翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Mary Jordan (filmmaker)
・ Mary Jordan (journalist)
・ Mary Joseph Butler
・ Mary Joseph Rogers
・ Mary Josepha Nowland
・ Mary Josephine Booth
・ Mary Josephine Ray
・ Mary Joy
・ Mary Julia Baldwin
・ Mary Juliana Hardman
・ Mary K. Bryan
・ Mary K. Estes
・ Mary K. Firestone
・ Mary K. Gaillard
・ Mary K. Pershall
Mary K. Shell
・ Mary K. Trigg
・ Mary K. Vernon
・ Mary K. Wells
・ Mary Kalantzis
・ Mary Kaldor
・ Mary Kalin Arroyo
・ Mary Kamala Gunaseelan
・ Mary Kane
・ Mary Kardash
・ Mary Karlino Madut
・ Mary Karooro Okurut
・ Mary Karr
・ Mary Kate McGeehan
・ Mary Kate McGowan


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Mary K. Shell : ウィキペディア英語版
Mary K. Shell

Mary Katherine Jaynes Shell, previously Mary Hosking, usually known as Mary K. Shell (born February 9, 1927), is the first woman to have served as mayor of Bakersfield, California (1981–1985) and only the second woman to have served on the Kern County Board of Supervisors (1985–1997). At the time of her retirement from public office, Shell was termed by the ''Bakersfield Californian'' as "the most popular politician in Kern County history." She is the widow of Joseph C. Shell, Sr. (1918–2008), a former Republican minority leader of the California State Assembly from Los Angeles, Richard M. Nixon's intraparty opponent for governor in 1962, and a lawmaker who fought to bring water to southern California in the 1960s.〔(San Marino Tribune - serving San Marino, CA )〕
==Early years, family, journalism==

Shell was the younger of two daughters born in Bakersfield to Walter Jaynes (1897–1972) and the former Mary Ellen Young (1897–1990).〔(Social Security Death Index Interactive Search )〕 Shell's paternal grandfather, Harris E. Jaynes, arrived in Bakersfield about 1900 to work as a welder for the Southern Pacific Railroad. He opened a welding shop which evolved into H. E. Jaynes and Son, an automobile repair business on Chester Street. Mary K., also called "Miki" by her family and friends, worked in the shop, doing chores traditionally associated with males. She recalls servicing a Buick when news of the D-Day landings in Normandy of June 6, 1944 were announced by radio. She demonstrated a youthful interest in current events, journalism, and politics. She was the editor of the student newspapers at Washington Junior High School and East Bakersfield High School. She was also a song leader and secretary to the student council. Shell said that so many extracurricular activities kept her from being an "A" student.〔http://kernpressclub.org/downloads/shellprofile.pdf〕

Shell attended Bakersfield College, a public community college, but dropped out a semester shy of receiving her associate's degree. She is a donor to the college and a member of its foundation board.〔(Bakersfield College Foundation - Board )〕 Instead she worked part-time at the ''Bakersfield Californian'' newspaper, where at the age of seventeen she had been the "cub" reporter on the farm beat. She soon learned that city officials were making most decisions over lunch at the Hotel El Tejon (now the site of the Bank of America building in Bakersfield) and then routinely approving what had been decided at council meetings. This was long before the era of "open meetings" laws, known in California as the Ralph M. Brown Act. Shell had taken flying lessons while she worked as a flight dispatcher at La Cresta Airfield near the Panorama Bluffs of Bakersfield.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Mary K. Shell」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.