"Dorothy Musuleng-Cooper"@de . . "47835934"^^ . . "Dorothy Harriet Eugenia Cooper"@en . "1930"^^ . . . "Dorothy Harriet Eugenia Musuleng Cooper, n\u00E9e le 9 septembre 1930 \u00E0 (Lib\u00E9ria) et morte le 30 juin 2009 \u00E0 Monrovia (Lib\u00E9ria), est une femme politique lib\u00E9rienne. Membre du , elle est ministre des Affaires \u00E9trang\u00E8res entre 1994 et 1995."@fr . "Dorothy Harriet Eugenia Musuleng Cooper (also known as \"D-Mus,\" September 9, 1930 \u2013 June 30, 2009) was a Liberian educator, politician and the first woman to serve as Foreign Minister in Liberia. She was born at Arthington, Liberia and obtained her B.S. and M.S. from College of West Africa and San Francisco State University respectively. She worked as a school teacher between graduation and high school and matriculation in 1964 in San Francisco in 1964, curriculum development in the Ministry of Education, and principal of Cuttington University College. She was an education minister in Charles Taylor's shadow government from 1990\u201393 in the National Patriotic Reconstruction Assembly Government"@en . . . . "Dorothy Musuleng-Cooper"@en . . . . "Dorothy Harriet Eugenia Musuleng Cooper, kurz Dorothy Musuleng-Cooper (* 9. September 1930 in Arthington, Montserrado County, Liberia; \u2020 30. Juni 2009 in Monrovia, Liberia) war eine liberianische Lehrerin und Politikerin. Musuleng-Cooper war die erste weibliche Au\u00DFenministerin Liberias."@de . . . . . . . "Dorothy Harriet Eugenia Cooper"@en . . . . "Dorothy Musuleng-Cooper"@en . . . . . . . . . "Dorothy Harriet Eugenia Musuleng Cooper, kurz Dorothy Musuleng-Cooper (* 9. September 1930 in Arthington, Montserrado County, Liberia; \u2020 30. Juni 2009 in Monrovia, Liberia) war eine liberianische Lehrerin und Politikerin. Musuleng-Cooper war die erste weibliche Au\u00DFenministerin Liberias."@de . . . . . . "San Francisco State University"@en . . . . . . . . "Dorothy Harriet Eugenia Musuleng Cooper, n\u00E9e le 9 septembre 1930 \u00E0 (Lib\u00E9ria) et morte le 30 juin 2009 \u00E0 Monrovia (Lib\u00E9ria), est une femme politique lib\u00E9rienne. Membre du , elle est ministre des Affaires \u00E9trang\u00E8res entre 1994 et 1995."@fr . . "1930-09-09"^^ . "1118196322"^^ . "first female Minister of Foreign Affairs in Liberia"@en . . "11204"^^ . "Dorothy Musuleng-Cooper"@fr . . . . . "Liberia"@en . . "Dorothy Musuleng-Cooper"@en . . . . . . . . . . "1930-09-09"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "2009"^^ . . . . . . . . . . "2009-06-30"^^ . . . . "Dorothy Harriet Eugenia Musuleng Cooper (also known as \"D-Mus,\" September 9, 1930 \u2013 June 30, 2009) was a Liberian educator, politician and the first woman to serve as Foreign Minister in Liberia. She was born at Arthington, Liberia and obtained her B.S. and M.S. from College of West Africa and San Francisco State University respectively. She worked as a school teacher between graduation and high school and matriculation in 1964 in San Francisco in 1964, curriculum development in the Ministry of Education, and principal of Cuttington University College. She was an education minister in Charles Taylor's shadow government from 1990\u201393 in the National Patriotic Reconstruction Assembly Government During 1994, she was appointed as the Vice-chairperson of the National Patriotic Front of Liberia, the guerilla movement of Charles Taylor. In 1994, she was appointed as Foreign Minister of Liberia during the period of civil war. In 2001, Taylor's government established a Ministry of Gender and Development (MoGD) and appointed Cooper as the first minister to that position and continued till 2005. She died on June 30, 2009 at the John F. Kennedy Memorial Hospital in Monrovia and was survived by four of her eight biological children."@en . . . "2009-06-30"^^ . . . .