social Democracy of the Kingdom of Poland and Lithuania
She then moved to Wisconsin and co-founded The Temple of Diana with Falcon River.
She co-founded the Skowhegan chapter of the Business and Professional Women's Club in 1922, and served as editor of the club's magazine, The Pine Cone.
She also co-founded the All Tribes Foundation, to culturally and economically benefit Native Americans, and the Give Love Give Life organization, to raise public awareness of women's cancers.
She also, in 1985, co-founded Tessera, which is a feminist journal.
She also co-founded and chaired the Canadian Environment Educational Foundation, and established the Winter Garden Show at the Royal Agricultural Winter Fair.
She co-founded the wartime Polish organization Żegota, set up to assist Poland's Jews in escaping the Holocaust.
She co-founded Provisional Committee to Aid Jews ( Tymczasowy Komitet Pomocy Żydom ), which later turned into Council to Aid Jews ( Rada Pomocy Żydom ), codename Zegota, an underground organization whose sole purpose was to save Jews in Poland from Nazi extermination.
She is a member of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, and is Co-Chair of the Congressional Labor and Working Families Caucus ( she co-founded this caucus ).
She also worked with ex-offenders, co-wrote a book on housing for single homeless people in north London, and co-founded a refuge for battered women in West Sussex.
She co-founded " Pedro, Muriel & Esther ( PME )" with Glen Meadmore.
She co-founded and managed Dominion Biologicals Ltd. until 1990.
She co-founded the Nancy Wilson Foundation, which exposes inner-city children to the country.
She was educated at Newnham College, Cambridge which had been co-founded by her mother.
She is best known as a member of the pop-rock band The Corrs, which she co-founded in 1990 with her elder brother Jim and younger sisters Caroline and Andrea.
She was the first investor in a fund managed by Access International Advisors, which was co-founded by René-Thierry Magon de la Villehuchet.
She co-founded Kinja along with Nick Denton of Gawker Media.
She co-founded Wilson Phillips with Carnie and childhood friend Chynna Phillips when they were in their teens.
She co-founded the fashion house Zambesi with her husband, Neville Findlay, in 1979.

She and production
She attended the Professional Children's School, in New York City, and made her professional theatre debut in a 1966 production of The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, starring Tammy Grimes.
She also appeared in the NBC television live action production of The Year Without a Santa Claus in December 2006.
She then reprised the role in the Broadway production from January 10 through November 12, 2006.
She again played the role for the Los Angeles production which began performances on February 7, 2007.
She left the production on December 30, 2007, and later returned from August 26, 2008 until the production closed on January 11, 2009.
She then transferred with the L. A. company, to play the role once again, in the San Francisco production which began performances January 27, 2009.
She is a reluctant and sometimes traitorous party to the office's determination to keep Mike away from production meetings.
She has also “ been responsible for the production of some twenty-two books … and at least five hundred articles .” “ Rosemary Ruether has written on the question of Christian credibility, with particular attention to ecclesiology and its engagement with church-world conflicts ; Jewish-Christian relations …; politics and religion in America ; and Feminism.
She also played the lead role in the first production in English of Federico Garcia Lorca's The House of Bernarda Alba, at the ANTA Playhouse in New York in 1951, and a BBC production of Lorca's Blood wedding ( Bodas de sangre ), broadcast on June 2, 1959.
She negotiated with Louis B. Mayer and on 8 December, Walt Disney brought her on a three-hour tour showing her the on-going production of Fantasia.
She subsequently acted in many melodramas with the Valentine Company in Toronto, capped by the starring role of Little Eva in their production of Uncle Tom's Cabin, the most popular play of the 19th century.
She played Lady Macbeth on Broadway opposite Maurice Evans in a production directed by Margaret Webster that ran for 131 performances in 1941, the longest run of the play in Broadway history.
She remained directly involved with Maule Air's factory production until her death.
She was portrayed by Helen Hayes in the London production of the play Anastasia and in the 1956 film based on the play.
She appeared in previews of the Neil Simon play Rose's Dilemma at the off-Broadway Manhattan Theatre Club in December 2003 but quit the production after receiving a critical letter from Simon instructing her to " learn your lines or get out of my play ".
She also performed in the production of Warrior, a musical about the American-Indian athlete Jim Thorpe, where CurtainUp. com described her as " outstanding.
She worked only two weeks on the film, early and late during the production that went from January to April 1997 while Sam Elliott was only on set for two days and did many takes of his final speech.
She and Olivier mounted a stage production of Romeo and Juliet for Broadway.
She became a professional actress in 1982 after graduating from drama school and moved to New York City in 1984 where she appeared in the Broadway production of The Real Thing.
She moved to New York City in 1984 and appeared in the Broadway production of The Real Thing alongside Jeremy Irons and Glenn Close.
" She opened in the West End production on November 1, 1951.
She currently owns a production company with Connie Tavel, Hunt / Tavel Productions under Sony Pictures Entertainment.
She made her stage debut in 1961, playing Juliet in a Virginia Shakespeare Festival production of Romeo and Juliet.

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