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Subject Item
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Judith Magyar Isaacson
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Judith Magyar Isaacson (July 3, 1925 – November 10, 2015) was a Hungarian-American educator, university administrator, speaker, and author. Born in Hungary into a Jewish family, Isaacson was deported to the Auschwitz concentration camp with her mother and aunt in July 1944, where she spent eight months in forced labor in an underground munitions plant in Hessisch Lichtenau. After liberation, she married a United States intelligence officer and moved to his hometown of Lewiston, Maine. She earned bachelor's and master's degrees in mathematics in Maine colleges in the mid-1960s and taught at Lewiston High School and Bates College, serving as dean of women and dean of students at the latter institution. Her 1990 memoir, Seed of Sarah: Memoirs of a Survivor, inspired a 1995 electronic chamber
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Judith Magyar Isaacson
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Judith Magyar Isaacson
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Kaposvár, Hungary
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1925-07-03
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1925-07-03
dbp:birthName
Judit Magyar
dbp:caption
2006
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3
dbp:deathDate
2015-11-10
dbp:education
B.A. mathematics, Bates College M.A mathematics, Bowdoin College
dbp:knownFor
Survivor of Auschwitz concentration camp
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Seed of Sarah: Memoirs of a Survivor
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Dean of Women and Dean of Students
dbp:parents
Jeno and Rózsi Magyar
dbp:spouse
Irving Isaacson
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1969
dbo:abstract
Judith Magyar Isaacson (July 3, 1925 – November 10, 2015) was a Hungarian-American educator, university administrator, speaker, and author. Born in Hungary into a Jewish family, Isaacson was deported to the Auschwitz concentration camp with her mother and aunt in July 1944, where she spent eight months in forced labor in an underground munitions plant in Hessisch Lichtenau. After liberation, she married a United States intelligence officer and moved to his hometown of Lewiston, Maine. She earned bachelor's and master's degrees in mathematics in Maine colleges in the mid-1960s and taught at Lewiston High School and Bates College, serving as dean of women and dean of students at the latter institution. Her 1990 memoir, Seed of Sarah: Memoirs of a Survivor, inspired a 1995 electronic chamber opera and a 1998 experimental film. The recipient of numerous awards and three honorary degrees, Isaacson was inducted into the Maine Women's Hall of Fame in 2004.
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