User:Lee Ann Banaszak/sandbox

Caruthers Berger was a U.S. lawyer and feminist who was active in the National Woman's Party, the National Organization for Women, and Human Rights for Women, Inc.

She graduated law school in 1939, she had difficulty finding a job as an attorney. She entered the U.S. civil service and only managed to get a law-related job in her second position, which was working for the Library of Congress in the area of copyrights. In 1959, she joined the National Woman's Party and worked with Alice Paul on several issues including the Equal Rights Amendment.

In 1966, as an attorney in the Department of Labor, she worked together with Mary Eastwood and Sonia Pressman Fuentes on several early sex discrimination cases. Among other cases, she informally helped to draft briefs for Mengelkoch v. Industrial Welfare Commission with Marguerite Rawalt, Mary Eastwood, and Phineas Indritz.

An oral history of her life and feminist activism is archived in the Schlesinger Library at Harvard Universityunder the American women's rights movement interviews project conducted by Leila J. Rupp and Verta Taylor.

Tina Lower Hobson Married twice, Tina Lower Hobson was the first Head of the Federal Women's Program and an early activist in Federally Employed Women (FEW). Tina was originally from Anaheim, California, a graduate of Stanford University,[4] and an employee at the National Institute for Public Affairs.

Personal Life
Tina Lower Hobson was Tina Lower Hobson's second husband was Julian Hobson who she

Later Activism
As a senior citizen, she remains active. She participated in Grannies for Gun Control and helped to organize an Independence day protest against the Trump administration