In 1959, when Kathleen Andrews pledged a sorority at the University of Washington, girls were expected to get married. They got bride dolls and hope chests and the message that they would grow up to be wives and mothers. Their job choices were limited for the most part to teaching, nursing, and office work-things they could "fall back on." They were teased that they went to college to get their MRS degree. Kathleen followed all the rules her sorority and society taught her and expected to meet her future husband. But the rules did not prepare her for the transition from the predictable roles...
In 1959, when Kathleen Andrews pledged a sorority at the University of Washington, girls were expected to get married. They got bride dolls and hope c...
Jodi Madsen agrees to go to the Calgary Stampede with her Canadian friend Becky to take a break from the tension at her advertising job in Seattle-not to meet a cowboy, as Becky had teased. But when two huge Percherons start backing up on either side of her in the heavy horse barn, Jodi is happy to have handsome cowboy Sam McKenzie slap them back into their stalls. Then Jodi and Becky find themselves invited to the heavy horse ball. They accept as a lark, but while dancing with Sam, Jodi is surprised to find this is not how she expected to feel about a cowboy. She prefers professional men...
Jodi Madsen agrees to go to the Calgary Stampede with her Canadian friend Becky to take a break from the tension at her advertising job in Seattle-...