Katie Bouman

Is it possible to create an image of something that by definition is impossible to see?  That was the question computer scientist Katie Bouman set out to answer five years ago as a lead member of the Event Horizon Telescope, an international collaboration between astronomers, engineers, physicists and mathematicians tasked …

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Mary Anderson

Leave it to a woman to help people see clearly. Inspiration struck Alabama native Mary Anderson on a visit to New York City in 1902. Traveling through the wet, snowy city by streetcar, she noticed how often the driver stopped, got out, and cleared the windshield so he could see …

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Lynda Barry

Lynda Barry is a cartoonist, author, graphic novelist, educator and recent MacArthur Foundation Fellow (known as the “genius” grants). And to my 11 and 13-year-old boys she was an inspiration. More about that later. Growing up in a racially mixed, working-class Seattle neighborhood, Barry began drawing comics at an early …

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Margaret Hicks

It’s not just the people who give the Chicago Pedway its neighborhood feel. Like any stretch of the city, the Pedway has its own rhythms — when it’s busiest; the good places to eat; where to get a shoe repaired; even the best place for a quick hair cut and …

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Ruby Bridges

The first day of school can be scary. New people, new rules, a new environment. Now, add a violent mob, federal marshals, and death threats. This is what six-year-old Ruby Bridges faced on her first day of her new, all-white elementary school. Ruby Bridges was born in 1954, the same …

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Ruth Wakefield

Ruth Wakefield was a dietician who invented the chocolate chip cookie, which makes them healthy and just fine to eat in bunches, right?  Born in 1903, Ruth graduated from Framington State Normal School Department of Household Arts in 1924. She taught home economics, gave lectures on food and cooking, and …

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Beatrix Potter

It’s a lyrical image: two young children wandering the English countryside with sketchbooks, plopping down suddenly in the tall grass to open their water color cases and start to paint. This was childhood for Helen Beatrix Potter, whose love of art and animals led to the most successful children’s literature …

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Sisters

Happy National Sisters Day! Anyone growing up with a sister knows – it’s complicated. Today, if I said to my sister “I need someone to . . .” she’d already be ringing my doorbell. Our teen years? Between the fighting and hair pulling and the rest of the family sick of …

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Maria Mitchell

A star in many fields, Maria (pronounced Mar-eye-ah) Mitchell, the first female astronomer in the United States, was also an educator, librarian, naturalist, suffragette and anti-slavery activist. Born in Nantucket, Massachusetts in 1818, Maria’s Quaker parents believed all their children should be educated – not a common idea back then. …

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Marie Antionette

The true story of Marie Antionette begins on Nov. 2, 1755 with her birth in Vienna. The eleventh child of the Empress Maria Theresa, ruler of the Habsburg Empire, and the Holy Roman Emperor Francis I, Maria Antonia (her Austrian name) is destined to live a life dictated by others.  …

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