Margaret jarman hagood biography of george michael

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  • Margaret jarman hagood biography of george michael

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    Margaret Jarman Hagood

    Statistician, sociologist, demographer

    Margaret Jarman Hagood (October 26, 1907 – August 13, 1963) was an American sociologist and demographer who "helped steer sociology away from the armchair and toward the calculator".[1] She wrote the books Mothers of the South (1939) and Statistics for Sociologists (1941), and later became president of the Population Association of America and of the Rural Sociological Society.

    Early life and education

    Margaret Loyd Jarman was born on October 26, 1907, in Newton County, Georgia, where she grew up.[1][2][3] She was one of six children of Lewis Jarman,[2] a mathematician who became vice president of Queens College in Charlotte, North Carolina[4] and later president of Mary Baldwin College in Virginia.[5] After acting as a teenage country preacher,[1][6] briefly studying at the Chicora College for Women in Columbia, South