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Felice Schwartz : ウィキペディア英語版 | Felice Schwartz
Felice N. Schwartz (January 16, 1925 – February 8, 1996) was an American writer, advocate, and feminist. During her career, Schwartz founded two national advancement and advocacy organizations. In 1945, she established the National Scholarship Service and Fund for Negro Students (NSSFNS), an association committed to placing African Americans in institutions of higher education. In 1962, she founded Catalyst, a national organization dedicated to advancing women in the workplace, where she served as president for three decades. Schwartz is also well known for her controversial article, "Management Women and the New Facts of Life," published in ''Harvard Business Review'' in 1989. The article pitted her against other feminists, such as Betty Friedan, for pointing out the differences between men and woman and their functions in the workplace.〔Angie Kim, March 31, 2010. (“The Mommy Track Turns 21” ). Slate. Accessed October 19, 2010.〕 ==Background==
Schwartz was born Felice Nierenberg on January 16, 1925, in New York, to businessman Albert Nierenberg and his wife Rose Irene née Levin. After attending boarding school in Cooperstown, New York, she enrolled in Smith College, where she graduated in 1945. In 1946, she married Irving Schwartz,〔January 13, 1946, (“Felice Nierenberg Bride of Captain; Smith Alumna Is Married to Irving Leon Schwartz of Army Medical Corps” ). The New York Times.〕 a physician, with whom she raised three children. After her father's death in 1951, she took over the ailing family manufacturing business with her brother, which they successfully saved and sold four years later.
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