My personal maglog shock: I read in Toronto Life that Susur's wife doesn't like or eat fish!! That's crazytalk when you are married to a master chef.
Also read the story of the lady catching MRSA at Sunnybrook and now have the urge to wash my hands 30 times a day at work.
7:12 PM
By the end of the eighteenth century, breast-feeding had come to seem an act of citizenship. Mary Wollstonecraft, in her “Vindication of the Rights of Woman” (1792), scoffed that a mother who “neither suckles nor educates her children, scarcely deserves the name of a wife, and has no right to that of a citizen.” The following year, the French National Convention ruled that women who employed wet nurses could not apply for state aid; not long afterward, Prussia made breast-feeding a legal requirement.
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Close this window Jump to comment formMy personal maglog shock: I read in Toronto Life that Susur's wife doesn't like or eat fish!! That's crazytalk when you are married to a master chef.
Also read the story of the lady catching MRSA at Sunnybrook and now have the urge to wash my hands 30 times a day at work.
7:12 PM