Linda Grover

Linda Grover (January 28, 1934 – February 20, 2010)[1] was an American peace activist, and the founder of the Global Family Day, previously known as OneDay.

She invited city officials and the news media to hear the reasons why twenty families wanted to buy the building and turn the apartments into co-ops.

She became the head writer for The Doctors, Search for Tomorrow and General Hospital, and co-wrote Looking Terrific in 1978, and August Celebration in 1993, on blue-green algae as a nutrient.

Grover wrote a utopian novel, Tree Island in 1995, on the topic and organized a 1998 meeting in Oregon's Cascade Mountains of 50 millennium groups.

In 2008, she traveled to China to represent the Global Family Day congressional caucus as she tried to get the world's most populous nation fired up about the holiday.