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Ellen Peck
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Ellen Remsburg Peck (August 24, 1942 – March 15, 1995) was an American , writer, and activist.


Early life
Born Ellen Remsburg to C. M. and Genevieve Remsburg of Normal, Illinois, Peck attended University High School and graduated in 1960. A high achiever, she took leading roles in her school's political, acting and debate arenas.


Career
After finishing college, Peck became an eighth-grade English teacher at Pimlico Junior High School in Baltimore, Maryland, where she was briefly known for wearing skirts so short they would not have been allowed on students. Facebook, Pimlico Junior High School (1950s – 1970s). Retrieved 2010-06-3 In 1969, however, she became rather more widely famous for writing a teenage girl's guide to romance, health, fashion, and beauty called, humorously, How to Get a Teen-Age Boy, and What to Do With Him When You Get Him, Facebook, Pimlico Junior High School (1950s – 1970s). Retrieved 2010-06-3 a sort of Sex and the Single Girl for teens. At the time the book was taken seriously, but later Ms. Peck claimed it was written merely as "humor" and it is usually missing from subsequent lists of her books. The book was quite popular, selling more than 50,000 copies in hard-cover, Awful Library Books , Advice for Mrs. Robinson. Retrieved 2010-06-3 and during the 1970s she wrote an advice column for teen-agers, called "The Column," which appeared in The Baltimore Sun and was nationally syndicated. Quasi-Interesting Paraphernalia, Inc., What's Your Guy-Q by Ellen Peck. Retrieved 2010-07-3 She subsequently wrote another book providing contraceptive information and called Sex and Birth Control: a Guide for the Young (1973; rev. ed. 1981), with E. James Lieberman, M.D.

In 1971, she wrote The Baby Trap with , which became one of the first and most prominent books about the emerging movement. In 1972, Peck and Shirley Radl founded the National Organization for Non-Parents (N.O.N.), an advocacy organization for men and women who choose not to have children. She later wrote several more books on parenthood and was, for a time, a rather prominent childfree advocate, even appearing on The Tonight Show where she exchanged views with . Facebook, Pimlico Junior High School (1950s – 1970s). Retrieved 2010-06-3


Activism
In 1977, Peck became an associate of the Women's Institute for Freedom of the Press (WIFP). WIFP is an American nonprofit publishing organization. The organization works to increase communication between women and connect the public with forms of women-based media.


Personal life
Ms. Peck was married in 1965 to William Peck, head of an advertising agency in Baltimore."A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to Equality" ()(1978) She never had children and eventually divorced. She died of cancer on March 15, 1995, in New York.[6], Baltimore Sun archives: March 26, 1995. Retrieved 2010-06-3


Books
  • How to Get a Teen-Age Boy, and What to Do With Him When You Get Him, ()(1969).
  • The Baby Trap, ()(1971), with
  • Sex and Birth Control: a Guide for the Young (1973; rev. ed. 1981; Spanish tr.), with E. James Lieberman, M.D.
  • Pronatalism: The Myth of Mom and Apple Pie ()(1974), an anthology of writings on pronatalism and its effects on society, co-edited by Judith Senderowitz
  • A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to Equality ()(1975), with William Granzig
  • The Joy of the Only Child ()(1977)
  • The Parent Test: How to Measure and Develop Your Talent for Parenthood ()(1978), with William Granzig.


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