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in her later years and was public about its effects. Suffering from its effects, she left her work in the U.S. and returned home to
Australia, moving into her Toorak home in 1989. She lived there for six years before being admitted to a nursing home in the Melbourne suburb of Kew. She died in 2005.
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in 1977. Her position was difficult there because of her involvement in
Israeli-Arab politics, protests against her from various ethnic groups and her statements about Catholic doctrine had caused issue with the church doctrine. This had caused some alarm by advertisers. A change in management saw
62:, working on the paper's social and fashion columns. She eventually was promoted to the position of editor of the Women's Section. Wright used the position to critique some of the hypocrisies and corruption of some the social set, especially the vice-regal pretensions of the
45:, June 17, 1934. Of poor, multicultural stock (her grandmother was Chinese), she attended school in Bendigo and worked her way up as a journalist, her first foothold being a job with the local Bendigo paper. She met her husband, Michael in Bendigo.
182:. Her work was published widely in popular U.S. newspapers, including the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, and Washington Post, as well as in the leading foreign policy journals of the U.S., including
103:. During this time, Wright became a high profile feminist, with support from the majority of the feminist community, and became a lifelong friend of Germaine Greer. She also became a public critic of the
33:(17 June 1934 – 29 January 2005) was an Australian journalist, noted for highlighting the cause of feminism, and being one of the first journalists to interview middle East leaders in the 1970s.
70:, and despite her published critiques, she became good friends with many of them, even where there were political differences. She was moved out of the position by
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Copeland, Julie (23 February 2005). "Radical
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social scene. It gave her the opportunity to get to know the members at the
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307:"Dementia: Into the Daylight".
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213:Woodrow Wilson Fellowship
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200:dementia
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