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Subject: "The Women's History Month post -2005-" This topic is locked.
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Trace
Member since Sep 16th 2002
37108 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 04:19 AM

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"The Women's History Month post -2005-"
Fri Apr-01-05 01:02 AM by BigReg

  

          

i wont be able to contribute here everyday, mainly cause i wont be here next week, so im hoping this will become a collaborative effort by men and women alike with low level ignorance.

i propose that here we put lots & lotsa great stuff abt women's history--facts, quotes, bios, personal stories, profiles, works of art, word searches, seek-n-finds, $1 donations for me (cause ain't i a woman?), etc. ill start us off-

gotta know what this is all abt if we finna know what we doin, right? .

here are a couple of pretty good comprehensive links on women's history month:
http://www.infoplease.com/spot/womenshistory1.html <- this has like everything u cld imagine--statistics, quizzes, articles. good site.
http://www.historychannel.com/exhibits/womenhist/ <- history channel!!

a complete alphabetical list of all the women who've been honored by National Women's History Week & Month:
http://www.nwhp.org/whm/all-honorees.html

ill followup later with some of my favorite quotes & historical figures and factoids and stuff & i encourage everyone else to do the same.

happy wimmins histrie munff!

____________________
natural hair tshirts & tote bags!
http://brokeymcpoverty.bigcartel.com


http://brokeymcpoverty.com
http://splackavelliecentral.wordpress.com
http://aboutmygranny.tumblr.com
http://naturalhairproblems.com

  

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Topic Outline
Subject Author Message Date ID
A song by one of my favorite women
Mar 01st 2005
1
one of my refrigerator magnets says the following:
Mar 01st 2005
2
i had a friend who had a bumper sticker w/ that on it
Mar 01st 2005
17
my mom has a similar one
Mar 01st 2005
46
Today in Women's History - March 1
Mar 01st 2005
3
Sojourner Truth - quote
Mar 01st 2005
4
and I KNOW thats right!
Mar 01st 2005
7
RE: Sojourner Truth - quote
Mar 01st 2005
24
ANCHOR N/M
Mar 01st 2005
5
ANCHOR THIS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Mar 01st 2005
6
As a man, I command you (The Mods) to anchor this.
Mar 01st 2005
8
lmao
Mar 01st 2005
10
      *booming, indignant laugh*
Mar 01st 2005
14
where you going?
Mar 01st 2005
9
vacation
Mar 01st 2005
16
do your write/paint/create stuff?
Mar 01st 2005
11
RE: do your write/paint/create stuff?
Mar 05th 2005
79
I support this
Mar 01st 2005
12
it is my sincere hope
Mar 01st 2005
13
Did you have the same concern during black history month post
Mar 01st 2005
15
yes
Mar 01st 2005
20
      question?
Mar 02nd 2005
48
           investment
Mar 03rd 2005
71
i wasnt going to say anything
Mar 01st 2005
19
huh?
Mar 01st 2005
21
      in other words, the post was doing just fine without injecting an idea
Mar 01st 2005
23
           on second though...nevermind
Mar 01st 2005
26
                that post in no way is an insult to men. its the truth
Mar 01st 2005
27
                if i may interject
Mar 01st 2005
28
                     the thing is
Mar 01st 2005
29
                          nope!
Mar 01st 2005
30
this is that bullshit, man.
Mar 04th 2005
76
The Glass Slipper Project
Mar 01st 2005
18
Thanks.
Mar 01st 2005
22
I love Shirley Chisolm
Mar 01st 2005
25
History
Mar 01st 2005
31
Previous Honorees (long read)
Mar 01st 2005
32
audre lorde (quotes)
Mar 01st 2005
33
i love her soooooooooo much i am naming my first
Mar 02nd 2005
54
Resources and Tools
Mar 01st 2005
34
Edmonia Lewis
Mar 01st 2005
35
Did you know?
Mar 01st 2005
36
i wldnt have guessed this
Mar 03rd 2005
70
Timeline
Mar 01st 2005
37
adrienne rich (quote)
Mar 01st 2005
38
i loooove love love adrianne rich
Mar 01st 2005
42
Women Leaders/Rulers (world history perspective)
Mar 01st 2005
39
how long till we get some infighting in here?
Mar 01st 2005
40
I fully support this post
Mar 01st 2005
41
Eve of Eden was the first woman to get her period
Mar 01st 2005
43
thats some crazy sexist religion do u really believe that?
Mar 01st 2005
45
      Ason the Okayplayer attempts to not get the joke AND
Mar 02nd 2005
52
           when women live or work together their periods synch
Mar 02nd 2005
63
Shouldn't it be Women's herstory month?
Mar 01st 2005
44
'
Mar 02nd 2005
47
Today in Women's History - March 2nd
Mar 02nd 2005
49
pssssssssssst
Mar 02nd 2005
57
my hometown hero(ine) - Anne Braden
Mar 02nd 2005
50
March 2
Mar 02nd 2005
51
I know thats right
Mar 02nd 2005
56
Great Article about Women's pay (swipe)
Mar 02nd 2005
53
interesting.. seems that for women who work
Mar 02nd 2005
55
get that JUELZ SANTANA! Back like cooked crack 2!
Mar 02nd 2005
58
what? march is women's month? fuck that, cant you broads
Mar 02nd 2005
59
mayhaps you missed the 'low level ignorance' line
Mar 02nd 2005
60
      fine, have your tainted month!
Mar 02nd 2005
61
The Sate of the Women's Movement
Mar 02nd 2005
62
that's a really big question; here's a start
Mar 03rd 2005
65
presently the issues of reproductive health
Mar 03rd 2005
69
Today in Women's History - March 3rd
Mar 03rd 2005
64
the movie on HBO- Iron Jawed Angels a must see
Mar 03rd 2005
67
the 'Hottentot Venus'
Mar 03rd 2005
66
i never even knew the words to that song
Mar 03rd 2005
68
sara baartman is another name they gave her
Mar 03rd 2005
72
good look
Mar 03rd 2005
73
Today in 1932, Miriam Makeba is born....
Mar 04th 2005
74
Sunday March 6th watch on The History Channel
Mar 04th 2005
75
MONDAY is International Womens Day
Mar 04th 2005
77
Mary Ellen Pleasant
Mar 05th 2005
78
i don't know much history...
Mar 05th 2005
80
RE: the Women's History Month post
Mar 05th 2005
81
bell hooks (quotes)
Mar 06th 2005
82
angela y. davis (quotes)
Mar 06th 2005
83
simone de beauvoir (quotes)
Mar 06th 2005
84
womanism
Mar 06th 2005
85
it's not so good to be born a girl/sometimes.
Mar 06th 2005
86
thanks for this
Mar 07th 2005
89
today in women's history
Mar 07th 2005
87
The Mother of Black Nationalism....Queen Mother Moore
Mar 07th 2005
88
RE: The Mother of Black Nationalism....Queen Mother Moore
Mar 25th 2005
121
Umi.
Mar 07th 2005
90
On March 8, 1972
Mar 08th 2005
91
International Women's Day (8 March)
Mar 08th 2005
92
women for women org
Mar 08th 2005
93
March 10th
Mar 10th 2005
94
todays link
Mar 10th 2005
95
Cervical Cancer - Please Be Aware
Mar 10th 2005
96
biddy mason: philanthropist, owner of prime dowtown l.a. real estate
Mar 11th 2005
97
can i mention my moms?
Mar 11th 2005
98
BLING.
Mar 11th 2005
99
BLING.
Mar 11th 2005
100
ELLA BAKER
Mar 11th 2005
101
My professor wrote an awesome book on her:
Mar 13th 2005
103
the traditional mexican woman
Mar 12th 2005
102
March 14th- Ladies let's keep this alive
Mar 14th 2005
104
March 16th
Mar 16th 2005
105
d'oh! i havent contributed today!
Mar 16th 2005
106
Today in Women's History - 3/17/05
Mar 17th 2005
107
egyptian feminist Nawal el Saadawi
Mar 17th 2005
108
thebreastcancersite.com (click this once a day)
Mar 18th 2005
109
thank u for posting this
Mar 18th 2005
110
Lakita Garth - Sexual Abstinence Advocate
Mar 20th 2005
111
this is great
Mar 21st 2005
113
Today in Women's History - 3/21/05
Mar 21st 2005
112
Pat Summitt Ties NCAA Basketball Wins Record
Mar 21st 2005
114
Today in Women's History - 3/22/05
Mar 22nd 2005
115
shameless plug
Mar 22nd 2005
116
March 24, 2002
Mar 24th 2005
117
this is the best we can do, eh
Mar 24th 2005
118
***for those who know saartjie baartman's story***
Mar 25th 2005
119
mary wallace - first chicago bus driver.
Mar 25th 2005
120
links and resources for victims of domestic violence and sexual assault
Mar 26th 2005
122
mmmmm ...women slaw.
Mar 28th 2005
124
Jane Addams
Mar 26th 2005
123
Roberta Flack
Mar 29th 2005
125
the ERA...
Mar 29th 2005
126
LADY PINK
Mar 30th 2005
127
RE: the Women's History Month post
Mar 31st 2005
128
today is the last day
Mar 31st 2005
129
For Next Year
Mar 31st 2005
130

StacyAdams
Charter member
66516 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 04:21 AM

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1. "A song by one of my favorite women"
In response to Reply # 0


          

yeah yeah yeah....

v1:
daling, here we are again,
right about now,
there's no need too tell you what i'm feeling.
i'm so greatful,
too have a man like you,
who knows what too do,
makes me feel like a woman should..
ooohh yeah...

c:

when i close my eyes,
i break down and cry,
it's something about the way you you loved me...
that part of you kiss,
my heart can't presist,
it's all about the way you loved me..

v2:
never thought that i would find..
so much peace of mind,
in every moment tha t cheir with you..
sometimes i dont know why...
we feel so deep in love...
but then it all comes back too me because...

c:X1

stick: when i'm with you,
i feel so good
no one loves me like you...eeee yeah

when i close my eyes

c:X3

  

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ScandalousWoman
Member since Nov 19th 2002
25416 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 04:25 AM

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2. "one of my refrigerator magnets says the following:"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

"well-behaved women rarely make history."

i'll be back to make more contributions.

*******************
YEEEEEEEE-HAAAAAAAWWWWWW

***********************
wouldn't you love to love me?

  

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Trace
Member since Sep 16th 2002
37108 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 08:49 AM

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17. "i had a friend who had a bumper sticker w/ that on it"
In response to Reply # 2


  

          

that shlda been the title of this post
'the women's history month post' just doesnt have that eye-catchin 'umph'

i be lyin sometimes, tho.

____________________
natural hair tshirts & tote bags!
http://brokeymcpoverty.bigcartel.com


http://brokeymcpoverty.com
http://splackavelliecentral.wordpress.com
http://aboutmygranny.tumblr.com
http://naturalhairproblems.com

  

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ear2ear
Charter member
3578 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 11:00 PM

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46. "my mom has a similar one"
In response to Reply # 2


          

"boring women have immaculate houses"

~
buckle up

.
, , , , .

•••

~
www.twitter.com/ear2ear
tanikacharles.com

  

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Trace
Member since Sep 16th 2002
37108 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 05:17 AM

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3. "Today in Women's History - March 1"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

Ancient Rome: celebration of the , a feast of Juno, the Roman queen of the gods.

Also in Rome: annual ritual: put out the fire and then relight it

1844: born

1872: Bertha Haven Putman (historian) born

1926: died

sometime in March, 1841: Marion Marsh Todd born


____________________
natural hair tshirts & tote bags!
http://brokeymcpoverty.bigcartel.com


http://brokeymcpoverty.com
http://splackavelliecentral.wordpress.com
http://aboutmygranny.tumblr.com
http://naturalhairproblems.com

  

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Trace
Member since Sep 16th 2002
37108 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 06:48 AM

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4. "Sojourner Truth - quote"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

this is one of my favorite quotes ever-

"That little man in black there! He says women can't have as much rights as men, cause Christ wasn't a woman! Where did your Christ come from? Where did your Christ come from?! From God and a woman. Man had nothing to do with him." --1851

____________________
natural hair tshirts & tote bags!
http://brokeymcpoverty.bigcartel.com


http://brokeymcpoverty.com
http://splackavelliecentral.wordpress.com
http://aboutmygranny.tumblr.com
http://naturalhairproblems.com

  

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DVActivist
Member since Oct 19th 2004
20915 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 07:18 AM

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7. "and I KNOW thats right!"
In response to Reply # 4


  

          


**********************************************

When they discover the center of the universe, a lot of people will be disappointed to discover they are not it.
- Bernard Bailey

  

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Cre8
Charter member
17379 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 09:02 AM

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24. "RE: Sojourner Truth - quote"
In response to Reply # 4


  

          

thats deep.

Food/Drink PlayersCookbook Info:
To help: L9 Health Clinic http://www.commongroundrelief.org/node/242
DEADLINE: November 22, 2006
Please submit your recipes to playerscookbook@yahoo.com or inbox and don't forget PHOTOS.

*********************************

  

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just a hunch
Member since Feb 27th 2005
88 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 07:07 AM

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5. "ANCHOR N/M"
In response to Reply # 0


          

.

  

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DVActivist
Member since Oct 19th 2004
20915 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 07:10 AM

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6. "ANCHOR THIS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

why hasn't this been anchored yet!?
I'd be glad to help Trace
thanks for this

**********************************************

When they discover the center of the universe, a lot of people will be disappointed to discover they are not it.
- Bernard Bailey

  

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truth0ne SGC
Member since Sep 25th 2003
38103 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 07:51 AM

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8. "As a man, I command you (The Mods) to anchor this."
In response to Reply # 0


  

          


  

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DVActivist
Member since Oct 19th 2004
20915 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 07:58 AM

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10. "lmao"
In response to Reply # 8


  

          

maybe that will work

**********************************************

When they discover the center of the universe, a lot of people will be disappointed to discover they are not it.
- Bernard Bailey

  

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truth0ne SGC
Member since Sep 25th 2003
38103 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 08:06 AM

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14. "*booming, indignant laugh*"
In response to Reply # 10


  

          


  

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Nate Geezie
Member since Feb 07th 2004
13530 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 07:58 AM

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9. "where you going?"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

<---

"Midwest niggas man...we the only niggas thats serious about our gospel and gangsta" (c) DonWizzle

"Go Skinny Boy!! Make The
Block Hott!!"

**************************************************************************



***FAMILY TALK***

*Radio:"I got living room full of fine dime brizzles...."
*Cousin Janelle: "What the Hell is a brizzle?"

*8 Year Old Cousin Marqueis: Do you have a girlfriend?
Nate: Naw...girls are stupid
Marqueis: I have a girlfriend...
Marqueis: If you want a girlfriend this is what you have to do...
Marqueis: Ask her to sit with you at lunch, then give her a note and ask her to be your girlfriend....
Marqueis: I'm the one you come to see if you want a girlfriend...tell me what you want her to look like and i'll write it down and i'll get you a girlfriend....*looking for pen*
Nate: Ok...She cant talk too much
Nate: *pause* What do you like about YOUR girlfriend
Marqueis: She has a big booty...
Nate: *pause*
Nate: *pause*
Nate: Well...put that on the list too

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I grew up on booty shake we did not know no better thangs....
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
DJ Nate G Presents-The Draws Off Mix: 69 Minutes of Music....

DOWNLOAD ON SOULSEEK- User Name: Sonlight


I Grew Up On Booty Shake...We Did Not Know No Betta Thangs...

https://Soundcloud.com/DJNategeezie/Saturday-Night

  

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Trace
Member since Sep 16th 2002
37108 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 08:48 AM

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16. "vacation"
In response to Reply # 9


  

          

a week @ the beach

i be lyin sometimes, tho.

____________________
natural hair tshirts & tote bags!
http://brokeymcpoverty.bigcartel.com


http://brokeymcpoverty.com
http://splackavelliecentral.wordpress.com
http://aboutmygranny.tumblr.com
http://naturalhairproblems.com

  

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Trace
Member since Sep 16th 2002
37108 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 07:59 AM

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11. "do your write/paint/create stuff?"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

do u write/paint/create stuff abt women?

do u wanna share what u write/paint/create abt women w/ us?

of course u do!


i be lyin sometimes, tho.

____________________
natural hair tshirts & tote bags!
http://brokeymcpoverty.bigcartel.com


http://brokeymcpoverty.com
http://splackavelliecentral.wordpress.com
http://aboutmygranny.tumblr.com
http://naturalhairproblems.com

  

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Nettrice
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61747 posts
Sat Mar-05-05 05:33 PM

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79. "RE: do your write/paint/create stuff?"
In response to Reply # 11


  

          

Many (not all) of my pieces are about women. Check me out at www.nettrice.us

<--- Blame this lady for Nutty.

  

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Sad Puppy Eyes
Member since Mar 26th 2003
11038 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 08:01 AM

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12. "I support this"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

(back later)

  

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BooDaah
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32690 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 08:03 AM

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13. "it is my sincere hope"
In response to Reply # 0
Tue Mar-01-05 08:04 AM

          

this doesn't become a man-hate post

but then again, i know my audience

(good idea trace)

  

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lingo
Charter member
61467 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 08:47 AM

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15. "Did you have the same concern during black history month post"
In response to Reply # 13


          

that it wouldn't become a white hate post?

  

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BooDaah
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32690 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 08:55 AM

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20. "yes"
In response to Reply # 15
Tue Mar-01-05 09:01 AM

          

i find it unfortunate when what is intended to be a celebration of achievement becomes a hatefest (or pity-party)

  

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ScandalousWoman
Member since Nov 19th 2002
25416 posts
Wed Mar-02-05 02:16 AM

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48. "question?"
In response to Reply # 20
Wed Mar-02-05 02:16 AM

  

          

why didn't you voice that (your concern) in the bhm post, similiarly to how you voiced it here?

*******************
purr

***********************
wouldn't you love to love me?

  

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BooDaah
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Thu Mar-03-05 06:55 AM

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71. "investment"
In response to Reply # 48


          

having been raised by women it's painful to see so many women who don't recognize that i'm not their enemy and actually have a certain amount of insight into their struggle. I've seen my mother have to struggle. I've seen my sisters in jacked up relationships (almost stabbed a guy who got too physical with one). Hostorically, the majority of my closest friends have been women and i've walked with many of them through bad circumstances.

Not so much with white folks.

Succinctly, i don't care as much about the feelings of whitefolks as i do about women, and the "hit dog" in me sees (and cares) about this going that direction. While it's true i did see the potential there also, it wasn't big enough for me to vocalize the idea.

if that makes me a bad guy or whatever *shrug*

if, in asking, you're questioning my motives or judgement, that's cool too

as stated before, i said my peace....if defensiveness (on behalf of the hearer) and a hope for education as opposed to fighting (on mine) makes me a bad guy then such is the cost of doing business

  

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kisszion
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Tue Mar-01-05 08:54 AM

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19. "i wasnt going to say anything"
In response to Reply # 13


  

          

but I know youre not the arguing type and i feel the need to tell you that you could have kept the negative comments to yourself.

:::::::

"And the more you hit something hard, the more hardened it becomes--the stronger it becomes. And that's what's happened: I'm resilient." - Michael Jackson

:::
http://sweetcreams.tumblr.com/

  

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BooDaah
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32690 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 08:57 AM

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21. "huh?"
In response to Reply # 19


          

what was negative?

  

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lingo
Charter member
61467 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 09:00 AM

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23. "in other words, the post was doing just fine without injecting an idea"
In response to Reply # 21


          

that had not presented itself until you posted.

  

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BooDaah
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32690 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 09:06 AM

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26. "on second though...nevermind"
In response to Reply # 23
Tue Mar-01-05 09:08 AM

          

i said my piece.

further sidebar discussion will take away from the post


  

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lingo
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61467 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 09:09 AM

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27. "that post in no way is an insult to men. its the truth"
In response to Reply # 26


          

.

  

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Trace
Member since Sep 16th 2002
37108 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 09:13 AM

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28. "if i may interject"
In response to Reply # 26


  

          

concerning that quote, u have to consider it w/i its context. i love it not b/c she's telling men essentially that they think too highly of themselves, but b/c that's a VERY strong statement in more ways than one for a black woman to say in front of white folks, to a white man, especially, and esPECIALLY after calling him "little" (that's gangsta!) waaaaaay back in 1851.

she had mo balls than most men i know.

so i can see how it'd look that way, but i dont think it is at all.

& i think the offense was taken b/c it seems like its being implied that that's the likely direction that this will go, like recognizing & big upping women is synonymous w/ downing & hating men.

at any rate, im glad to see u up in hurr )


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BooDaah
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Tue Mar-01-05 09:22 AM

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29. "the thing is"
In response to Reply # 28
Tue Mar-01-05 09:53 AM

          

it's not so much a matter of that quote not being valid (in it's hertorical trueness, or it's intended meaning), but moreso seeing it as a point where this post could start to go left. she's not talking about MEN, she's talking about a particular man. We should all know that all MEN aren't like that, so when folks start co-signing thinking she were talking to/about men in general that's doing her a disservice.

my opinion is that this post could be a celebration of the achievements of women, and an oppourtunity to learn about them (for men and women). you acknowledged that some dude might take offense to that quote, and i think if that got worse, or became the norm, dudes might start to feel like this is ONLY a post for women and miss out.

i'm just a guy, so my opinion carries whatever weight that might hold in this context, but i'd hate to see someone take offense at a comment and this devolve (as is sadly so often the case) into some battle of the sexes thing.

similarly, i'd hate for the women to go from celebrating the same to harping on how trifling men are (which could also easily occur)

the assumed "negativity" was simply acknowledging how often the best of intentions lead elsewhere here, and therefore noting that it might very well happen again

i hope no offense was taken by you



  

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Trace
Member since Sep 16th 2002
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Tue Mar-01-05 09:29 AM

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30. "nope!"
In response to Reply # 29


  

          

>i hope no offense was taken by you

i been cool.

i seen ur pt & i agree, but i seen how others cld see it as negative too. jus playin the peaceful diplomat i reckon.

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Quixotic
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Fri Mar-04-05 10:43 AM

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76. "this is that bullshit, man."
In response to Reply # 13


  

          


~G.D.

  

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kisszion
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Tue Mar-01-05 08:50 AM

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18. "The Glass Slipper Project"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          



I'm a little excited about volunteering for this. This project is for young women who cannot afford prom dresses. The org. provides the dress, makeup, shoes and accessories for prom night. If you're in Chicago, theyre looking for volunteers now but they have branches all over. & If you never knew what to do with your own formal wear (old bridemaid dress ect.) consider donating here. Check out the website.

http://www.glassslipperproject.org

:::::::

"And the more you hit something hard, the more hardened it becomes--the stronger it becomes. And that's what's happened: I'm resilient." - Michael Jackson

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lingo
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Tue Mar-01-05 08:58 AM

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22. "Thanks."
In response to Reply # 18


          

.

  

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lingo
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Tue Mar-01-05 09:05 AM

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25. "I love Shirley Chisolm"
In response to Reply # 0


          

One distressing thing is the way men react to women who assert their equality: their ultimate weapon is to call them unfeminine. They think she is anti-male; they even whisper that she's probably a lesbian.
-Shirley Chisolm


  

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BooDaah
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Tue Mar-01-05 12:01 PM

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31. "History"
In response to Reply # 0


          

History of Observance

* National Women’s History Month began in the mid 1970’s as a locally celebrated International Women’s Day (March 8th) in Sonoma County, California. After several years of continued success, the program grew to Women’s History Week.
* In March of 1980, President Carter issued a Presidential Message encouraging the recognition and celebration of women’s historic accomplishments during the week of March 8th and in 1981 Congress declared the week of March 8th as National Women’s Week.
* Finally, in 1987, at the request of numerous women's organizations, museums, libraries, youth leaders, and educators throughout the country, the National Women's History Project (NWHP) successfully petitioned Congress to expand the national celebrations to the entire month of March.
* As a result, a National Women's History Month Resolution was quickly approved with strong bipartisan support in both the House and Senate.
* Since 1992, a Presidential Proclamation has carried the directive for what is now a major national and international celebration.

According to the National Women’s History Project, the 2005 theme, "Women Change America" honors and recognizes the role of American women in transforming culture, history and politics as leaders, writers, scientists, educators, politicians, artists, historians, and informed citizens. For a very detailed history of the creation of National Women’s History Month, visit the National Women’s History Project website at www.nwhp.org.

  

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BooDaah
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Tue Mar-01-05 12:04 PM

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32. "Previous Honorees (long read)"
In response to Reply # 0


          

(in alphabetical order)

Bella Abzug (1920-1998 )
Congresswoman, Women’s Rights Activist
Abzug was a founder and national legislative director of Women Strike for Peace from 1961 to 1970. She served 3 terms in Congress (1970-1976) where she worked to end the Vietnam War and the draft. She was presiding officer at the first government sponsored women’s conference at Houston in 1977. In 1990, she co-founded the International Women’s Environment and Development Organization to provide visibility and support for working women.

Abigail Adams (1744-1818)
Women Rights Advocate
As a self-educated woman, Adams held well-informed strong political beliefs. In over two thousand letters written to her husband John, to family and friends, and to government officials, she articulately expressed her ideas on the American Revolution, the new nation, the American family, foreign courts, and war. Well respected, her opinions were influential in government affairs before, during, and after her husband’s term as president.

Rebecca Adamson (1950-)
Native American Advocate
A member of the Cherokee nation, in 1980 Adamson founded the First Nations Development Institute. This group has established new standards of accountability regarding federal responsibility and reservation land reform and has an operating budget of about three million dollars. Adamson has aided indigenous peoples in Australia and Africa also and has received many awards for mobilizing and unifying people to solve common problems.

Jane Addams (1860–1935)
Social Worker
Addams founded Hull House in Chicago in 1889, America's first settlement house providing English language classes, childcare, health education, and recreational programs for poor immigrant families. From 1919 until her death, Addams was president of the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom. She won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1931, the first American woman so honored, for her unending dedication to the causes of peace and social justice.

Marian Anderson (1902-1993)
Singer
Anderson was denied permission to perform at Constitution Hall in Washington, D.C. by the Daughters of the American Revolution—because she was black. Undaunted, she sang at the Lincoln Memorial on Easter Sunday, 1939, to an audience of 75,000. With a voice that “comes once in a century,” Anderson was the first black singer to perform at the Metropolitan Opera in 1955. Her talent and quiet determination opened doors for other black classical performers.

Mary Anderson (1872–1964)
Labor Activist
Anderson’s keen negotiating skills and labor activism, especially on behalf of working women, won her an appointment in 1920 as the first director of the Women’s Bureau in the U.S. Department of Labor. During her 24 years there, she played a major role in winning federal minimum wage and maximum hour laws for women. After retiring in 1944, Anderson continued to advocate on behalf of working women.

Ethel Percy Andrus (1884–1967)
Elder Rights Activist
Andrus was the founder of the National Retired Teachers Association (NRTA) in 1947 and the American Association of Retired Persons (AARP) in 1958. As its first president, Andrus pioneered nursing home reform legislation, often testified before Congress on issues of concern to senior citizens, and challenged mandatory retirement laws. She showed Americans of all ages that older people can and do live productive, useful, and purposeful lives.

Maya Angelou (1928-)
Author/Poet
Angelou is a novelist, poet, professional stage and screen writer, dancer, editor, lecturer, songwriter, and civil rights activist. Most notable among her publications are autobiographical novels starting with I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, published in 1970, which helped establish the memoir as a popular genre. In 1993, Angelou recited an original poem at President Clinton’s inauguration, confirming her status as "a people’s poet."

Susan B. Anthony (1820- 1906)
Women’s Rights Activist, Suffragist
Susan B. Anthony began her life-long campaign for woman suffrage when she met Stanton in 1852. They organized the National Woman Suffrage Association in 1869. Anthony edited its newspaper, traveled extensively, organizing and lecturing. When committed people work for justice, she said, "Failure is Impossible." The Nineteenth Amendment, passed in 1920, has been called the "Anthony Amendment" in tribute to the tireless work of this great crusader.

Virginia Apgar (1909-1974)
Physician, Anesthesiologist
Apgar graduated in 1933 from Columbia’s College of Physicians and Surgeons. In 1949, she became the first full professor of anesthesiology at Columbia. In 1952, she developed the internationally adopted Apgar Score System which measures a newborn infant’s heart rate, respiration, muscle tone, reflexes and color. She joined the National Foundation—March of Dimes in 1959, and in 1967, she became director of basic research for the Foundation.

Judith F. Baca (1946-)
Artist
Determined to give all people a voice in public art and urban culture, Baca organized over 1,000 young people in Los Angeles to create more than 250 murals citywide. Starting in 1974, her massive works have brought together young people from different ethnic neighborhoods to explore their cultural histories and make connections to their lives today. Since 1987, Baca has been creating an enormous portable mural called the “World Wall” to promote global peace.

Ella Baker (1903–1986)
Political Activist
Baker worked steadily for 50 years to gain civil and voting rights for blacks. As Field Secretary and later Director of Branches for the NAACP, from 1938–1946, she traveled extensively in the segregated South, often at great peril. Baker helped found the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) in 1958, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) in 1960, and the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party in 1964.

Clara Barton (1821- 1912)
Nurse, American Red Cross Founder
Barton began her humanitarian work in the Civil War when she collected and delivered supplies and nursed wounded Union soldiers. She was called the “Angel of the Battlefield.” In 1869, she learned about the work of the International Red Cross, founded in 1863 in Geneva. Barton helped convince the United States to sign the Geneva treaty in 1882, and in 1893, she became president of the American Red Cross. For 22 years, Barton led its disaster relief work.

Catherine Beecher (1800-1852)
Author, Educator
Beecher was a dedicated advocate of education for women. Beecher founded the Hartford Female Seminary in 1827 and later opened schools in western towns to train women to be teachers and strong mothers. Her 1869 book, The American Woman’s Home, gave basic information on child rearing, housekeeping, and cooking. She endorsed exercise, non-restrictive clothes, fresh air, and good food to develop healthy women able to raise educated citizens.

Mary McLeod Bethune (1875-1955)
Educator, Presidential Advisor
In 1904, Bethune opened a school for black girls in Daytona Beach that became Bethune-Cookman College in 1929. She was its president until 1942. In 1935, she founded the National Council of Negro Women and was its president until 1949. From 1936 to 1944, Bethune served as advisor to President Roosevelt on minority affairs. She was vice-president of NAACP from 1940 to 1955. In 1945, she attended the organizing conference of the United Nations.

Elizabeth Blackwell (1821-1910)
Doctor
Blackwell became the first woman doctor when she graduated from Geneva Medical School in 1849. Blackwell and two other women doctors opened the New York Infirmary for Women and Children in 1857. During the Civil War, she assisted in selecting and training nurses. She and her sister opened the Women's Medical College in New York in 1868. Returning to her native England, she was a professor of gynecology at the London School of Medicine for Children.

Gertrude Bonnin (1876-1938)
Indian Rights Activist, Writer
Growing up on a reservation and attending missionary schools, Bonnin faced pressures from the white community to ignore her mother’s Sioux culture. In 1901, she compiled an anthology, Old Indian Legends and in 1913, she wrote an opera, The Sun Dance. From 1918 to 1919, she was editor of the American Indian Magazine. She created the National Council of American Indians in 1926 to fight for rights and equality for American Indians.

Margaret Bourke-White (1904-1971)
Photojournalist
Bourke-White was the first female photojournalist, working for Fortune magazine and Life magazine. She published photos of the depression in a book, You have Seen Their Faces. During World War II, she documented military action in Africa and Europe. Bourke-White later photographed Gandhi’s non-violent protests in India. Her images of the Great Depression, WWII, and the liberation of the concentration camps reveal the startling human side of historical events.

Carol Moseley Braun
U.S. Senator
Braun was the first black woman Senator, serving from 1992 to 1998, after ten years in the Illinois House of Representatives. In 1998, she worked with the Dept. of Education developing programs to assist minority and women college students. From 1999 to 2001, Braun was ambassador to New Zealand and Samoa. Braun was a candidate for the Democratic nomination for president in 2003, but withdrew in January 2004.

Pearl Buck (1892-1973)
Author, Humanitarian
Buck wrote more than 100 books using a variety of themes and many locales including China, Russia, and America. In 1931, she won the Pulitzer Prize for her book The Good Earth . She won the Nobel Prize in 1938 for her writings, the first American women so honored. She founded Welcome House, an adoption agency for Asian-American children in 1949. The Pearl S. Buck Foundation was set up in 1964 to aid half-American children throughout Asia.

Sarah Buel (1953-)
Domestic Violence Activist, Attorney
Escaping domestic violence in her own life, Sarah Buel became an impassioned advocate for the legal rights of battered women and abused children. Believing that if she became an attorney she could best defend and advocate for battered women and their children, she graduated from Harvard Law School and now runs a legal clinic for battered women. She is also co-founder and co-director of the National Training Center on Domestic and Sexual Violence.

Nannie Helen Burroughs (1879-1961)
Educator, School Founder
"We specialize in the wholly impossible," describes the school Burroughs opened for black girls and women in 1909 with seven students. The National Training School for Women and Girls opened in Washington, D.C., combining classical and trade courses with required black history classes. By the 1960s, thousands from around the world had received an education of junior college quality. In 1964, the school became the Nannie Helen Burroughs Elementary School.

Edna Campbell (1968-)
Professional Athlete, Spokesperson for Breast Cancer Awareness
A professional basketball player with the WNBA Sacramento Monarchs and a breast cancer survivor, Edna Campbell travels across the country as a spokesperson for breast cancer awareness, encouraging women to do regular breast exams and inspiring those with cancer to have hope and courage in challenging the disease. She uses these opportunities to recognize other survivors and to raise money for breast cancer research.

Rachel Carson (1907–1964)
Biologist, Pioneer Environmentalist
Carson's research and writings awakened worldwide concern for our environment. In 1962, Silent Spring, detailed the dangers of DDT and other pesticides. She warned that these chemicals contaminate humans, animals, and the entire "web of life." She wrote that "the central problem of our age has therefore become the contamination of total environment." Considered very controversial at first, her ideas became the foundation of the modern environmental movement.

Mary Shadd Cary (1823-1893)
Teacher, Journalist, Lawyer
Cary was born free in Delaware and taught for 10 years in schools for free blacks. In 1851, she moved to Canada to help blacks who had fled after the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 but were being fleeced by the sponsoring society. In 1853, she edited the helpful paper Provincial Freeman. In 1869, she moved to Washington, earned a law degree from Howard University in 1883, and lectured on woman suffrage and the need for education for blacks and race improvement.

Willa Cather (1873-1947)
Writer
Cather wrote novels and short stories dealing with the struggles of European immigrants in the harsh environment of frontier Nebraska. After four years as an editor for McClure’s in New York, Cather published her first novel in 1912 titled Alexander’s Bridge. In 1923, she won the Pulitzer Prize for One of Ours. With strong, independent female characters, her novels capture pioneer traditions and also their collapse in the twentieth century.

Linda Chavez-Thompson (1944)
Labor Leader
Linda Chavez-Thompson, the daughter of sharecroppers, worked as an agricultural laborer before joining the labor union, eventually rising through the ranks of the AFL-CIO to become the first person of color, and the first woman, elected to be the Executive Vice-President of the AFL-CIO in 1995.

Shirley Chisholm (1924- 2005)
Activist and Congresswoman
In 1968, Chisholm became the first black woman elected to Congress where she served for 14 years. In 1972, she made history by campaigning for nomination by the Democratic Party for President, the first woman of color to seek the nation’s highest office. Since her retirement from politics in 1982 she has lectured and written on human rights issues. As a professor at Mount Holyoke College, her courses included political science and women’s studies.

Septima Clark (1898-1987)
Educator, Civil Rights Activist
Believing literacy to be the key to social and political power, Septima Clark trained teachers to work in citizenship schools across the south, teaching basic skills and empowering southern blacks to stand up for their rights as Americans. As an executive staff member of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, Clark took the SCLS’s voter-registration and teacher-training programs into the deep south and registered thousands of new voters.

Alice Coachman (1923-)
Olympic Athlete
Coachman won her first Amateur Athletic Union national championship in the high jump in 1939. By 1946, she held national track and field championships in 50 and 100 meter dashes, 400 meter relay, and running high jump. Coachman was the first black woman to win a gold medal in the Olympics when she won in the high jump in London in 1948. Coachman entered the Track and Field Hall of Fame in 1975. Retired from competition, she coaches many young athletes.

Jacqueline Cochran (1910-1980)
World Renowned Pilot
Cochran began flying in 1932. She began competing in the Bendix Transcontinental Air Race in 1935 and won it in 1938. In 1941, she was a flight captain in the British Air Transport Auxiliary. Returning to America, she became the director of the Women’s Air Force Service Pilots. In 1945, she was awarded the Distinguished Service Medal. In 1953, Cochran became the first woman to break the sound barrier. Cochran received more than 200 awards as a pilot.

Bessie Coleman (1896-1926)
Pioneering Pilot
Coleman, denied admission to American aviation schools, learned French and went to Europe where she took lessons from French and German aviators and learned to fly the German Fokker plane. In 1922, she earned an international pilot’s license and became the first licensed black woman pilot. She became a stunt flyer where she thrilled observers and earned the title, "Brave Bessie." She founded a black aviation school and lectured at African-American schools.

Jill Ker Conway (1934-)
Educator, Writer, Historian
Conway earned a Ph.D. from Harvard in 1969 where she studied the intellectual experiences of earlier American women. She was the first woman president of Smith College, serving from 1975 to 1985. Realizing the need for equality in pay and opportunity for women, she set up a research project, Women and Social Change. In addition to writing the histories of many American women, Conway has also written three autobiographical books.

Dorothy Day (1897–1980)
Social Reformer
Co-founder of the Catholic Worker Movement in 1933, Day dedicated her life to improving living conditions for the poor. She developed new ways of combating social ills, including the "direct mutual aid" concept, teaching the poor to help one another. Writer, suffragist, speaker, activist and publisher, Day aided conscientious objectors in World War II, demonstrated against the Vietnam war and supported the organizing efforts of farm workers in California.

Ada Deer (1935-)
American Indian and Civil Rights Activist
Deer was the first member of the Menominee tribe of Wisconsin to graduate from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and earned an MS in Social Work from Columbia. Deer led her tribe in gaining passage of the Menominee Restoration Act, which restored their land and treaty rights as American Indians. At the national level, Deer became Deputy of Indian Affairs and is now the Director of the American Indian Studies Program at the University of Wisconsin at Madison.

Emily Dickinson (1830-1886)
Poet
Dickinson attended Amherst Academy and spent one year at Mount Holyoke Female Seminary. She returned to her home in 1848 and rarely traveled. She probably began writing poetry in the 1860s. Her correspondent, Thomas Higginson, counseled her against publication, but her school mate and lifelong friend Helen Hunt Jackson encouraged Dickinson to allow a few to be published in the 1870s. After her death, 1,775 pieces were found and published.

Dorothea Dix (1802-1887)
Social Reformer
Dix started helping the mentally ill and prisoners when she visited the East Cambridge jail for women inmates in 1841. She saw the horrible conditions in the jail where mental patients and prisoners were thrown together in filth, some chained or kept in cages. She documented conditions there and in many states, persuaded legislatures across the nation to build more than 100 mental hospitals in the next 50 years and suggested many reforms in jails.

Amelia Earhart (1897–1937)
Pioneering Aviator
Earhart was the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean in 1932. She was the first person to fly solo non-stop from Hawaii to California in 1935 and the first to fly solo round-trip from the U.S. to Mexico. Five years later, after a dazzling array of “firsts,” Earhart disappeared attempting the first ‘round-the-world flight along the equator. Her adventurous life encouraged many to believe that women were capable of anything they could imagine.

Elizabeth Eckford (1942-)
Student Integrator
Eckford was one of nine students selected to integrate Little Rock, Arkansas high school in 1957. Integration plans were postponed at the last minute, but Eckford did not get the message. She arrived alone and was taunted, jeered, and accosted. Photographs of her grace under pressure captured her agony and became an international symbol of the oppression of black students. After weeks of mob violence, Federal troops finally escorted the students on Sept. 25.

Marian Wright Edelman (1939-)
Children Rights Advocate, Civil Rights Activist
From her earliest years, Edelman was encouraged to give hope and aid to others. As a lawyer, civil rights activist, and founder of the Children’s Defense Fund, she has provided a strong authoritative voice for those who have been denied the power to speak for themselves. For almost 40 years, she has advocated for quality health care, immunizations, nutritious food, and educational opportunities, providing hope and possibility to countless numbers.

Gertrude B. Elion (1918-1999)
Nobel Prize Biologist
Elion shared the 1988 Nobel Prize in Medicine for pioneering work in inventing drugs to help in successful organ transplants, and others to counter acute leukemia, kidney disease and arthritis. They focused their research on the genetic differences between healthy and diseased cells. As scientist emeritus, Elion was named research professor of medicine at Duke University. In 1991, Elion became the first woman inducted into the National Inventor's Hall of Fame.

Felisa Rincon de Gautier (1897-1994)
Political Activist
Gautier began her political activism campaigning for woman suffrage in Puerto Rica which was won in 1932. She joined the Popular Democratic Party and in 1940 was president of its San Juan committee. From 1948 to 1968, she was mayor of San Juan. In her open government, many schools, daycare, and health centers were built. She was on the National Committee of the United States Democratic Party and was a delegate to the national conventions until 1992.

Althea Gibson (1927-2003)
Olympic Athlete
Gibson was the first black tennis player to win at Wimbledon, 1957 and 1958; the Associated Press named her Woman Athlete of the Year for 1958. She had dominated women’s amateur tennis from 1947–1957, and in 1950, she was the first black woman to play in a major U.S. tournament. Gibson also played professional golf from 1963–1967. Gibson was the first black woman to join the Ladies Professional Golf Association (LPGA).

Lillian Gilbreth (1878- 1972)
Industrial Engineer
Gilbreth and her husband Frank pioneered industrial management techniques; as a widow, she applied these time and motion studies to home management and to assisting handicapped people at home and in the workplace. From 1935 to 1948, she was a professor of management at Purdue University and consultant on careers for women, creating a more realistic attitude toward the place of women in industry.

Ruth Bader Ginsburg (1933- )
Supreme Court Justice
Ginsburg became the second woman justice on the Supreme Court when she was nominated by President Clinton and confirmed in 1993. She graduated from Harvard and then Columbia Law School. At Harvard, she was editor of the Harvard Law Review. She argued the first sex-bias case before the Supreme Court and won 5 of the 6 cases which she argued dealing with unequal or unfair treatment of women.

Mary Katherine Goddard (1738- 1816)
Printer of the Declaration of Independence
Goddard and her mother published the Providence Gazette from 1765 to 1768. In 1774, she moved to Baltimore to help her brother with the Maryland Journal, Baltimore’s first newspaper; she became publisher in 1775. In January 1777, she printed the Declaration of Independence with the names of the signers. She became postmaster of Baltimore in 1775, an office she held for 14 year. She was removed from her position because she was a woman.

Emma Goldman (1869-1940)
Social Reformer, Anarchist
Goldman immigrated to the United States in 1885. She lectured and wrote about the dreadful working and living conditions of poor people. In 1893, she was jailed for inciting unemployed workers to riot. As a drama critic she helped introduce Ibsen, Shaw, Strindberg and others to American audiences. In 1917, she was jailed for two years for agitating against military conscription and then deported. In Europe, she continued to write and lecture for civil rights.

Katharine Graham (1917-2001)
Publisher
Graham was the first woman president of a Fortune 500 company when she became president and then publisher of the Washington Post from 1963 to 1979. In 1971, she resisted tremendous pressure and threats when she printed the Pentagon Papers. In 1972, she supported the aggressive investigation of the Watergate burglary. The Post received a Pulitzer Prize for public service in 1973. Her autobiography Personal History won a Pulitzer Prize in 1998.

Martha Graham (1894-1991)
Dancer, Choreographer
The foremost innovator in modern dance, Martha Graham’s 50-year dancing career began in 1920. She founded the Martha Graham School of Contemporary Dance in 1929 and later, dance companies in Israel and London. Her dances covered many themes, including Greek myths, biblical stories, lives of Joan of Arc and Emily Dickinson. In 1973, she published The Notebooks of Martha Graham, and in 1976, she was awarded the Medal of Freedom by President Ford.

Angelina Grimké (1805-1879) and Sarah Grimké (1792-1873)
Abolitionists and Women's Rights Advocates
The Grimké sisters, raised in a slave-holding South Carolina family, were among the first women to write and lecture against slavery. They wrote for the Liberator, and in 1836, Angelina published a pamphlet An Appeal to Christian Women of the South. Southern postmasters destroyed copies and a price was put on their heads. They stayed North. Even there, they were criticized for their boldness, but they led the way for other women to speak.

Fannie Lou Hamer (1917–1977)
Civil Rights Activist
Hamer devoted 15 years to winning voting rights for blacks in the South. Despite beatings by the police, losing her job, and being forced from her home, Hamer continued organizing and demanding recognition and power in national politics for southern blacks. In 1964, she led the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party delegation to the Democratic Convention, forcing a change in the representation of women and minorities within state delegations.

Alice Hamilton (1869-1970)
Physician, Social Reformer
Hamilton was the first American doctor to investigate the physical hazards of working around carbon monoxide, lead, and other poisonous substances found in industrial plants. Her persistent efforts led to the first state workers’ compensation law, better working conditions, and federal workplace-hazard standards and safety laws. She became an international expert on industrial diseases and alerted the public to industrial dangers.

Frances Watkins Harper (1825-1911)
Abolitionist, Lecturer, Author
Harper was born free in Baltimore, attended the Union Seminary in Ohio, and taught in Pennsylvania in 1852. Unable to return to Maryland because she could be captured and sold, she began antislavery lectures and published articles, poems and stories. Her 1859 story, The Two Offers, is probably the first short story by a black author. Fighting racism took priority over woman suffrage; in 1896, she helped found and lead the National Association of Colored Women.

La Donna Harris (1931-)
Indian Rights and Civil Activist
Harris, member of the Comanche tribe, has served since 1970 as president of Americans for Indian Opportunity (AIO), a multi-tribal organization devoted to improving life for American Indians. She has served on the National Rural Housing Conference and the National Association of Mental Health. Harris has expanded the AIO to include the "American Indian Ambassadors" program, which provides one-year fellowships for Native American students.

Dorothy Height (1912-)
Humanitarian
As president of the National Council of Negro Women since 1958, her leadership gained international stature for the organization. Height has worked with every president and civil rights leader for 60 years. Her more than 50 awards include the 1989 Citizens Medal Award for distinguished service to the country, the 1993 Spingarn Medal from the NAACP, and the Congressional Gold Medal, its highest award, in 2004, for her work in promoting AIDS education.

Lillian Hellman (1905-1984)
Playwright, Screenwriter, Author
Beginning with The Children’s Hour in 1934, Hellman’s award-winning plays presented powerful and bitter pictures of intolerance and exploitation. One of many Hollywood screenwriters who refused to testify before the House Un-American Activities Committee when asked about the politics of her friends and associates, Hellman was blacklisted from 1948 to the ‘60s. Her book, An Unfinished Woman, won a National Book Award in 1969.

Anita Hill (1956-)
Lawyer
In 1991, Hill testified before an all-white, all-male Senate Judiciary Committee that she had been harassed by US Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas. Her testimony led to national awareness and the creation and implementation of new policies by businesses, educational institutions, and government to identify and stop sexual harassment. She has written a book, Speaking the Truth to Power. In 1997, she joined the faculty at Brandeis University.

Dolores Huerta (1930-)
Labor Union Administrator
In the 1950s, Huerta began teaching in a farm workers' community and saw the brutal poverty surrounding her students. In 1962, she co-founded with Ceasar Chavez the United Farm Workers Union. She organized the members and through non-violence tactics, mounted a successful boycott of California table grapes. Her goal in life is to empower farm workers with information and skills to help them secure better living and working conditions.

Jovita Idár (1885–1946)
Journalist
Idár reported discrimination against Mexican children and the lynchings of Mexicans by Texas Rangers for her father’s newspaper, La Cronica. In 1911, she co-founded La Liga Femenil Mexicanista (The League of Mexican Women) and was its first president. The women formed free schools for Mexican children and provided necessities for the poor. During the Mexican Revolution, Idár organized La Cruz Blanca (the White Cross) to nurse the wounded on both sides.

Shirley Jackson (1946-)
Physicist
In 1973, Jackson was the first black woman to receive a Ph.D. from MIT. In 1991, she became a professor of physics at Rutgers University. President Clinton named her chair of the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission in 1995, where she helped set up the International Nuclear Regulators Association in 1997 to provide assistance to other nations on matters of nuclear safety. In 1999, she became president of the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.

Mae Jemison (1956-)
Astronaut
With a medical degree from Cornell University, Dr. Jemison spent three years as a Peace Corps Medical Officer in West Africa, and then worked in a refugee camp in Thailand. In 1992, now a NASA astronaut, she participated aboard Spacelab-J, the cooperative mission between the U.S. and Japan that conducted life science experiments in space. Jemison now pursues health care and science projects related to women and minorities.

Mary Harris "Mother" Jones (1830–1930)
Labor Organizer
"Mother" Jones became a labor organizer at the age of 50 and then led strikes in mines and publicized dangers of child labor in textile mills for the next 50 years. She traveled constantly without a permanent home. Jones lead miners' wives armed only with brooms and mops when they chased off Colorado strikebreakers. She lead a march of Pennsylvania child mill workers to President Roosevelt's home on Long Island to dramatize the evils of child labor.

Helen Keller (1880–1968)
Advocate for Disadvantaged
Despite being deaf, blind, and unable to speak, Keller became an active writer and international public speaker. She learned to communicate in 1887 with the help of her teacher, Anne Sullivan. In 1904, she became the first deaf-blind person to earn a college degree. Her books and lectures advocating rights for disabled people helped the public recognize the potentials of people with physical limitations. She also supported suffrage for women and peace.

Billie Jean King (1943-)
Tennis Star and Women's Rights Advocate
The most successful woman in professional tennis, King was top-ranked five times and was in the top ten for 17 years. She was the first woman athlete to earn $100,000 a year, the holder of the most Wimbledon titles, as well as the first woman to coach a professional team. She has aggressively fought for equality for women athletes, for honest professionalism in tennis, and for implementation of Title IX in all sports.

Coretta Scott King (1927-)
Civil Rights Activist
King graduated from Antioch College in music and gave concert programs in the 1940s. In 1962, King was a delegate to Women Strike for Peace conference in Geneva. Now she continues the civil rights work of her husband. She is the founding president of the Martin Luther King, Jr., Center for Nonviolent Social Change. In the 1980s, she led demonstrations against South African apartheid system. In 1969, she wrote a book titled My Life With Martin Luther King Jr.

Maxine Hong Kingston (1940-)
Author
Kingston’s childhood in California was filled with Chinese traditions and stories, which sometimes conflicted with the "American" ideas she was learning in school. Her first book, The Woman Warrior: Memoirs of a Girlhood Among Ghosts, won the National Book Critics Circle Award for nonfiction in 1976. It was followed by two equally fine books which also celebrate the heritage and contributions of Chinese-American people.

Tsuyako "Sox" Kitashima (1919-)
Civil Rights Activist
For a decade, Kitashima was a leader in the successful movement to win reparations for Japanese-Americans who had lost their homes and possessions and were forced to live in internment camps during WWII. After years of pressure from Kitashima and other activists, in 1989 Congress passed the Entitlement Bill, providing $20,000 to each surviving internee and an official apology for the internment.

Yuri Kochiyama ( 1922-)
Civil Rights Advocate
Born in California, Kochiyama was interned in a Japanese relocation center during WW II. After her release, she and her family moved to New York City where she took part in civil rights demonstrations. She met Malcolm X in 1963; they worked together to call attention to the struggle of oppressed people. Kochiyama founded Asian Americans for Action to link liberation efforts of blacks and Asian Americans by bringing down barriers and building bridges.

Maggie Kuhn (1905-1995)
Activist for Senior Citizens
In 1970, Kuhn founded the Gray Panthers to fight ageism, encouraging old and young people to work together. Kuhn was an outspoken advocate of rights for older people, showing that old people are strong, vibrant, and intelligent. Through the Gray Panthers, she sought improved health care, housing, and economic well-being for senior citizens. She wrote three books and worked internationally to promote a better understanding of human aging.

Dorothea Lange (1895-1965)
Photographer
Lange photographed bread lines in the depression years, living conditions of migrant workers in California in the 1930s, and documented the treatment of Japanese-Americans in WWII in the crowded internment camps. These powerful photographic images brought public attention to the inhumane conditions. "If any documents of this turbulent age are justified to endure," Ansel Adams wrote, "he photographs of Dorothea Lange shall, most certainly."

Emma Lazarus (1849-1887)
Poet, Translator
Lazarus is best known for her sonnet The New Colossus which is inscribed on the base of the Stature of Liberty. She also published several volumes of poetry and novels. After the Russian pogroms of the 1880s, Lazarus became a spokeswoman for Judaism and was an early advocate of a national Jewish homeland in Palestine. She played a central part in setting up the Hebrew Technical Institute to aid the newly arrived Russian Jews in New York.

Gerda Lerner (1920-)
Historian
Lerner is the foremost historian in defining the scope and importance of women’s history. The Grimké Sisters from South Carolina (1967) was the first of her ten authoritative books on women's history topics. Lerner has been insistent that theory and practice, consciousness and action, must dynamically inform each other. At the pinnacle of her career, Lerner's two-volume Women in History (1986, 1993) mapped the origins and persistence of patriarchy and the resistance to it that we now call feminism.

Tania Léon (1943-)
Composer and Conductor
Leon, born in Cuba, immigrated to New York in 1967, and continued her work of performing, directing, conducting and composing music. She directed and conducted the Broadway musical The Wiz and Dance in America for public television. In 1993, Leon was a composer for the New York Philharmonic, using gospel, jazz, Latin and African elements in her music. In 1994, Leon started the Sounds of the Americas festival. Her opera Scourge of Hyacinths premiered in 1994 and won Best Composition prize at Munich.

Queen Lili'uokalani (1838–1917)
Monarch
The last reigning monarch of Hawaii, Lili'uokalani inherited a difficult situation in 1891. Foreigners forced through a new constitution which took away voting rights from most Hawaiians. A revolution, encouraged by the American government, forced Lili'uokalani to abdicate in 1893 and in 1889, the Hawaiian Islands were annexed by the United States. Among her legacies are over 200 songs she composed, including the very popular Aloha Oe.

Maya Lin (1959-)
Architect, Sculptor
Lin wrote, "Sculpture is like poetry, architecture is like prose." As a Yale student in 1981, Lin's design for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial was unanimously chosen from 14,241 models. Her Wall design is acclaimed as one of the greatest war memorials ever created. Among other designs, Lin created the Civil Rights Memorial at the Southern Poverty Law Center in Alabama and the Langston Hughes Library in Tennessee. In 2000, her book Boundaries was published.

Belva Lockwood (1830-1917)
Lawyer, Women's Rights Activist
Lockwood graduated from the National University Law School in Washington, D.C. in 1873. In 1879, she was the first woman admitted to practice before the Supreme Court where, in 1900, she argued and won $5 million for the Eastern Cherokee Indians. She ran for president in 1884 and 1888 as the National Equal Rights Party candidate. Lockwood joined the Universal Peace Union, and in 1889 was a delegate to the International Peace Congress.

Maria Lopez de Hernandez (1896-1986)
Civil Rights Activist
Lopez de Hernandez worked for the improvement of civic, educational, and economic opportunity for the Mexican-American community. In 1929, she co-founded the Orden Caballeros of America, a civic and civil rights organization. She protested and wrote against the segregated and inferior education Mexican American children received. In 1970, she played a large role in the development of the Raza Unida Party to gain power through politics.

Susan Love (1948-)
Women's Health and Breast Cancer Research Expert
A founder of the breast cancer advocacy movement, Dr. Love co-founded the National Breast Cancer Coalition which includes more than 200 organizations and thousands of members devoted to gathering input from breast cancer advocates as well as obtaining federal funding for research. As a surgeon and author, Love encourages physicians to listen more closely to their patients.

Juliette Low (1860-1927)
Founder of Girl Scouts USA
Low admired the work done by the Boy Scouts and Girl Guides in England which enrolled children of many backgrounds including the disabled. In 1912, Low founded similar groups in Georgia, and in 1915, the official title of Girl Scouts of America was adopted with Low president. By 1927, there were troops in every state with goals of helping girls learn to be resourceful, skillful, and independent. Low's birthday, October 31, is celebrated as Scouts Founder's Day.

Mary Lyon (1797-1849)
Founder, Mount Holyoke College
Seeing the need for better education for women, Lyon devised plans for an endowed seminary for women combining high academic standards and work to keep tuition low. She raised the first $1000; South Hadley promised $8000. A new four-story building housed the Mount Holyoke Female Seminary that opened in November, 1837 with 80 students and continued to grow in size, curriculum and enrollment. Lyon was principal for 12 years.

Wilma Mankiller (1945-)
American Indian, Civil Rights Activist
Mankiller lived in San Francisco in 1969 when she and friends from the Indian Center successfully occupied Alcatraz and brought national attention to the needs of Indians. She returned to Oklahoma and became deputy chief of the Cherokee Nation in 1983. She was elected principal chief of the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma in 1985, the first woman to be elected to this position. Mankiller served for 10 years and in 1991, she won with 82% of the vote.

Sonia Manzano (1950-)
Actress
Manzano appeared in the original Broadway production of Godspell in New York. In 1972, she played the shopkeeper in the children’s TV show, Sesame Street. Manzano also wrote for the show. She has won seven Emmy Awards for her work. She was also nominated for an Emmy for Best Performer in a Children’s Program. Manzano has also appeared in other plays including The Living Room.

Maria Montoya Martinez (1887–1980)
Artist, Potter
Martinez lived in the small, ancient Tewa Indian village of San Ildefonso, New Mexico, where she learned the traditional Pueblo way of making coiled pottery from her aunt, Tia Nicolasa. She and her husband rediscovered the ancient techniques of firing polychrome and black-on-black pottery. These fine designs are highly praised today, and this blend of the old and new has helped produce economic self-sufficiency for the Indian village.

Vilma Martinez (1943-)
Civil Rights Attorney and Lawyer
Martinez graduated from Columbia University with a law degree in 1967. Knowing discrimination herself as a Latina, she has worked to ensure that the rights of traditionally underrepresented people are respected. Martinez was president of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund (MALDEF) from 1973–1982, building it into a powerful civil rights organization with regional offices. For a decade, she was a regent of the University of California.

Barbara McClintock (1902–1992)
Nobel Prize Scientist
A genetic scientist, McClintock won the Nobel Prize in 1983 for her 1951 discovery of "jumping genes." While studying maize, or Indian corn, McClintock found that some genes move around rather than remaining stationary as previously thought. She became a member of the National Academy of Sciences in 1944 and received the National Medal of Science in 1970. McClintock is regarded as one of the most influential geneticists of the twentieth century.

Margaret Mead (1901–1978)
Anthropologist, Author
Mead received a Ph.D. from Columbia in 1929 after studying families in Samoa, New Guinea and other cultures, concluding there is no "natural" assignment of gender roles. She also investigated many western cultures and wrote books about the changing roles of women and men. She wrote over 30 books and hundreds of articles and pamphlets. In 1979, Mead was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom for her contributions to scientific research.

Patsy Mink (1927-2002)
Congresswoman, Women's Rights Activist
Mink, the first Asian American elected to Congress, served 12 terms in Congress, beginning in 1965. She helped draft and win passage of Title IX in 1972. She was a founding member of the National Women's Political Caucus in 1971. She authored legislation for the Women's Educational Equity Act in 1973. Mink worked for women's rights, health, labor, education and environmental issues; she opposed capital punishment and the Vietnam War.

Maria Mitchell (1818-1889)
Astronomer
In 1847, Mitchell discovered a comet; later, it was named for her and she received a gold medal from the King of Denmark. In 1848, she was the first woman elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Mitchell was astronomy professor at Vassar College from 1865 to 1888. In 1873, she co-founded the Association for the Advancement of Women. As chair of the science committee until her death, she pleaded for recognition of women's scientific abilities.

Alicia Dickerson Montemayor (1902–1989)
Latina Activist, Artist
Montemayor worked to end discrimination and improve the lives of Latino families. In 1937, she became the first woman in the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) to hold a national office not specifically designated for women. That same year, she became the first woman to serve on the board of the LULAC News and helped start Junior LULAC. At age 74, Montemayor began painting. Under the name ADMonty, her vibrant works have been widely exhibited.

Toni Morrison (1931-)
Nobel Prize Author
Morrison was the first African American woman to win the Nobel Prize for literature, in 1993. She won the Pulitzer Prize in 1988 for her novel, Beloved. Morrison's lyrical, richly detailed works speak of family, history, and prejudice, making visible the lives of black women in America. Since publishing her first book in 1970, Morrison has written seven novels, two volumes of essays, and a play. She is currently a professor at Princeton University.

Ellen Ochoa (1958-)
Astronaut
Ochoa was the first female Hispanic astronaut who, in 1993, served on a nine-day mission aboard the shuttle Discovery. The astronauts were studying the earth's ozone layer. A pioneer of spacecraft technology, she patented an optical system to detect defects in a repeating pattern. At the NASA Ames Research Center, she led a research group working primarily on optical systems for automated space exploration.

Sandra Day O'Connor (1930-)
Supreme Court Justice
O'Connor became the first woman Supreme Court justice when she was named by President Reagan in 1981. After graduating from Stanford Law School in 1952, O'Connor was an Arizona state senator from 1969 to 1974 where she was the first woman to be majority leader of a state senate. In 1979, she became the first woman on the Arizona Court of Appeals. Her service on the country's highest court has paved a way for more women in the judicial system.

Georgia O'Keeffe (1887–1986)
Artist
Famous for her stunning combination of technique and vision, her brilliant colors and simplicity of form, O'Keeffe ranks as one of our great contemporary American artists. She broke all rules for women artists of her time with the boldness of her paintings. She is best known for her precisely painted, highly stylized studies of southwest desert landscapes and natural objects, flowers, birds, and bones, the "beautiful shapes," she once said, "that I see in my mind."

Graciela Olivarez (1928-)
Lawyer
Olivarez is a former chair of the Mexican-American Legal Defense and Education Fund (MALDEF). Olivarez and Vilma Martinez were the first women on the board. Olivarez worked as a volunteer helping the poor and the physically disadvantaged. President Carter named her Director of Community Services Administrations in 1977. A professor of Law at the University of New Mexico she served as director for the Institute for Social Research and Development.

Kitty O'Neal (1946- )
Stuntwoman
O'Neal is one of the world’s greatest stunt women. She drove a 48,000 horsepower car at 618 miles per hour. She jumped off a 105 foot cliff, has crashed cars, been set on fire, and jumped off a ten- story building. She has performed stunts for TV shows such as Bionic Woman and Gemini Man. In 1970, O'Neal set a world record as the fastest woman on water skis at the speed of 104.85 mph. She was a diver and competed for the US in the 1964 Olympics in Tokyo.

Nina Otero-Warren (1881-)
Educator, Politician, Suffragist
Between 1914 and 1920, Otero-Warren worked for woman suffrage in New Mexico. She became superintendent of public schools in Santa Fe County in 1918. As superintendent, Warren made improvements in rural schools. During WWI, she worked with the Red Cross. In 1921, she ran for the Congress and lost. Otero-Warren was then appointed Inspector of Indian Schools in Santa Fe County in 1923 and was able to improve education for Native Americans.

Essie Parrish (1903-1979)
Kashaya Pomo Doctor
Parrish is believed to be the last of four leaders sent to guide the Kashaya Pomos. She was a religious, spiritual, and political leader of her tribe. She taught in the reservation school for the Pomos because she wanted to teach the children in the Indian language and of their culture. Parrish could also interpret people's dreams.

Alice Paul (1885–1977)
Suffragist, Founder of the Congressional Union
Arrested six times and jailed three times for suffrage demonstrations in England, Paul returned to the United States with radical ideas for the American movement. In 1913, she staged a huge parade in Washington, D.C., and organized pickets at the White House throughout 1917. Paul drafted the Equal Rights Amendment in 1923, and for over fifty years, she led the movement to have the ERA become part of the Constitution.

Frances Perkins (1880–1965)
Government Leader
Secretary of Labor from 1933 through 1945, Frances Perkins was the first woman to hold a cabinet level position. After witnessing the Triangle shirtwaist fire in 1911, where 146 women workers lost their lives, she worked for safety legislation for industrial workers in New York State. As Secretary of Labor, Perkins secured legislation to provide unemployment relief, public works, Social Security, minimum wage and maximum hours and prohibition of child labor.

Esther Peterson (1906-1996)
LaborEducator, Government Official
Throughout her life and in many different areas, Esther Peterson worked to protect the rights of working people. As Assistant Secretary of Labor and Director of the Women's Bureau, she led successful campaigns for equal pay for equal work. She directed the first President's Commission on the Status of Women. In 1993, President Clinton named her a delegate to the UN General Assembly where she continued to advocate for the needs of working Americans.

Mary Pickford (1893-1979)
Actress
Pickford , star of Broadway productions and silent and talking films, was loved as "America's Sweetheart." A very savvy businesswoman, she co-founded United Artists in 1919 with the revolutionary idea of allowing filmmakers to have total artistic control over their films. As co-owner of United Artists, Mary Pickford became a millionaire several times over. In 1928, she won an Academy Award for Coquette. She continued producing films into the 1930s.

Leontyne Price (1927-)
Soprano Opera Diva
An operatic soprano of stunning musical talent, Price began her career in 1952 by singing the lead in Virgil Thomson's Four Saints in Three Acts. She sang Bess in Gershwin's Porgy and Bess in the U.S. and abroad. She was the first black singer to appear in a televised opera when she sang in Puccini’s Tosca, in 1955. Since retiring, Price has written a children’s book, Aida (1990), based on that opera. Her achievements and confidence provide a spirited role model.

"Ma" Rainey (1886-1939)
Blues Singer
Born Gertrude Pridgett in Georgia, "Ma" Rainey was one of the last great minstrel artists and the earliest known black woman blues singer. Rainey began as a singing comedian with her husband in 1904. She attained national stardom in the 1920s through a recording contract. With her rich contralto voice, she recorded at least 92 songs from 1923 to 1928 and has been called "Mother of the Blues." She mentored the young Bessie Smith and influenced many others.

Jeannette Rankin (1880-1973)
Congresswoman, Suffragist, Peace Activist
Rankin began her political work in Montana campaigning for woman suffrage. In 1916, running on a pro-suffrage and anti-war platform, she became the first woman elected to the US Congress. She voted against entering WWI and then worked for improved pay and better conditions for government women. Elected to Congress again in 1940, she voted against entering World War II. In 1967, she led the Jeannette Rankin Brigade in a demonstration against the Vietnam War.

Florence Reece (1900-1986)
Labor Song Writer
In 1931, bloody violence erupted in Harlan County, Kentucky, after coal miners went on strike for decent wages. Reece, wife of one of the coal miners, experienced the violence and was inspired to write the song, Which Side Are You On? Her lyrics expose strike violence as a class struggle. The song has become one of the most famous of the American labor movement.

Sally Ride (1951-)
Astronaut
Ride became the first American woman in space in 1983, serving as mission specialist and flight engineer for the 6-day flight of the Challenger shuttle. Ride made a second flight in 1984, and then left NASA in 1987. With a doctorate in astrophysics, she now directs the California Space Institute at Scripps Institution of Oceanography, researching ways to preserve the earth’s environment by using space technology.

Robin Roberts (1960-)
Athlete, TV Sports Journalist
Star of the Southern Louisiana University Lions basketball team, Roberts was one of three women to score 1,000 career points and 1,000 career rebounds. In 1990 she joined ESPN, covering events including basketball and the Olympic games. Roberts received the 1993 Excellence in Sports Journalism Award for Broadcast Media. She has advised the Women’s Sports Foundation and has received awards for expanding the image of women in broadcast journalism.

Eleanor Roosevelt (1884–1962)
Humanitarian
Although a shy child, Eleanor Roosevelt became one of the greatest humanitarians of the 20th century. During the Roosevelt Administration, she used her position to promote reforms to help women, minorities, and poor people. As the "eyes and ears" for her husband, she provided essential information about Americans' concerns. In 1948, as a delegate to the United Nations, she worked brilliantly to win passage of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

Ernestine Rose (1810-1892)
Suffragist, Reformer
Rose joined Stanton and others in 1840 fighting for passage in New York of the married women's property bill which took 20 years to be passed in full. In 1850, she called for "political, legal, and social equality with man." Her lectures included themes of anti-slavery, temperance and freedom of thought. Anthony wrote that the suffrage movement pioneers "begin with Mary Wollstonecraft—then Frances Wright—then Ernestine L. Rose."

Harilyn Rousso (1946)
Disabled Rights Activist
Harilyn Rousso, a pioneer activist in both disability rights and feminism, whose informed work and extraordinary talent has empowered countless women and girls with disabilities. Her life and work demonstrate that women and men with disabilities can and should lead the lives they choose.

Wilma Rudolph (1940–1994)
Olympic Athlete
In 1960, Rudolph became the first American woman to win three Olympic gold medals for track and field. This feat is even more astounding because she had been crippled by illness and was not able to walk until she was eight years old. She continued breaking records until she retired in 1962. In 1974, she was inducted into the Black Athletes Hall of Fame. To encourage young athletes, she founded the Wilma Rudolph Foundation in 1981.

Sacajawea (1784-1812)
Frontier Guide
Sacajawea was a Shoshone woman sold to a fur trader, Charbonneau, when she was fourteen. Lewis and Clark hired Charbonneau as an interpreter; Sacajawea was a translator and guide. She traveled with her two-month old baby nicknamed "Pomp." She saved the expedition when she met her long-lost brother, a Shoshone, who prevented conflicts with unfriendly tribes. Lewis named a "handsome river" in Montana for Sacajawea, this trusted interpreter.

Buffy Sainte-Marie ( 1941-)
Singer
A Cree Indian, Sainte-Marie has supported Native American rights through her songs. Her intense political songs in the folk style of the 1960’s, like Universal Soldier and Now That the Buffalo's Gone, established her solid reputation as a songwriter and vocalist. Her first album debuted in 1964, and her latest in 1991. Sainte-Marie has written over 300 songs which have been recorded by her and more than 100 artists in seven languages.

Margaret Sanger (1879–1966)
Nurse, Birth Control Advocate
As a public health nurse in New York, Sanger anguished over the dismal lives of women burdened with unwanted pregnancies. In 1914, she began work to legalize birth control. In 1916, she opened the first family-planning clinic. In 1921, she founded the American Birth Control League, which became the Planned Parenthood Federation of America in 1942. Sanger overcame government opposition, legal battles, voluntary exile, and a jail sentence to aid women.

Rose Schneiderman (1882–1972)
Union Organizer
A Russian-Jewish immigrant working in New York’s garment industry, Schneiderman organized workers for the Women's Trade Union League in 1908 and became its president in 1928, a position she held for 20 years. She was an ardent suffragist, and ran for the U.S. Senate in 1920 on a campaign of better working conditions. She served on the Labor Advisory Board of Roosevelt's NRA for two years, and was a founding member of the ACLU.

Tye Leung Schulze (1888–1972)
Interpreter
Schulze was the federal government’s first Chinese American civil servant. In 1910, she worked as an interpreter at the Angel Island Detention Center where Chinese immigrants were held until their immigration papers were approved. In 1912, 21-year-old Leung became the first Chinese-American woman to vote. When she married a Caucasian, she and her husband lost their jobs because of California's miscegenation laws forbidding mixed marriages.

Leslie Marmon Silko (1948-)
Author, Poet
Silko, raised on the Laguna Pueblo Indian Reservation, listened to the traditional stories told by her great-grandmother. These tales later informed her poetry and novels. Her first book of poems, Laguna Woman, published in 1974, was followed in 1982 by Storyteller, a book of poetry and photographs. Silko's novel, Ceremony, in 1977 received critical acclaim. In 1991 her book, Almanac of the Dead, condemned the exploitation of native Americans.

Beverly Sills (1929-)
Coloratura Opera Diva
Sills was a child prodigy, a radio star at age 7. She made her operatic debut in 1946 at the Philadelphia Civic Opera and her debut at the Metropolitan Opera in 1975 where she sang in 46 performances in the next 5 years. She has served as chairwoman of the Lincoln Center for Performing Arts. Sills served as national chair of the March of Dimes' Mothers' March on Birth Defects for 10 years. In 1998, Sills received the MS Hope Award for her work with the National Multiple Sclerosis Society.

Lillian Smith (1897-1966)
Author
Smith published the first southern journal which included black and white authors. Her first novel, Strange Fruit, dealt with interracial love. Banned in Massachusetts, a ban by the U.S. Post Office was quickly stopped by Eleanor Roosevelt in 1944. Other novels dealt with the moral effects of segregation and the hysteria accompanying the McCarthy charges of the 1950s. Smith was on the board of CORE for many years and inspired many black leaders.

Margaret Chase Smith (1897-1995)
Senator
Smith served as a Maine congresswoman from 1940 to 1948 where she supported the Lend-Lease agreement with Britain and the Women's Armed Services Integration Act. From 1948 to 1973, Smith served in the Senate. In 1950, she was the first Senator to challenge the smear tactics of Senator McCarthy in her senate floor speech, "A Declaration of Conscience." In 1964, she sought the Republican nomination for president and received 27 votes at the convention.

Elizabeth Cady Stanton (1815-1902)
Women’s Rights Activist
Stanton spearheaded the demand for equal rights for women. In 1848, she and 4 friends organized the historic women's rights convention in Seneca Falls where Stanton made gaining suffrage, ownership of property, and guardianship of children some of the rights for women. Stanton and Anthony formed the National Woman Suffrage Association in 1869; Stanton served as its president for 21 years. She was an eloquent speaker for her ideas and a forceful writer.

Gertrude Stein (1874-1946)
Writer
Stein’s first book was Three Lives (1909) about three working class women. In 1914, she wrote Tender Buttons, which was influenced by cubism. Stein wrote an opera, Four Saints in Three Acts, in 1934; Virgil Thompson wrote the music for it. Stein wrote about the soldiers during the German occupation of France in Brewsie and Willie in 1946. Stein remained in France during WWII and wrote a book of her experiences, Wars I have Seen.

Gloria Steinem (1934-)
Women Rights Activist, Writer
Steinem graduated from Smith College in 1956. She received a fellowship to study in India where she saw the oppression of women and the power of non-violent protests. Her insights resulted in a book, A Thousand Indias, written for the Indian government in 1957 but never published. In 1972, she co-founded MS magazine. A collection of Steinem’s essays and articles, Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions, was published in 1983.

Lucy Stone (1818-1893)
Abolitionist, Women's Rights Activist, Suffragist
Lucy Stone was a noted speaker for abolitionism and women's rights. For several years, she lectured wearing the Bloomer costume. In 1852, she led the call for the first national woman’s rights convention held in Worcester, Ma

  

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ScandalousWoman
Member since Nov 19th 2002
25416 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 12:05 PM

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33. "audre lorde (quotes)"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

"I do not want to be tolerated nor misnamed. I want to be recognized."

"When I dare to be powerful - to use my strength in the service of my vision, then it becomes less and less important whether I am afraid."

"The erotic is a measure between our sense of self and the chaos of our strongest feelings."

"I have come to learn that that which is most important to me must be spoken."

*******************
YEEEEEEEE-HAAAAAAAWWWWWW

***********************
wouldn't you love to love me?

  

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DVActivist
Member since Oct 19th 2004
20915 posts
Wed Mar-02-05 07:34 AM

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54. "i love her soooooooooo much i am naming my first"
In response to Reply # 33


  

          

born daughter after her- should i be blessed with one

**********************************************

When they discover the center of the universe, a lot of people will be disappointed to discover they are not it.
- Bernard Bailey

  

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BooDaah
Charter member
32690 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 12:07 PM

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34. "Resources and Tools"
In response to Reply # 0


          

NWHP (http://www.nwhp.org/tlp/main/main.html)

The National Women’s History Project Learning Place is a great source of information on Women’s History Month activities as well as a source for women’s museums and organizations by state, a history quiz and a list of additional women’s history Internet links

Gale Group (http://www.galegroup.com/free_resources/whm/index.htm)

Some of the free information that you can obtain from this site includes a very comprehensive list of biographies on important women in history, a comprehensive historical timeline of events, book suggestions, an interactive quiz and a list of additional links.

The National Women’s Health Information Center (http://www.4woman.gov/)

Presented by the U.S. Department of Heath and Human Services, NWHIC provides ample women’s related medical information, additional resources including medical articles, medical statistics, links to additional medical sources as well as and a comprehensive list of both past and present women related health legislation.

  

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kisszion
Charter member
23173 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 12:16 PM

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35. "Edmonia Lewis"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

Edmonia Lewis (1843-1911) was one of America's pre-eminent sculptors during Reconstruction, and her neoclassical masterpiece "The Death of Cleopatra" was exhibited at the Philadelphia Centennial of 1876. It survives to this day only because a racetrack owner bought it to use as a tombstone for one of his favorite steeds.

In 1972, a fireman, taken by its beauty as it stood in a machine yard in a Chicago suburb covered with grime, lobbied for its restoration. Finally, in 1987, more than a century after its creation, conservators discovered it was Lewis' lost "Cleopatra." Black women artists, argues Lisa Farrington in her new book, "Creating Their Own Image,'' have never had it easy, and they are still struggling for acknowledgement and representation.

"Creating Their Own Image" is the first comprehensive history of African American women artists. Farrington, who is the author of "Art on Fire: The Politics of Race & Sex in the Paintings of Faith Ringgold," finds it "unpardonable" that such a history has not been written sooner. Historical surveys can be tedious and stodgy, but Farrington's personal engagement in her subject matter and her emotional investment in the politics of race, gender and personal expression make "Creating Their Own Image" an exciting -- and disturbing -- read.

Farrington begins by examining Western images of blackness, beginning with the ancient Greeks. Art through the Renaissance is filled with positive portrayals of Africans. As the slave trade developed in the 1500s, so did negative stereotypes of Africans. The Western imagination began to typecast African American women as "both sexually attractive and physically repulsive .. . as either naïve and childlike primitives or dangerous and cunning shrews." For the remainder of the book, Farrington creates a compelling narrative of women artists, despite every imaginable obstacle, redefining these images and, ultimately, demanding acceptance on their own terms.

The narrative proper begins during the Middle Passage with the emergence of slave art, including domestic-oriented work such as quilts, dolls and textiles, as well as gardens and burial sites. Farrington then leads us through the splendors of black women's art during the Reconstruction, the post- Reconstruction backlash, a new flowering during the Harlem Renaissance and the WPA, what she views as the setback of Abstract Expressionism, and black women artists' love-hate relationships to the Black Power and feminist movements. The second half of the book is devoted to contemporary art, covering abstraction, conceptualism, outsider art, postmodernism and post-Black art.

This is a huge amount of material, and while a certain amount of reductiveness is inherent in the textbook form, Farrington manages to convey the complexities of her subjects' lives and cultural contexts. Thus, despite her positioning of Abstract Expressionism as an apolitical monster that destroys the careers of politically engaged social realist artists, Farrington is respectful of black women formalists, exposing as racist the assumption "that art made by African Americans must inherently be the art of social protest."

Repeatedly Farrington warns that the very institutions that support black artists can also threaten their self-expression. During the Harlem Renaissance the Harmon Foundation, which widely promoted African American art, had a strong aesthetic position, encouraging work that portrayed "supposed black traits" such as strength, rhythm, optimism and simplicity. At the same time, white patrons of African American art sought a "cliched black 'primitivism.' " African American artists "had to walk a fine line" between these expectations and "imagery that expressed their own individuality."

Farrington is also critical of the outsider art phenomenon, in which she sees a patronizing childlikeness projected onto artists who have developed outside the art establishment. "Fundamental to the art world's perception of vernacular artists is the notion of modern 'tourism,' which allows people of different cultural origins to cross over into one another's arenas and experience the Other, whose difference from their own actuality promises delight and amusement." Farrington goes on to examine the sophistication and originality of a handful of female vernacular artists, including Clementine Hunter and Nellie Mae Rowe.

Farrington, who teaches art history at Parsons School of Design in New York, assumes the reader of "Creating Their Own Image" has little knowledge of black history, American history or art history. Without apology, she begins her discussion of the Harlem Renaissance by explaining what Harlem is ("a small section of uptown Manhattan") and tracing the sociology of black migration to Harlem. Throughout her large-format book, Farrington is generously accessible without talking down to the reader. She sums up the tenets of conceptual art in two succinct yet meaty paragraphs. She discusses Carrie Mae Weems in terms of French literary theorist Roland Barthes' essay "Rhetoric of Images." To analyze Adrian Piper's performances, she summons Kant.

Lavishly illustrated, exhaustively researched, "Creating Their Own Image" is a magnificent achievement. Since Sept. 11, many writers and artists have been soul-searching, questioning what it means to make art amidst today's frightening politics. Farrington makes a convincing argument that art cannot - - and should not -- be stripped from its political and cultural contexts.

Dodie Bellamy's novel "The Letters of Mina Harker" has recently been rereleased by the University of Wisconsin Press.



:::::::

"And the more you hit something hard, the more hardened it becomes--the stronger it becomes. And that's what's happened: I'm resilient." - Michael Jackson

:::
http://sweetcreams.tumblr.com/

  

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BooDaah
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Tue Mar-01-05 12:17 PM

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36. "Did you know?"
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Did You Know?

- There were 147.8 million females in the United States as of July 1, 2003. That exceeds the number of males (143.0 million). Males outnumber females in every five-year-age group through the 35 to 39 age group. Starting with the 40 to 44 age group, women outnumber men. At 85 and over, there are more than twice as many women as men.

- There were 215,243 active duty women in the military, compared to 1,219,134 men, in 2003. Of that total, 34,796 women are officers, 178,428 are enlisted and 2,019 are enrolled in military academies.

- The median annual earnings of women ages 15 and older who work full time, year-round is $30,724. After adjusting for inflation, earnings for these women declined by 0.6 percent between 2002 and 2003 — their first annual decline since 1995.

- The estimated work-life earnings of women with a professional degree (i.e., medical, law, dental or veterinarian) who work full time, year-round is $2.9 million. For women, like men, more education means higher career earnings. It is estimated that women without a high school diploma would earn $700,000 during their work lives, increasing to $1 million if they had a high school diploma and $1.6 million if they had a bachelor’s degree.

- The amount women, who worked full time, year-round, earned 76 cents for every $1 their male counterparts earned. This amount is down from 77 cents for every dollar in 2002.

- Thirty-one Percent of women ages 25 to 29 years attained a bachelor’s degree or higher in 2003, which exceeded that of men in this age range (26 percent). Eighty-eight percent of young women and 85 percent of young men had completed high school. The last year young women and men had equal rates of high school and college attainment was 1995.

- The estimated number of mothers of all ages in the United States is 82.5 million.

- Forty-four percent of all women of childbearing age (15 to 44 years old) are childless. Seventy-one percent of these childless women participated in the labor force.

- Eight-five percent of women age 25 and over have completed high school. For the second year in a row, women have had a higher rate of high school completion than men (84 percent).

- There are 62.9 million married women (including those who are separated or have an absent spouse). There are 53.5 million unmarried (widowed, divorced or never married) women.

Data courtesy of the U.S. Census Bureau

  

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Trace
Member since Sep 16th 2002
37108 posts
Thu Mar-03-05 05:32 AM

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70. "i wldnt have guessed this"
In response to Reply # 36


  

          

>- Forty-four percent of all women of childbearing age (15 to 44 years old) are childless. Seventy-one percent of these childless women participated in the labor force.

ida guessed the percentage wld be lower for some reason
seem like erbody & they mama got kids.

..well of course they mamas got kids.

i be lyin sometimes, tho.

____________________
natural hair tshirts & tote bags!
http://brokeymcpoverty.bigcartel.com


http://brokeymcpoverty.com
http://splackavelliecentral.wordpress.com
http://aboutmygranny.tumblr.com
http://naturalhairproblems.com

  

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BooDaah
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Tue Mar-01-05 12:21 PM

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37. "Timeline"
In response to Reply # 0


          

(US-centric btw)

1777 Abigail Smith Adams, wife of the second president (John Adams) and mother of the sixth president (JohnQuincy Adams) writes that women "will not hold ourselves bound by any laws which we have no voice."

1784 Hannah Adams is first American woman to support herself by writing.

1819 Emma Hart Willard writes her "Plan for Improving Female Education," which although unsuccessful, defines the issue of women's education at that time.

1826 The first public high schools for girls open in New York and Boston.

1828 Former slave, abolitionist, and feminist Isabella van Wagener is freed and takes the name Sojourner Truth. She begins to preach against slavery throughout New York and New England.

1833 Oberlin College in Ohio, is the first co-educational college in the U.S.

1838 Mount Holyoke College is established in Massachussetts as first college for women.

1840 Elizabeth Cady Stanton, feminist, dress reformer, and editor, omits the word "obey" from her marriage vows.

1840 Lucretia Mott is one of several women delegates to attend the World's Anti-Slavery Convention in London. As a woman, she is forced to sit in the gallery and cannot participate.

1848 The first Women's Rights Convention is held in Seneca Falls, NY.

1849 Elizabeth Blackwell becomes the first woman to receive a medical degree in U.S.
Women doctors are permitted to legally practice medicine for the first time.

1850 Women are granted the right to own land in a state (Oregon).
The Female (later Women's) Medical College is founded in Pennsylvania.

1852 Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Stanton form the Women's NY Temperance Society.

1860-65 American Civil War

1866 The American Equal Rights Association is founded by Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Stanton, Martha Coffin Pelham Wright, and Ernestine Rose.

1868 The 14th Amendment denying women the right to vote is ratified.
Women lawyers are licensed in U.S.

1869 The National Woman Suffrage Association (NWSA) and the American Woman Suffrage Association (AWSA) are formed.

1870 The 15th Amendment enfranchising black men is ratified.

1872 Susan B. Anthony is arrested for attempting to vote.

1874 The Women's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) is founded.

1878 For the first time, a Women's Suffrage Amendment is introduced to Congress.

1890 Wyoming is first state to allow women to vote.
The NWSA and the AWSA reunite to form the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA).
Women begin to wear knickerbockers instead of skirts for bicycle riding.

1903 The Women's Trade Union Leage of New York is formed to unionize working women. This group later becomes the nucleus for the International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union (ILGWU).

1913 5,000 suffragists march in Washington, D.C. for the women's rights movement.

1915 A petition with 500,000 signatures in support of women's suffrage amendment is given to President Woodrow Wilson.

1920 The 19th Amendment is ratified, allowing women the right to vote in federal elections.

1923 Alice Paul and the National Women's Party first proposes the Equal Rights Amendment to eliminate discrimination on the basis of sex. It has never been ratified.

1934 Florence Ellinwood Allen becomes first woman on US Court of Appeals.

1939-45 World War II

1961 Eleanor Roosevelt is appointed to chair the Commission on the Status of Women.

1966 The National Organization for Women (NOW) is founded by Betty Goldstein Friedan.

1970 50,000 people march in New York City for the first Women's Strike for Equality.

1971 U.S. Supreme Court rule ends sex discrimination in hiring.

1972 U.S. Congress passes the Equal Employment Opportunity Act.
Equal Rights Amendment passes Congress but fails to be ratified.

1975 Ella Grasso is first woman Governor (CT) to be re-elected.

1977 3,000 women march in Washington, D.C. on Women's Equality Day to support the E.R.A.

1981 Sandra Day O'Connor becomes first woman appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court.

1995 Lt. Col. Eileen Collins becomes the first American woman to pilot a Space Shuttle.

1997 Madeleine K. Albright becomes first woman U.S. Secretary of State.

2000 Hillary Rodham Clinton becomes the only First Lady ever elected to the United States Senate.

2005 Condoleezza Rice becomes the first African-American woman to be appointed Secretary of State.

  

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ScandalousWoman
Member since Nov 19th 2002
25416 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 12:22 PM

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38. "adrienne rich (quote)"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

False history gets made all day, any day,
the truth of the new is never on the news.

*******************
YEEEEEEEE-HAAAAAAAWWWWWW

***********************
wouldn't you love to love me?

  

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Trace
Member since Sep 16th 2002
37108 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 02:43 PM

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42. "i loooove love love adrianne rich"
In response to Reply # 38


  

          

that's a great quote

i be lyin sometimes, tho.

____________________
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http://brokeymcpoverty.bigcartel.com


http://brokeymcpoverty.com
http://splackavelliecentral.wordpress.com
http://aboutmygranny.tumblr.com
http://naturalhairproblems.com

  

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BooDaah
Charter member
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Tue Mar-01-05 12:25 PM

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39. "Women Leaders/Rulers (world history perspective)"
In response to Reply # 0


          

Hatshepsut
Queen of Egypt, 15th century B.C.
Hatshepsut was a powerful political person in Egypt even before she assumed the title of Pharaoh. She had a peaceful reign promoting trade and the arts. Her beautiful temple at Deir el-Bahri still stands west of Thebes.
(Hatshepsut is featured in our resource, The Bird of Destiny)

Nefertiti
Queen of Egypt, 14th Century B.C.
Nefertiti was the powerful wife of Akhenaton, who worshiped a new religion honoring only one God, Aten. She later rejected this religion, backing her half-brother who re-established the old worship of the sun-god Amon. Her beauty was immortalized in exquisite sculptures made at the time.

Sammuramat
Assyrian Queen, 9th Century B.C.
Sammuramat is the subject of many myths about her reign as both the wife and mother of kings. She apparently accompanied her husband into battle, greatly expanded Babylonia's control over far-flung territories, irrigated the flatlands between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, and restored the fading beauty of her capital, Babylon. (See our catalog for the resource Women in the Ancient Near East)

Cleopatra
Queen of Egypt, 69-30 B.C.
Cleopatra was the ambitious last ruler of the Macedonian Dynasty of Ancient Egypt. In her struggles to win the crown and keep her country free, she sought the support of Julius Caesar, bearing him a son. For a time she lived in Rome. Later, she won the protection of Rome through an affair with Mark Anthony, and had three children with him. Financing his failing military campaigns, both she and Anthony were defeated in a battle against Octavian in 31 B.C. A lesser known fact is that Cleopatra was highly educated and possessed an impressive intellect, being a student of philosophy and international relations.

Eleanor of Aquitaine
Queen of England and of France, 1122-1202
Eleanor was one of the most influential figures of the 12th century. Married at age fifteen to Louis VII of France, she later divorced him to marry Henry II, the future King of England. She bore Henry eight children, two of them future kings of England. Throughout her life she maintained control over her extensive lands in Southern France, and cleverly managed the lives of her children and grandchildren. For much more, see our Web biography, Eleanor of Aquitaine.

Joan of Arc
Leader of the French Army, 1412-1431
Born into a peasant family, Joan became a French heroine by leading the army of Charles VII against the English and raising their siege of Orleans. Captured by the Burgundians, and ransomed by the English, she was put on trial on charges of witchcraft and fraud. She eventually was convicted only of wearing male clothes, an offense against the Church, and was burned at the stake. Her legend grew and she became canonized in 1920.

Isabella I of Castile
Queen of Spain, 1451-1504
When Isabella married Ferdinand of Aragon in 1469, both she and her husband became joint rulers of the whole of Spain. They governed independently, however, and Isabella initiated a program of reform which reduced the power of her rebellious nobles, streamlined her government, and encouraged scholarship. Intensely religious, she helped establish the Inquisition in Andalusia, which led to the expulsion from Spain of over 170,000 Jews. With Ferdinand, she conquered Granada, the remaining territory of the Moors. Eventually, they too were expelled from Spain.

Catherine de Medici
Queen of France, 1519-1589
Catherine de Medici was a born into the influential Medici family of Florence, Italy. In 1533 she was given in a political marriage to Henri, Duke of Orleans, who became the French King in 1547. As queen she was very influential in bringing aspects of Italian culture to France, such as their theater and food. After her husband's death, she gained political power as regent for her sons (she had ten children). An ambitious woman, she actively involved herself in the political intrigues of the court, always trying to increase royal power. At first Catherine tried to reconcile France's opposing Catholic and Protestant factions as their violent disputes threatened national unity. But with the massacre in 1570 of Protestants (the massacre of St Bartholomew), this peace was shattered, and Catherine was blamed for allowing it to happen.

Mary Queen of Scots
1542-1587
Mary led an eventful and troubling life. She became Queen of Scotland when she was just six days old. At age five she was sent to France to be brought up in the French court, and eventually married King Francis II, who died the next year. A widow, Mary returned to Scotland where a series of politically unwise love affairs and her continued adherence to Catholicism in a Protestant country led to trouble and a revolt against her. Forced to flee to England for refuge, she now faced the fears of Queen Elizabeth I who saw her as a rival to her throne. Elizabeth kept Mary under a form of imprisonment for the next 19 years. Watched closely, she was implicated in a series of conspiracies against Queen Elizabeth, and was executed.

Elizabeth I
Queen of England, 1533-1603
With a childhood full of political intrigue, it was assumed that Elizabeth would never become queen. But she did, and as queen managed for a time to quiet her Catholic population with acts of tolerance, promote government reforms, strengthen the currency, and forward the growth of a capitalist economy. Highly educated, she also turned her court into a great center of learning. Elizabeth's foreign relations were uneasy. Always pressured to marry to form political alliances, she diplomatically seemed to consider it, but in the end always refused. Her greatest success was the defeat of the invading Spanish Armada in 1588 in the waters off England's west coast. Her greatest failures were the suppression of uprisings in Ireland and her long wars. During Elizabeth's colorful 45 year reign, England became a strong European power, a vibrant commercial force, and an place of intellectual accomplishment. The "Elizabethan age" rightly was one of England's most fascinating eras.

Amina
Nigerian Queen, 1560-1610
Queen Amina headed the northern Nigerian Hausa city-state of Zaria. It is thought that perhaps the Hausa were matrilineal people at that time since having a woman as queen was not all that rare. A great military leader, Amina brought most of the other Hausaland city-states into her orbit, and is credited with encouraging them to surround themselves with huge defensive mud walls. She also opened up trade routes to the south, enriching Zaria's economy with gold, slaves and cola nuts.


Mbande Nzinga
Angolan Queen, 1582-1663
Nzinga (or Jinga) was the colorful queen of the Ndongo and Matamba kingdoms. She is honored for her resistance against the Portuguese who were increasingly occupying all of what is now known as Angola. Constantly driven east by the Portuguese, Nzinga organized a powerful guerrilla army, conquered the Matamba, and developed alliances to control the slave routes. She even allied with the Dutch, who helped her stop the Portuguese advancement. After a series of decisive setbacks, Nzinga negotiated a peace treaty with the Portuguese, but still refused to pay tribute to the Portuguese king. (Nzinga is featured in our resource: I Will Not Bow My Head: Political Women in World History)

Catherine the Great
Empress of Russia. 1729-1796
Ambitious and intelligent, Catherine arrived in Russia from Germany in 1744 to marry the 16 year old Grand Duke Peter. His unpopularity allowed her to depose him, orchestrate his death, and proclaim herself sole ruler of Russia. Considering herself a ruler in line with enlightenment ideas, she supported progressive ideas, such as reforms in law, education, and provincial and municipal administration. But she ruled as an autocrat and suppressed Polish nationalists, which led to Poland's partition, and took the Crimea and parts of the Black Sea coast from Turkey.

Victoria
Queen of England, 1819-1901
Queen Victoria's reign was the longest in English history. Called the Victorian age, it was a time when Britain was at the height of its colonial power. Victoria became a symbol of British expansionist foreign policy. She insisted on taking an active part in the decisions of the government, and forcefully backed those ministers she liked. She herself was most proud of her role as wife and mother - she had nine children. After the death of her beloved husband Prince Albert, she went into a period of deep depression, dropping out of public view for three years. Her popularity increased in her late years, particularly during time of national celebrations, like the Jubilees of 1887 and 1897.

Tzu-hsi
Empress of China, 1835-1908
Although only a low-ranking concubine of the Emperor Hs'en Feng, Tzu-hsi rose in status when she bore his only son. At his death, and her son's succession, every decree had to be approved by her. Called the Dowager Empress, she exerted herself into state affairs and refused to give up her regency even when her son came of age. In effect she had the power of a ruler. Tzu-hsi's rule was imperious. She used state funds to build herself a palace and sold posts and promotions. Such acts were resented by some, particularly after the Chinese were defeated by the Japanese in the 1890s. Under Tzu-hsi's reign, the Western powers forcefully increased their presence in China. After the suppression of the anti-West Boxer Rebellion, Tzu-hsi began a policy of appeasement, allowing reforms and the modernization of the government.

Liliuokalani
Last Monarch of Hawaii, 1838-1917
Queen Liliuokalani's reign was short and stormy. Upon inheriting the throne, she had to deal with an economically depressed economy and a constitution forced on the Hawaiians by the United States, which left the monarchy of Hawaii powerless. Liliuokalani was determined to free Hawaii from overseas control. Her push for a new constitution, led to a confrontation between the Queen and the Americans. Liliuokalani was deposed and a provisional government set up. The Queen was made a prisoner on charges that she encouraged an uprising, one that never really took place.

Golda Meir
Prime Minister of Israel, 1898-1978
Golda Meir was born in the Ukraine and lived for awhile in the United States. She emigrated to Israel in 1921. Her work within the Labor movement led her to achieve high political positions, including diplomatic missions abroad. When Israel became a state, she was elected to the Knesset (parliament), and, in turn, became Minister of Labor and Minister of Foreign Affairs - the only woman in the Labor administration. In 1969, she was elected Prime Minister, a political feat for an Israeli woman at that time. She was a powerful, tough leader, but her defense policy was criticized after Israel seemed unprepared in the 1973 Yom Kippur War. Golda retired from active political life when the Labor Party fell from power as a consequence of that war.

Indira Gandhi
Prime Minister of India, 1917-1984
As daughter of Jawaharlal Nehru, India's first prime minister, politics was always a part of Indira Gandhi's world. She joined her father's Congress Party in 1938 and was jailed for awhile by the British for her support of India's independence from Great Britain. After her father's death, she was elected to Parliament in his place, becoming Prime Minister herself in 1966. She continued many of her father's policies, such as pressing for land reform and the nationalization of banks. But India endured great economic troubles during her watch. There were riots after which she declared Emergency Rule. Political opponents were jailed and the press censored. In 1977 she lost her an election and even faced charges of corruption. Expelled from Parliament, briefly jailed, she reorganized her party and won re-election as Prime Minister in 1980. In 1984 she met a brutal death at the hands of Sikh assassins in retaliation for her forceful actions to halt disturbances in a sacred Sikh temple.

Margaret Thatcher
Prime Minister of England, b. 1925
Margaret Thatcher was Britain's first female prime minister, and first British prime minister in the twentieth century to win three consecutive terms. A lawyer, Margaret first entered Parliament in 1959, eventually serving in a variety of ministerial posts. In 1974 she was elected leader of the Conservative Party, and brought her party to victory in 1979. Espousing conservative ideals of based on free enterprise, she advocated public spending cuts, limited money supply, and raised interest rates. Her privatization programs led to union opposition, labor unrest, and high unemployment rates. She earned the nickname "The Iron Lady" because of her hard line against the USSR over their invasion of Afghanistan, and because when Argentina challenged Britain's right to the Falkland Islands, she went to war. In 1990 she resigned as prime minister, although she stayed in Parliament until 1992.

  

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loveandhappenis
Member since Aug 18th 2003
1331 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 12:34 PM

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40. "how long till we get some infighting in here?"
In response to Reply # 0


          

Personally? I respect and appreciate women's history, despite what y'all might think.

No matter what this post is about, jack it, and reply to me with your vote on the name of the sex position found here:

http://www.nsgalleries.com/hosted1/ns/gals/taylor-rain4/011.jpg

-The Million Dollar Dream
-Ice Cream Scoop
-The Spiderman
-Reverse cowgirl anal with a full nelson twist
-the McGyver
-42nd Street Situps

loveandhappenis

  

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Ason
Member since Dec 27th 2002
30506 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 01:24 PM

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41. "I fully support this post"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

You've come a long way, baby.

--------------------------------------

http://www.yvonneridley.org/multimedia.php
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
250 troops lead by Custer were defeated by the Dakota, they are Sioux Indians.

  

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fire
Charter member
111370 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 04:17 PM

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43. "Eve of Eden was the first woman to get her period"
In response to Reply # 0


          

consequently, all other women w/wombs have had to suffer her same plight.

thanks eve.

________________________________________
who gonna check me boo?!

www.twitter.com/firefire100
http://instagram.com/firefire100
www.philadelphiaeagles.com

  

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Ason
Member since Dec 27th 2002
30506 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 08:06 PM

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45. "thats some crazy sexist religion do u really believe that?"
In response to Reply # 43


  

          

we don't have orginal sin in Islam
much less blame it on women.

Having a period is a function of a body getting itself ready to get pregnant. Women have periods more frequently oday than they did in the past because of their diet and lifestyle.

--------------------------------------

http://www.yvonneridley.org/multimedia.php
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
250 troops lead by Custer were defeated by the Dakota, they are Sioux Indians.

  

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fire
Charter member
111370 posts
Wed Mar-02-05 05:17 AM

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52. "Ason the Okayplayer attempts to not get the joke AND"
In response to Reply # 45


          

not contribute one fact to the Women's History Month post.

________________________________________
who gonna check me boo?!

www.twitter.com/firefire100
http://instagram.com/firefire100
www.philadelphiaeagles.com

  

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Ason
Member since Dec 27th 2002
30506 posts
Wed Mar-02-05 11:26 AM

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63. "when women live or work together their periods synch"
In response to Reply # 52


  

          

there thats a fact.

happy Womyns Month

--------------------------------------

http://www.yvonneridley.org/multimedia.php
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
250 troops lead by Custer were defeated by the Dakota, they are Sioux Indians.

  

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Whateva
Member since Jul 07th 2003
4637 posts
Tue Mar-01-05 06:29 PM

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44. "Shouldn't it be Women's herstory month?"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

BWAHAHA!!!



That's all.

***************************************
"Science" and Religion are the two most dangerous weapons of ideology. See holocaust.

Why do "scientists" constantly produce statistics based on "race", a social construct?

  

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MrHotep
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3540 posts
Wed Mar-02-05 12:49 AM

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47. "'"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          


~~~~~

  

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Trace
Member since Sep 16th 2002
37108 posts
Wed Mar-02-05 03:52 AM

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49. "Today in Women's History - March 2nd"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

1803: born

1831: born

1861: born

1866: born

1873: born

1895: died

1949: died


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DVActivist
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57. "pssssssssssst"
In response to Reply # 49


  

          

lucy whiteheads link is wrong

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- Bernard Bailey

  

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Trace
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50. "my hometown hero(ine) - Anne Braden"
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this is my favorite whitefolks (aside from Tim Wise). Anne Braden was born in my homecity of Louisville but grew up in Alabama. She's like a million yrs old or something now, but she's back in Louisville & still fighting for civil rights. It began early & she did some pretty radical stuff--she and a small group of other white women, for example, were very vocally opposed to the lynching of black men and demonstrated in Alabama, of all places. Pretty big seeing as how they were the ones lynching was supposed to 'protect.'

Ive had a chance to hear her speak and speak with her a couple times; a the wife of a professor @ school wrote a about her life (forwarded by none other than Angela Freakin Davis, might I add). She's got a wonderful personality and its so interesting b/c she's heralded as such a major figure in women's history but thinks the women's movement & feminism are somewhat obselete.

more .

see how that proper punctuation & capitalization just seemed to come from nowhere? felt like i was writing a term paper. lol

i be lyin sometimes, tho.

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Mindstorm
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Wed Mar-02-05 04:56 AM

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51. "March 2"
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"Mother of March Day" in Bulgaria, Women do not work or the Goddess will send storms. I wish...

-----------------------------
"Since it is art that translates civilization from one generation to the next, "art" is a quality-of-life need that cannot be disputed."

  

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DVActivist
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56. "I know thats right"
In response to Reply # 51


  

          

Mothers Day we should get off of work- all mothers anyway or mommies-to-be

**********************************************

When they discover the center of the universe, a lot of people will be disappointed to discover they are not it.
- Bernard Bailey

  

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MC Rucifee at work
Member since Jan 11th 2005
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53. "Great Article about Women's pay (swipe)"
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http://nytimes.com/2005/02/27/business/yourmoney/27lunch.html

AT LUNCH WITH WARREN FARRELL
Are Women Responsible for Their Own Low Pay?
By CLAUDIA H. DEUTSCH
Do you think that Lawrence H. Summers, Harvard's president, stirred up a hornets' nest by suggesting that women's brains are not genetically wired for math or science? Wait until you hear Warren Farrell on the subject of women's pay.

Sure, Dr. Farrell accepts that women, as a group, are paid less than men. But the way he sees it, using pay statistics to prove sex discrimination is akin to using the horizon to prove that the world is flat.

Women, he believes, methodically engineer their own paltry pay. They choose psychically fulfilling jobs, like librarian or art historian, that attract enough applicants for the law of supply and demand to kick in and depress pay. They avoid well-paid but presumably risky work - hence, the paucity of women flying planes. And they tend to put in fewer hours than men - no small point, he says, because people who work 44 hours a week make almost twice as much as those who work 34 and are more likely to be promoted.

In fact, Dr. Farrell points to subgroups - male and female college professors who have never married, or men and women in part-time jobs - in which women average higher pay than their male counterparts. "Control for all these things, and the women make as much, or more," said Dr. Farrell, 61, whose new book on the shaky myths of pay disparity, "Why Men Earn More: The Startling Truth Behind the Pay Gap - and What Women Can Do About It" (Amacom), arrived in bookstores in January. "Let's face it: men do a lot of things in the workplace that women just don't do."

Ready to brand him a sexist? Wait, there's more. Dr. Farrell says he thinks that the whole debate over gender-linked skills is superfluous. "Men may well be hard-wired to be better at math, and women to excel at verbal skills, but so what?" he asked. He said the human ability to adapt to circumstances and limitations was equally hard-wired, and that fascination with a field could easily trump innate abilities.

It's pretty subversive stuff. But then, Dr. Farrell - the doctorate is in political science, "but I walk and talk like a psychologist," he said - is accustomed to flouting convention. In the early 1970's, when the idea of equality for women still had novelty status, he served on the board of the New York chapter of the National Organization for Women. In 2003, by then living in San Diego, he unsuccessfully sought the Democratic nomination for governor of California on a platform promoting legislation to force courts to grant divorced fathers equal time with their children. He has a lucrative business as an expert witness in custody cases, and in speaking and consulting on fatherhood issues. (He has no children, but he has served as a stepdad to several.)

When a book tour took him to Manhattan recently, he had lunch with a reporter at Eleven Madison Park, on Madison Avenue at East 24th Street, to elaborate on why, as he phrases it, women should stop trying to play off "victim power" and start wielding their true earning power.

"Companies like I.B.M. have offered women scholarships to study engineering for years, and women engineers routinely get higher starting salaries than men," he said.

Noting that his current and former wives, businesswomen both, make more than he does, he added: "Men have not stacked the decks against women."

Even as a child, Warren Farrell had little patience for the gender roles mandated by society. His family was conventional enough: a New Jersey suburban home, three children (he was the oldest), an accountant father who was definitely the primary earner.

But the young Warren refused to be pigeonholed by anyone's view of proper behavior for a boy. In seventh grade, he entered - and won - a beauty contest for boys. "I was elected class prince," he recalled with a still-proud laugh. In eighth grade, he was tagged as a math whiz, but he found math too boring to pursue. Although he was tall and athletic, he hated fighting, so, of course, he attracted the taunting of the local bullies in high school. He finally fought one. He won, and the bully clique respected him after that.

"It made me sad - winning a wrestling match is such a stupid reason to respect someone," he said.

Dr. Farrell always suspected that women tended to undermine themselves. One day, while he was teaching urban politics at Rutgers, he attended a convention at which one attendee, an attractive young woman, wanted to make a point but was beset with stage fright. "I encouraged her to speak up, and when she did, she blew everyone away," he said. She and Dr. Farrell soon married and, after she became a well-known corporate executive, she offered to be primary breadwinner while he pursued a doctorate in political science from New York University. (He asked that her name be withheld to protect her privacy.) He did his dissertation on the women's movement.

"My wife's income allowed me to do what I really loved," he said. "I realized that women's liberation is men's liberation, too."

After they divorced - they remain friends, he said - Dr. Farrell moved to San Diego, where he still lives. Ten years ago he met, and eventually married, Liz Dowling, a California entrepreneur with two daughters - Alex, now 17, and Erin, 18. Although he has written extensively about issues like sexual harassment and fatherhood, he says he is not spurred on by personal experiences. "I've always been motivated to stop people from doing dysfunctional things," he said.

Which, of course, provided a nice segue into his thoughts on how women can stop the self-sabotage that so often leads to low pay. Refreshingly, he steered clear of advice about body language, attitudes, dress and communication skills; women are already better at all of those than men, he said. But he did offer other observations:

There can be good jobs in fields you think you hate. So what if you are all thumbs. "A woman with organizing skills can run a construction company without ever picking up a hammer and nail," Dr. Farrell said. Do you like medicine, but can't stand blood? "Pharmacists can make as much as doctors," he said, and can have more control over their lives.

Jobs that are hazardous for men can be pretty safe for women. Women in the military are rarely sent to the front lines, Dr. Farrell said. Studies have shown that women who are cabdrivers usually pull daytime hours, female postal workers get safer routes, and male coal miners try to keep their few female colleagues out of danger. "When women need protection, men will compete to give it," he said.

Many jobs pay women more than men. Some of them - say, advertising executive, speech pathologist or statistician - are in fields that have long welcomed women. But many are jobs that many women erroneously believe are closed to them, like tool-and- die makers, funeral service workers, automotive mechanics, radiation therapists and sales engineers. The Bureau of Labor Statistics provides pay comparisons for many jobs.

A little extra training can yield a lot more money. Are you good with numbers? "Financial analysts make a lot more than accountants," Dr. Farrell said. Similarly, he notes, a nurse anesthetist makes twice as much as a regular nurse.

The "line versus staff" rule applies to women, too. Men have long realized that jobs in manufacturing and sales - line jobs in business parlance - are better for their careers than staff support jobs in human resources and public relations. "C.E.O.'s are selected from among those assuming bottom-line responsibilities for a company," he said, "so these fields pave the way for women who want to break alleged glass ceilings."

It is O.K. to trade a fatter paycheck for more time with children and hobbies. Just recognize that society did not force the choice on you. "Feel powerful and happy that you have control over your own life," Dr. Farrell said. "It's better than feeling like an angry victim of discrimination."

  

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DVActivist
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55. "interesting.. seems that for women who work"
In response to Reply # 53


  

          

the same amount of hours and the same number of days with the same education as men, pay is still less.
My senior year African Literature professor argued about this a lot. She told us the male professors on campus made $1.35 cents more an hour than the women. Based off of what? Purely gender!

Its amazing!

**********************************************

When they discover the center of the universe, a lot of people will be disappointed to discover they are not it.
- Bernard Bailey

  

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IsaIsaIsa
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Wed Mar-02-05 08:09 AM

58. "get that JUELZ SANTANA! Back like cooked crack 2!"
In response to Reply # 0


          

Supported by your local piff sponsor.

  

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Effa
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59. "what? march is women's month? fuck that, cant you broads"
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get april? wtf is april?

my birthday is in march, greek independance day is in march, the most non-woman friendly holiday in the world, st.patties, is in march......

who the fuck decides this history month shit?


  

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Trace
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Wed Mar-02-05 09:27 AM

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60. "mayhaps you missed the 'low level ignorance' line"
In response to Reply # 59
Wed Mar-02-05 09:27 AM

  

          

thank u for not doing that here.

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Effa
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61. "fine, have your tainted month!"
In response to Reply # 60


  

          

one request, when us guys rearrange are buddies down there can ya'll stop saying "dont do that infront of me"

its so annoying

  

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Deselune
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Wed Mar-02-05 10:46 AM

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62. "The Sate of the Women's Movement"
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I was just wondering what people think about today's women's movement. If this isn't the place that's ok I'm not sure what besides quotes, facts and info everyone wants to see here.

  

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Trace
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65. "that's a really big question; here's a start"
In response to Reply # 62


  

          

have a look at ; hopefully itll still be up by the time u see this

ill be back w/ an answer later, hopefully

i be lyin sometimes, tho.

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DVActivist
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Thu Mar-03-05 04:59 AM

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69. "presently the issues of reproductive health"
In response to Reply # 62


  

          

are top priority among many feminist agencies in the country.

**********************************************

When they discover the center of the universe, a lot of people will be disappointed to discover they are not it.
- Bernard Bailey

  

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Trace
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64. "Today in Women's History - March 3rd"
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1887: Anne Sullivan arrived at the home of young Helen Keller to begin to teach her to communicate

1913: Woman suffrage supporters in Washington, D.C., disrupting the inauguration of President Woodrow Wilson. Onlookers attacked while police stand by.

1996: died






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DVActivist
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67. "the movie on HBO- Iron Jawed Angels a must see"
In response to Reply # 64


  

          


**********************************************

When they discover the center of the universe, a lot of people will be disappointed to discover they are not it.
- Bernard Bailey

  

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Trace
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66. "the 'Hottentot Venus'"
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what they did to sara baartman is the reason why i cringe at the end of the cowardly lion's song 'courage' in 'the wizard of oz.'

crude synopsis:
sara baartman was a khoi woman living in africa in the 1600s and was around 20 when white europeans, who re-named her 'the hottentot venus,' took her back to europe w/ her to put her on display, literally--they essentially kept her naked in a cage and charged those interested a fee, sometimes a bit of tobacco, to approach and inspect the black woman's body, allowing them to touch and manually inspect all parts of her, including her genitals. she was kept on display even after she died when they made a plaster cast of her body to that folk cld keep looking at the abnormalcy of the black female body & black female sexuality.

'hottentot' is a racial slur. at the end of the lion's song, if u'll recall, he sings 'what makes the hottentot so hot?' everytime i hear that i be like 'fuck him.'

links that describe sara baartman & her story better than i:



- as told thru a review of a documentary abt her life (which was very good, btw) <-- pic of the cast of sara baartman's body

from 1974 book 'race' by john baker that cites an original study of the anatomy and sexual characteristics of 'hottentot' women by a dutch fella in 1668

contemporary black female photographer rene cox's photo ""


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DVActivist
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68. "i never even knew the words to that song"
In response to Reply # 66


  

          

wow

i remember being told this womans story. it makes me sick to my stomach every time i hear of what they did to her body.

**********************************************

When they discover the center of the universe, a lot of people will be disappointed to discover they are not it.
- Bernard Bailey

  

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MeDiNaStaR
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72. "sara baartman is another name they gave her"
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however,she's one of the many africans displayed and displaced in museums,circus shows and other euro entertainment throughout centuries.


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*TWINNING*


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ScandalousWoman
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73. "good look"
In response to Reply # 66


  

          

around 2001 or 2002, her remains were recently returned to her native land for proper burial.

"they" literally had her in glass jars for a minute, for display.

*******************
purr

***********************
wouldn't you love to love me?

  

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KCPlayer21
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74. "Today in 1932, Miriam Makeba is born...."
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She is a South African singer, entertainer, and activist.

From Prospect, South Africa, throughout her life and singing career, Miriam Zenzi Makeba has used her voice to draw the attention of the world to the music of South Africa and to its oppressive system of racial separation, apartheid. For eight years she attended the Kilmerton Training School in Pretoria, where she sang in the school choir. During her teenage years, Makeba helped her mother with the domestic work she did for white families.

She also pursued singing and, in 1950, joined an amateur Johannesburg group called the Cuban Brothers. In 1954, a successful professional South African group, the Black Manhattan Brothers, noticed her. Eventually she left with the group in 1957 to become a member of a touring revue show, African Jazz and Variety. With her appearance in the semi-documentary antiapartheid film Come Back, Africa 1959, Makeba drew the attention of international audiences. That same year, Makeba traveled to London where she met African-American performer and civil rights activist Harry Belafonte, who had requested a private screening of the film.

Belafonte became her sponsor and promoter in the United States. Through him, she appeared on the Steve Allen Show, which led to nightclubs around New York City and recordings of South Africa music. Some songs became hits in the United States, including Patha Patha, Malaika, and The Click Song. Her music also contained a political component, the denunciation of apartheid, which earned Makeba the hostility of the South African government, who revoked her passport when she attempted to return for her mother’s funeral in 1960. Makeba pressed on and, in 1963, she addressed a United Nations special committee on apartheid, characterizing South Africa as "a nightmare of police brutality and government terrorism."

Her marriage to African-American civil rights activist Stokely Carmichael (now Kwame Ture) derailed her career in the United States. The entertainment industry virtually blacklisted Makeba. According to one account, her record company never called her in to record again after the marriage. She and Carmichael eventually moved to Guinea in West Africa. Makeba’s career continued outside of the United States, however, during the 1970s and 1980s she toured Europe, South America, and Africa appearing regularly at the Montreux Jazz Festival, the Berlin Jazz Festival, and the Northsea Jazz Festival.

In 1977 she traveled to Lagos, Nigeria, to serve as the unofficial South African representative at Festac, a Pan-African festival of arts and culture. In 1982 "Mother Africa," as she was known, reunited with South African trumpeter Hugh Masekela, to whom Makeba was married from 1964 to 1966. Continuing her activism, in 1975, she served a term as a United Nations delegate from Guinea. In addition, she was awarded the Dag Hammarskjöld Peace Prize in 1986. In 1987, Makeba performed on Paul Simon’s Graceland tour. She finally returned to South Africa in 1990.

In 1991, she released Eyes on Tomorrow and, that same year, Makeba gave her first live performance in South Africa since her departure more than 30 years earlier. She has continued to record and tour.





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We the children of the Light, you know what I mean?
That's why I'm hating on the darkness like Paula Deen
Cause in my hood they masked up like it's Halloween
We going hard for the Rock, but we not some fiends
- Andy Mineo

  

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DVActivist
Member since Oct 19th 2004
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75. "Sunday March 6th watch on The History Channel"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

FOUNDING MOTHERS WITH COKIE ROBERTS, March 6 @ 7pm/6c

come back with reviews!

**********************************************

When they discover the center of the universe, a lot of people will be disappointed to discover they are not it.
- Bernard Bailey

  

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DVActivist
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77. "MONDAY is International Womens Day"
In response to Reply # 75


  

          

my office is closed

**********************************************

When they discover the center of the universe, a lot of people will be disappointed to discover they are not it.
- Bernard Bailey

  

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Nettrice
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78. "Mary Ellen Pleasant"
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"Called "the Mother of Civil Rights in California" from work begun in the 1860s, her achievements went unsurpassed until the 1960s. Pleasant was once the most talked-about woman in San Francisco." - from http://www.mepleasant.com/story.html

She is one of my sheroes.

<--- Blame this lady for Nutty.

  

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LeroyBumpkin
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80. "i don't know much history..."
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...or important quotes or names.

All I know is my mother is probably THE most important person in my life. If that doesn't show the power of a woman, to raise a God fearing, black, educated and *cough* handsome son, I don't know what is.

this is my contribution to this post.

https://digife.com

  

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Ntrinsicsoul1
Member since Mar 04th 2005
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Sat Mar-05-05 07:38 PM

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81. "RE: the Women's History Month post"
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CANDACE
EMPRESS OF ETHIOPIA (332 B.C.)
Alexander reached Kemet (Ancient Egypt) in 332 B.C., on his world conquering rampage. But one of the greatest generals of the ancient world was also the Empress of Ethiopia. This formidable black Queen Candace, was world famous as a military tactician and field commander. Legend has it that Alexander could not entertain even the possibilty of having his world fame and unbroken chain of victories marred by risking a defeat, at last, by a woman. He halted his armies at the borders of Ethiopia and did not invade to meet the waiting black armies with their Queen in personal command.


Betsy Ross.
Betsy Ross was born January 1, 1752 and died at the age of 84 on January 30, 1836.
At the age of 21, she eloped across the Delaware River to Gloucester, New Jersey, and was married at a tavern.
She was the 8th of 17 children.
She claimed to have done tailoring for George Washington.
She has been buried in three different locations: Christ Church Cemetery, Mt. Moriah Cemetery, and now on Arch Street in the courtyard adjacent to the Betsy Ross House.
A major Philadelphia bridge is named in her honor.


Golda Meir (May 3, 1898 - December 8, 1978) was the fourth Prime Minister of Israel from March 17, 1969 to 1974. Born Golda Mabovitz in Kiev, Russia (now in Ukraine), she emigrated with her family to Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in 1906. There, she graduated from teachers' college and taught in the public schools. She joined the Poale Zion (Labor Zionist Organization) in 1915 and emigrated to Palestine with her husband, Morris Myerson, in 1921. He died in 1951. She adopted the Hebrew name Meir ("to burn brightly") in 1956. She moved to Tel Aviv in 1924 where she was employed in a variety of posts in the trade union movement and civil service before being elected to the Knesset in 1949. She served as Minister of Labor (1949-1956) and Foreign Minister (1956-1966) in successive governments. Upon becoming Prime Minister following the death of Levi Eshkol, her government was clouded by internal squabbles among the governing coalition, and serious questions over strategic misjudgments and general lack of leadership that resulted in the unanticipated Yom Kippur War. Golda Meir resigned leadership, to be succeeded by Yitzhak Rabin. Golda Meir died in Jerusalem and was buried on Mount Herzl in Jerusalem.

MADAM C. J. WALKER 1867-1919 Entrepreneur, Philanthropist, Social Activist~"I am a woman who came from the cotton fields of the South. From there I was promoted to the washtub. From there I was promoted to the cook kitchen. And from there I promoted myself into the business of manufacturing hair goods and preparations....I have built my own factory on my own ground"
Madam Walker, National Negro Business League Convention, July 1912


  

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ScandalousWoman
Member since Nov 19th 2002
25416 posts
Sun Mar-06-05 04:51 AM

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82. "bell hooks (quotes)"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

"We are all subjects in history...By recognizing subjectivity and the limits of identity, we disrupt that objectification that is so necessary in a culture of domination."

"If we want a beloved community, we must stand for justice, have recognition for difference without attaching difference to privilege."

"Writing is my passion. It is a way to experience the ecstatic. The root understanding of the word ecstasy — ‘to stand outside’ —comes to me in those moments when I am immersed so deeply in the act of thinking and writing that everything else, even flesh, falls away."




*******************
purr

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wouldn't you love to love me?

  

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ScandalousWoman
Member since Nov 19th 2002
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Sun Mar-06-05 04:56 AM

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83. "angela y. davis (quotes)"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

"We know the road to freedom has always been stalked by death."

"The work of the political activist inevitably involves a certain tension between the requirement that position be taken on current issues as they arise and the desire that one's contributions will somehow survive the ravages of time."

"Media mystifications should not obfuscate a simple, perceivable fact; Black teenage girls do not create poverty by having babies. Quite the contrary, they have babies at such a young age precisely because they are poor --because they do not have the opportunity to acquire an education, because meaningful, well-paying jobs and creative forms of recreation are not accessible to them... because safe, effective forms of contraception are not available to them."

"Progressive art can assist people to learn not only about the objective forces at work in the society in which they live, but also about the intensely social character of their interior lives. Ultimately, it can propel people toward social emancipation."


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purr

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wouldn't you love to love me?

  

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ScandalousWoman
Member since Nov 19th 2002
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84. "simone de beauvoir (quotes)"
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"All oppression creates a state of war."

"In itself, homosexuality is as limiting as heterosexuality: the ideal should be to be capable of loving a woman or a man; either, a human being, without feeling fear, restraint, or obligation."

"Sex pleasure in woman is a kind of magic spell; it demands complete abandon; if words or movements oppose the magic of caresses, the spell is broken."

"Society cares for the individual only so far as he is profitable."

"To catch a husband is an art; to hold him is a job."

"I tore myself away from the safe comfort of certainties through my love for the truth; and truth rewarded me."


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purr

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wouldn't you love to love me?

  

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ScandalousWoman
Member since Nov 19th 2002
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Sun Mar-06-05 05:18 AM

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85. "womanism"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

(as defined by the oxford companion to african american literature; eds Williams Andrews, Frances SMith Forster, and Trudier Harris {r.i.p})

"introduced and explicated by alice walker in In Search of Our Mothers' Gardens: Womanist Prose (1983), "womanism" refers to african american feminism or the feminism of women of color.... a womanist, according to walker, loves women, womanhood, and women's culture. sometimes a sexual and/or platonic lover of men, a womanist is committed to the welfare of an entire people and claims the universality and diversity of the black race. a womanist, moreover, values salient characteristics of the african american experience in general and loves herself. Finally, according to walker, womanism is an empowered form of feminism just as purple is a bold and empowered version of lavender.

in its general usage, womanism is generally understood to address the triple impact of sex, race, and class on african american women and to compensate for the traditional shortcomings of feminist and african american liberation discourse that have routinely excluded the peculiar needs of african american women. while feminism has disregarded issues of race and class, african american liberation theory has ignored issues of gender and class...."

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purr

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wouldn't you love to love me?

  

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morpheme
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94867 posts
Sun Mar-06-05 11:56 AM

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86. "it's not so good to be born a girl/sometimes."
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

that's why societies usta throw us away/or sell us/or play with our vaginas/cuz that's all girls were good for. at least women cd carry things & cook/but to born a girl is not good sometimes/some places /such abominable things cd happen to us. i wish it waz gd to be born a girl everywhere/then i wd know for sure that no one wd be infibulated/that's a word no one wants us to know. infibulation is sewing our vaginas up with cat-gut or weeds or nylon thread to insure our virginity. virginity insurance equals infibulation. that can also make it impossible for us to live thru labor. infibulation lets us get infections that we cant mention/cuz disease in the ovaries is a sign that we're dirty anyway/so wash yrself/cuz once infibulated we hve to be cut open to have/you know what/the joy of phallus/that we may know nothing about/ever/especially if something else not good that happens to little girls happens: if we've been excised. had our labia removed with glass or scissors. if we've lost our clitoris because pleasure is profane & the presence of our naturally evolved clitoris wd disrupt the very unnatural dynamic of polygamy. so with no clitoris/no labia & infibulation/we're sewn up/cut-up/pared down & sore if not dead/& oozing pus/if not terrified that so much of our body waz wrong & did not belong on earth. such thoughts lead to a silence/that hangs behind veils & straightjackets/it really is not good be born a girl wheen we have to be infibulated, excised, clitorectomized & STILL be afraid to walk streets or stay home at night. i'm so saddened that being born a girl makes it dangerous to attend midnight mass unescorted. some places if we're born girls & someone else who's very sick & weak & cruel/attacks us & breaks our hymen/we have to be killed/sent away from our families/forbidden to touch our children. these strange people who wound little girls are known as attackers/molesters & rapists. they are known all over the world & are proliferating at a rapid rate. to be born a girl who will always have to worry not abt the molesters/the attackers & the rapists/but also abt their peculiarities: does he stab too/or shoot? does he carry an axe? does he spit on you? does he know if he doesn't drop sperm we can't prove we've been violated? these subtleties make being a girl too complex/ for some of us & we go crazy/or never go anyplace. some of us have never had an open window or a walk alone, but sometimes our homes are not safe either. rapists & attackers & molesters are not strangers to everyone/they are related to somebody/& some of them like raping & molesting their family members better than a girl-child they don't know yet. this is called incest, & girl children are discouraged from revealing attacks from uncle or daddy/cuz what wd mommy do? after all/daddy may have seen to it that abortions were outlawed in his state/so that mommy mkght have too many children to care abt some "fun" daddy might be having with the 2-yr-old/she's a girl after all/we have to get used to it. but infibulation, excision, clitorectomies, rape & incest are irrevocable life-deniers/life stranglers & disrepectful of natural elements. i wish these things wdnt happen anywhere anymore/then i cd say it wz gd to be born a girl everywhere. even though gender is not destiny/right now being born a girl is to be born threatened; i want being born a girl a cause for celebration/cause for protection & nourishment of our birthright/to live freely with passion/knowing no fear that our species waz somehow incorrect. & we are now plagued with rapists & clitorectomies. we pay for being born girls/but we owe no one anything/not our labia, not our clitoris, not our lives. we are born girls to live to be women who live our own lives/to live our lives. to have our lives. to have/our lives/to live. we are born girls/to live to be women...

-Ntozake Shange. © 1981


*~* i would like to make any apologies for any misspellin of any of miss shange's words...i typed this out by hand as i was readin tho that is no excuse when u choose to transfer someone's work to be read as they had it written...i think most notable about the piece is they year of it's copyright, 1981...that's 24 years ago...where were some of u 24 years ago if u were anywhere??? & when did u learn of clitorectomies & ur first rape??? not necessarily first person experience, but when it was a threat to protect urself against...anything that early 80s seems like an eternity ago...maybe because of where i was then & now it's 2000sumthinelse & we are in the 21st century...i find the education of this piece so concise tho it is poetry & somehow lends itself to poeticism still...i read it aloud several times this weekend...i read the word 'wound' as wound, like someone bindin someone instead of piercin someone...but i take responsibility for my own freudian there

anyway...enjoy or discuss

~k

_____________
Kamikaze Genes
____________♌♀
goddess; small g.

  

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stereOtype
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Mon Mar-07-05 01:46 PM

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89. "thanks for this"
In response to Reply # 86


  

          

i love shange...she inspires me a lot
and i love reading anything from her i'd never read before.
this was bittersweet.

I say I sing-I beg everyone to join my song.
-Fela Kuti

Privatized liberalism invites social inaction.
-Robert

  

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hyde
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24819 posts
Mon Mar-07-05 03:26 AM

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87. "today in women's history"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

i was born.

oh, and so was tammy faye baker.


-k-
q.e.p.d.

una y otra vez

  

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Astral1der
Member since Jul 07th 2003
2592 posts
Mon Mar-07-05 01:35 PM

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88. "The Mother of Black Nationalism....Queen Mother Moore"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

"Queen Mother" Moore
(1898-1997)

Those who seek temporary security rather than basic liberty deserve neither...

My bones are tired. Not tired of struggling, but tired of oppression.

Our purpose in life is to leave a legacy for our children and our children's children. For this reason, we must correct history that at present denies our humanity and self-respect.
–Queen Mother Moore


Queen Mother Moore was born Audley Moore in New Iberia, Louisiana, and acquired the appellation Queen Mother on her first trip to Ghana, where she attended the funeral of Kwame Nkrumah in 1972. She was in the forefront of the struggle for 77 years.

Her family was scarred by virulent racism. Her great-grandmother was raped by her slave master and her grandfather was lynched. Forced to quit school in the fourth grade, she studied to be a hairdresser to take care of her sisters. In the 1920's, she traveled around the country only to learn that racism was not confined to the South. She finally settled in Harlem where she organized, mobilized and demonstrated against racist oppression and imperialism directed towards Africa and people of African descent. She was locked into perpetual struggle against black oppression at all levels, joining numerous groups and founding a number of her own.

Initially inspired by Marcus Garvey's emphasis on African pride and culture, she waged battle on the Black Nationalist, Communist and Pan-Africanist fronts. In keeping with her credo, "There was nothing left to do but struggle," her list of activities defy enumeration.

Impressed by the Communist Party's role as the vanguard in the defense of the Scottsboro Boys, she joined the party. However, she left when she realized that the party could or would not translate its ideas about black self-determination into action.

In 1955, she joined a small band of activists demanding reparations for slavery and its insidious legacy which has permeated black lives up to this day. During Black History Month 2002, on February 6, the Queen Mother Moore Reparations Resolution for Descendants of Enslaved Africans in New York City bill was submitted to the City Council.

Spanning an era from the heyday of Marcus Garvey to the second coming of Nelson Mandela, our Warrior Queen waged war on the hydra of black oppression whenever it raised an ugly head. It can definitely be said, in deference to Mandela, that the struggle was truly her life.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Books

Black Women in America: An Historical Encyclopedia, Darlene Hine, Elsa Barkley Brown and Rosalyn Terborg-Penn (eds.), Indiana University Press, 1994.
Buy it in hardcover: Amazon.com
Buy it in paperback: Amazon.com

The Black Scholar (interview), Issue 4, March-April, 1973.
Book of Black Heroes: Great Women in the Struggle, Toyomi Igus (ed.), Just Us Books, 1991.
Buy it in hardcover: Amazon.com
Buy it in paperback: Amazon.com | Amazon.ca

I Dream a World: Portraits of Black Women Who Changed America, Brian Lanker. Stewart, Tabori and Chang, 1989.
Buy it in library binding: Amazon.com | Amazon.ca
Buy it in paperback: Amazon.com | Amazon.ca


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Links

Queen Mother Audley E. Moore: In Honor of a Warrior Woman

History Matters: "Speak, Garvey, Speak!" A Follower Recalls A Garvey Rally


'Republicans and Democrats: One just takes from you and the other takes advantage of you'~The Rev. Al Sharpton

ARE YOU CULTURALLY RETARDED?!?!?!??!!?!?!?!?!
Soul Star…
Oh you've come*listened real good*
So far from where you started
Don’t be afraid to let your light
Shine on the World <--sung with me
in mind :c )
*
Give you something sweet everytime
you come into my Jungle Book
***

READ MY.....I'll get right soon
enough

OH yeah inbox me for the password

EDUCATION IS THE SLEEPING PILL THAT MAKES DREAMS BETTER~Peggy Hill


If He cares about the sparrow...I know
that He cares for me...


<---You Remember them!?!?!? Dang that was my show for real....

To choose to not know...is to choose to die.

Stop the death process.

Stop looking...start claiming

But oh I am not afraid
To be a lone bohemian

http://higherthought.blogspot.com/

  

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eessix
Member since Mar 25th 2005
1 posts
Fri Mar-25-05 09:14 PM

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121. "RE: The Mother of Black Nationalism....Queen Mother Moore"
In response to Reply # 88


  

          

Hi,
My name is Eric Essix. You are using an image from my website and while I am very flattered that you like the picture, it is generating a lot of "hits" on my site that are not really hits as every time the image is used on the message board it posts as a hit to my site. I have had over 10,000 hits to my site this month (about 2 times more than ususal) and most of them seem to be from this message board site and that soul food image is the page that is being shown 70% of the time. It really distorts the true number of people who are actually visiting the site. At first I was like Whoa! why are people going to the site all of a sudden and then I did the history and found out why.

If you really like the image I will be happy to scan it for you and send it to you to use that way so that it will not hit my site every time somebody posts a message. It is from a restuarant in Florence/Muscle Shoals Alabama and I took it back in 2000 while working on my Southbound album there at Fame studios. You are welcome to it. Let's see if we can work this out so that soul food is good for both of us!
eric

  

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AFRICAN
Charter member
11871 posts
Mon Mar-07-05 11:46 PM

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90. "Umi."
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

The woman who knows me best.
This is an opportunity to show some respect and thanks to the woman who made me.Apart from bringing up two children to the best of her means,she managed to go on with her studies until she was the first Phd. holder in Genetics in Sudan.Defying the myth that a mother cannot successfully pursue her career and raise a family.
Her father thought that studying was a waste of time for women,since she would eventually marry someone.She persevered,studied,married who She wanted to marry.
When she sat for the Sudanese Certificate,she ranked 9th in the country.Her family was not that thrilled,they were dissapointed her cousin-a male- had failed.Thankfully her father came around and she is currently the apple of his eye.He brags about her all the time.
I'm proud to have a strong woman as a mother,and like to think maybe a little rubbed off on me.


http://perspectivesudans.blogspot.com/
instagram:@3rdworldview
Blessed be the Lord /who believe any mess they read up on the message board

  

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abby
Member since Oct 19th 2004
65215 posts
Tue Mar-08-05 09:55 AM

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91. "On March 8, 1972"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

Tareion Fluker was born.

_______________________________________

"I'm gonna treat OKP better during the 2nd half of the year. So, expect new things and better dialog."
~Case_One

  

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kisszion
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23173 posts
Tue Mar-08-05 10:29 AM

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92. "International Women's Day (8 March)"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

International Women's Day (8 March) is an occasion marked by women's groups around the world. This date is also commemorated at the United Nations and is designated in many countries as a national holiday. When women on all continents, often divided by national boundaries and by ethnic, linguistic, cultural, economic and political differences, come together to celebrate their Day, they can look back to a tradition that represents at least nine decades of struggle for equality, justice, peace and development.


International Women's Day is the story of ordinary women as makers of history; it is rooted in the centuries-old struggle of women to participate in society on an equal footing with men. In ancient Greece, Lysistrata initiated a sexual strike against men in order to end war; during the French Revolution, Parisian women calling for "liberty, equality, fraternity" marched on Versailles to demand women's suffrage.


The idea of an International Women's Day first arose at the turn of the century, which in the industrialized world was a period of expansion and turbulence, booming population growth and radical ideologies. Following is a brief chronology of the most important events:


1909

In accordance with a declaration by the Socialist Party of America, the first National Woman's Day was observed across the United States on 28 February. Women continued to celebrate it on the last Sunday of that month through 1913.


1910

The Socialist International, meeting in Copenhagen, established a Women's Day, international in character, to honour the movement for women's rights and to assist in achieving universal suffrage for women. The proposal was greeted with unanimous approval by the conference of over 100 women from 17 countries, which included the first three women elected to the Finnish parliament. No fixed date was selected for the observance.


1911

As a result of the decision taken at Copenhagen the previous year, International Women's Day was marked for the first time (19 March) in Austria, Denmark, Germany and Switzerland, where more than one million women and men attended rallies. In addition to the right to vote and to hold public office, they demanded the right to work, to vocational training and to an end to discrimination on the job.


Less than a week later, on 25 March, the tragic Triangle Fire in New York City took the lives of more than 140 working girls, most of them Italian and Jewish immigrants. This event had a significant impact on labour legislation in the United States, and the working conditions leading up to the disaster were invoked during subsequent observances of International Women's Day.


1913-1914

As part of the peace movement brewing on the eve of World War I, Russian women observed their first International Women's Day on the last Sunday in February 1913. Elsewhere in Europe, on or around 8 March of the following year, women held rallies either to protest the war or to express solidarity with their sisters.


1917

With 2 million Russian soldiers dead in the war, Russian women again chose the last Sunday in February to strike for "bread and peace". Political leaders opposed the timing of the strike, but the women went on anyway. The rest is history: Four days later the Czar was forced to abdicate and the provisional Government granted women the right to vote. That historic Sunday fell on 23 February on the Julian calendar then in use in Russia, but on 8 March on the Gregorian calendar in use elsewhere.


Since those early years, International Women's Day has assumed a new global dimension for women in developed and developing countries alike. The growing international women's movement, which has been strengthened by four global United Nations women's conferences, has helped make the commemoration a rallying point for coordinated efforts to demand women's rights and participation in the political and economic process. Increasingly, International Women's Day is a time to reflect on progress made, to call for change and to celebrate acts of courage and determination by ordinary women who have played an extraordinary role in the history of women's rights.





The Role of the United Nations
Few causes promoted by the United Nations have generated more intense and widespread support than the campaign to promote and protect the equal rights of women. The Charter of the United Nations, signed in San Francisco in 1945, was the first international agreement to proclaim gender equality as a fundamental human right. Since then, the Organization has helped create a historic legacy of internationally agreed strategies, standards, programmes and goals to advance the status of women worldwide.

Over the years, United Nations action for the advancement of women has taken four clear directions: promotion of legal measures; mobilization of public opinion and international action; training and research, including the compilation of gender desegregated statistics; and direct assistance to disadvantaged groups. Today a central organizing principle of the work of the United Nations is that no enduring solution to society's most threatening social, economic and political problems can be found without the full participation, and the full empowerment, of the world's women.



http://www.un.org/ecosocdev/geninfo/women/womday97.htm

:::::::

"And the more you hit something hard, the more hardened it becomes--the stronger it becomes. And that's what's happened: I'm resilient." - Michael Jackson

:::
http://sweetcreams.tumblr.com/

  

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Orula
Member since Dec 27th 2003
4011 posts
Tue Mar-08-05 12:42 PM

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93. "women for women org"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

for the

~rare~

----------------------------------------
twitter.com/tastychemicals

  

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DVActivist
Member since Oct 19th 2004
20915 posts
Thu Mar-10-05 12:33 PM

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94. "March 10th"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          


Harriet Tubman dies (1913)
Born a slave in Maryland, Harriet Tubman escaped to freedom, and later led more than 300 other slaves to the North and to Canada to their freedom, too. The best-known conductor on the Underground Railroad, Harriet Tubman was acquainted with many of the social reformers and abolitionists of her time, and she spoke against slavery and for women's rights. Tubman died March 10, 1913. In 1990 President George H. W. Bush declared March 10 to be Harriet Tubman Day; in 2003 New York State established the holiday.

"I had reasoned this out in my mind, there was one of two things I had a right to, liberty or death; if I could not have one, I would have the other."-H. Tubman

**********************************************

When they discover the center of the universe, a lot of people will be disappointed to discover they are not it.
- Bernard Bailey

  

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DVActivist
Member since Oct 19th 2004
20915 posts
Thu Mar-10-05 12:39 PM

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95. "todays link"
In response to Reply # 94


  

          

http://womenshistory.about.com/library/cal/bl0310.htm

**********************************************

When they discover the center of the universe, a lot of people will be disappointed to discover they are not it.
- Bernard Bailey

  

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strezzed
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6529 posts
Thu Mar-10-05 12:59 PM

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96. "Cervical Cancer - Please Be Aware"
In response to Reply # 0


          

http://www.nccc-online.org/

"who i'm eeea?"
aim - bronze elixir
yahoo - amorel7

  

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EMATI
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Fri Mar-11-05 06:21 AM

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97. "biddy mason: philanthropist, owner of prime dowtown l.a. real estate"
In response to Reply # 0


          

petitioned the state of california for her freedom & won it
is a very interesting one





Bridget ("Biddy") Mason (1818-1891) was born a slave on a Mississippi plantation. When her owner, Robert M. Smith, became a Mormon convert in 1847, Mason and her three daughters joined his family on a 2,000-mile trek to the Utah Territory during which Mason was responsible for herding the cattle, preparing the meals and serving as midwife. Four years later, Smith moved his household to San Bernardino County, Calif., where Brigham Young was starting a Mormon community. California being a free state, Mason and her daughters petitioned the court for their freedom, which was granted in 1856.

Mason moved to Los Angeles where she worked as a nurse and midwife. A decade after gaining her freedom, she had saved enough to buy a site on Spring Street for $250, thereby becoming one of the first African-American women to own land in Los Angeles. In 1884, she sold part of the property for $1,500 and built a commercial building on the remaining land. Over the years, her wise business and real estate transactions enabled her to accumulate a fortune of almost $300,000.

Mason gave generously to charities, visited jail inmates, and provided food and shelter for the poor of all races. When a flood devastated Los Angeles in the 1880s, Mason had food prepared for the flood victims and paid the bills herself. In 1872, she and her son-in-law, Charles Owens, founded and financed the First African Methodist Episcopal Church of Los Angeles, the city’s first African-American church.

When Mason died in 1891 she was buried in an unmarked grave at Evergreen Cemetery in Boyle Heights. Nearly a century later, on March 27, 1988, in a ceremony attended by Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley and 3,000 members of the First AME Church, a tombstone was unveiled which marked her grave for the first time.

-- Contributed by Albert Greenstein, 1999

  

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PlanetInfinite
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126185 posts
Fri Mar-11-05 01:05 PM

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98. "can i mention my moms?"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

and my sis?


my sis is cool.
my moms is cool.

i have a cousin who's cool too.
but she don't know how to call anybody.



--------------------
She was a mink handjob in sarcophagus heels

  

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truth0ne SGC
Member since Sep 25th 2003
38103 posts
Fri Mar-11-05 02:53 PM

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99. "BLING."
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

  

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truth0ne SGC
Member since Sep 25th 2003
38103 posts
Fri Mar-11-05 02:53 PM

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100. "BLING."
In response to Reply # 99


  

          

  

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Astral1der
Member since Jul 07th 2003
2592 posts
Fri Mar-11-05 10:36 PM

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101. "ELLA BAKER"
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One of the founders of SNCC and a true spirit for her people

I have always thought what is needed is the development of people who are interested not in being leaders as much as in developing leadership in others."
Ella J. Baker

A conference to celebrate the 40th Anniversary of the founding of SNCC (Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee), to remember and honor SNCC’s founder, Miss Ella J. Baker, and to offer an opportunity for those who knew her best to share their experiences for the benefit of our historical present.

We expect to bring together SNCC and other movement veterans to talk with today’s student leaders. We expect to bring together educators and researchers of the movement experience for gathering historical information and curriculum development. We expect to bring together people from varying personal experiences: university and community, elders and youth, to share in this historical event. We hope you will join us.

The national conference begins on Thursday, April 13, 2000 at 9:00 a.m. in Raleigh, N.C. at Shaw University where all began. The local community will begin celebrations on Sunday, April 9th with the opening of an exhibit on the movement in North Carolina and continuing through Wednesday evening at both Shaw University and North Carolina State University. The Sunday through Wednesday evening events are free and open to the public. There will be limited conference-rate hotel space available during that period for those who want to attend these events, so please call ahead for hotel reservations. The national conference ends on Sunday, April 16, 2000.

For more information contact:

African American Cultural Center
North Carolina State University
2810 Cates Avenue
P.O. Box 7318
Raleigh, NC 27695 -7318
919- 515-5210



http://www.ellabakercenter.org/
http://www.ncsu.edu/chass/mds/ellabio.html
http://www.ncsu.edu/chass/mds/ellahome.html



<-------G.R.I.T.S .....Yatches!!!!!!!!
get some cooking lessons

My bones are tired. Not tired of struggling, but tired of oppression.Our purpose in life is to leave a legacy

  

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Mica
Member since Nov 28th 2002
12907 posts
Sun Mar-13-05 12:02 AM

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103. "My professor wrote an awesome book on her:"
In response to Reply # 101


          

Entitled "Ella Baker and the Black Freedom Movement: A Radical Democratic Vision" by Barbara Ransby.

Amazon:
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0807827789/qid=1110690004/sr=8-1/ref=pd_ka_1/104-9541857-3224704?v=glance&s=books&n=507846

*gone*

  

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cindylu
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10644 posts
Sat Mar-12-05 01:35 AM

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102. "the traditional mexican woman"
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"I have to say that the traditional role is kind of a myth. I think the traditional Mexican woman is a fierce woman."
- Sandra Cisneros


Chicana labor leader from San Antonio, Texas. Tenayuca was one of the main leaders of the 1938 pecan shellers strike. Six to eight thousand workers, mainly women, protested low wages and unhealthy working conditions. Although Tenayuca was blacklisted for her labor activism in Texas, she is still remembered for her activsim that contributed to the establishment of a national minimum wage.

Tenayuca showed that Chicanas were empowered and willing to stand up for their rights... even in 1930s Texas.

_______________________________________________

  

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DVActivist
Member since Oct 19th 2004
20915 posts
Mon Mar-14-05 12:03 PM

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104. "March 14th- Ladies let's keep this alive"
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968: Saint Matilda, Queen of Germany and mother of Emperor Otto I, died

1808: Narcissa Prentiss Whitman born

1815: Josephine Lange born (composer)

1830?: Sarah Flournoy Moore Chapin born

1833: Lucy Hobbs Taylor born

1851: Anna Caroline Maxwell born

1875: Isadore Gilbert Mudge born

1877: Edna Woolman Chase born (Vogue editor)

1887: Sylvia Woodbridge Beach born

1894: Osa Helen Leighty Johnson born

1923: Diane Arbus born

1958: Princess Grace (former movie star Grace Kelly) gave birth to a son, Prince Albert, who thereby became heir to the throne, displacing his older sister, Princess Caroline

Feast Day: Saint Matilda of Saxony, queen of Germany




"A girl should not expect special privileges because of her sex but neither should she adjust to prejudice and discrimination."

-- Betty Friedan

**********************************************

When they discover the center of the universe, a lot of people will be disappointed to discover they are not it.
- Bernard Bailey

  

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DVActivist
Member since Oct 19th 2004
20915 posts
Wed Mar-16-05 10:57 AM

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105. "March 16th"
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1750: Caroline Hershel born

1864: Carrie Bamberger Frank Fuld born

1912: Jean Rosenthal born

1891: Irita Van Doren born




"The best impromptu speeches are the ones written well in advance."

-- Ruth Gordon

I don't particularly like this quote but I suppose it will do for today.

Research those folks born today and tell us about them!

**********************************************

When they discover the center of the universe, a lot of people will be disappointed to discover they are not it.
- Bernard Bailey

  

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Trace
Member since Sep 16th 2002
37108 posts
Wed Mar-16-05 11:30 AM

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106. "d'oh! i havent contributed today!"
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back soon

i be lyin sometimes, tho

  

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Trace
Member since Sep 16th 2002
37108 posts
Thu Mar-17-05 08:51 AM

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107. "Today in Women's History - 3/17/05"
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ill just link it since the hyperlinks are stupid now:

http://womenshistory.about.com/library/cal/bl0317.htm

  

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Trace
Member since Sep 16th 2002
37108 posts
Thu Mar-17-05 09:04 AM

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108. "egyptian feminist Nawal el Saadawi"
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i was the only person of color in my jr year's Third World Feminisms class. one of the only ppl i really remember reading about is nawal el saadawi. i liked her because she was so outspoken on the superior attitudes of western feminists; it seemedl ike i was the only person, aside from my professor, who understood what she was saying. we read 'the hidden face of eve' and like half the class was offended at what she was saying about them, essentially, but i rode for her. made for some interesting and fiery discussions.

plus its a good book.

her website and bio:

http://www.nawalsaadawi.net

http://www.nawalsaadawi.net/bio.htm

  

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poetx
Charter member
58856 posts
Fri Mar-18-05 10:41 AM

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109. "thebreastcancersite.com (click this once a day)"
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http://www.thebreastcancersite.com

click that once per day and advertisers will donate free mammograms for poor women. (also, on the same page their are links to the hungersite, children's health site, and others, which use web advertisers and user traffic to create 'free' donations on your behalf to a bunch of charities).

when i first got to these boards, okp tinkywinky put me up on this site. i slack ery now and then but i do try and click through once per day. (or twice if i work from home and the office, since the IP is different).






peace & blessings,

x.

"I'm on the Zoloft to keep from killing y'all." - Iron Mike

my philosophy on free time:
"and next time when he get it he'll waste it on somethin' useful" - MF Doom

  

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Trace
Member since Sep 16th 2002
37108 posts
Fri Mar-18-05 11:40 AM

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110. "thank u for posting this"
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i did it everyday when i saw it in what her name's sig, but then she posted less and i saw it less and forgot

thank u!

  

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BooDaah
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32690 posts
Sun Mar-20-05 09:45 PM

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111. "Lakita Garth - Sexual Abstinence Advocate"
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Sun Mar-20-05 09:48 PM by BooDaah

          

(http://www.teencarecenter.org/index.php?s=reallife&p=story7 also: a google search will result in more info)

On July 16, 1998, Lakita shared many of her ideas with a United States Congressional Subcommittee where she was invited to speak about the high cost of pre-marital sex and teen pregnancy.

Following is the speech Lakita gave to Congress in 1998:

"I am a '20-something' year old black female, a former 2nd-runner up to Miss Black America, an entertainer, president of a corporation, and a virgin. I've had the unique opportunity to be invited by School Districts, Abstinence groups, and even state organizations such as the Department of Health and Human Services and Office of Family Planning in California, to share the message of abstinence.

I've spoken to nearly a million teenagers of different racial and socio-economic backgrounds in assemblies across America over the past 9 years. My greatest motivation in doing so is to empower them with some of the same tools I was fortunate enough to grow up with, which I feel are lacking in our culture today. The first thing I communicate to teens and adults alike is the fact that abstinence is not just shaking ones finger at a generation and telling them to 'just say no' to sex. Abstinence is a lifestyle. It is mastering the art of:

1. Self-control
2. Self-discipline
3. Delay of self-gratification

These three components are not just the foundation of an abstinent lifestyle that will enable young people to postpone sexual evolvement, but the necessary traits every individual must have in order to achieve anything in life. I believe, I'm sure as any rational individual, that a permissive undisciplined lifestyle has never, and never will, produce sustained success or excellence. Many may ask what qualifies me to make such a bold statement. My great-aunt often said, "the proof is in the pudding."

I grew up near a project community in Southern California in which Money Magazine said in the late 80's was one of the worst places in America to raise children. After serving in Korea and Viet Nam my father died of cancer a few years after his retirement. Therefore my mother, a primary school teacher, was left to raise my four older brothers and myself.

An abstinence message wasn't very popular in our community and she was thought to be quite old-fashioned for insisting that her children practice self-control, selfdiscipline, and the delay of self-gratification- in all areas. We indeed were the laughing stock of the community, but the proof is in the pudding and here's a taste of its results. Of all those who grew up with my brothers in that community, we were the only complete family to make it out.

Moreover, my mother raised a doctor, lawyer, engineer, a career naval serviceman, and I finished college in less than four years. Abstinence is not a 'just say no' program that exclusively applies to sex but a lifestyle that spills over into every aspect of a young person's life.

The future of this nation rests in the hands of the generation that will follow you. It cannot be gambled away by choosing to ignore the casualties left over nearly 30 years by the Sexual Revolution. I am neither a registered democrat nor a registered republican and all of us must cease to reduce an issue as important as this one down to left, right, liberal, conservative, but instead focus on what's right and wrong.

To more vividly share what I have witnessed over these past few years, I'd like to put it in the context of the 10 most commonly shared opinions about teens and sexuality:

1. It can't happen to me.

2. We just need to teach them safe sex.

3. They're gonna do it anyway.

4. Sex is a natural bodily function that can't be controlled.

5. It's too late to teach them ABSTINENCE.

6. Well, I think as long as you love the person, it's perfectly okay.

7. Kids will never buy into an abstinence message.

8. Hey, if it feels good, do it.

9. You should be able to do whatever you want as long as you don't hurt anybody.

10. What people do behind closed doors is nobody elses business.

1. IT CAN'T HAPPEN TO ME- is perhaps the prevailing attitude of most every teenager in America regardless of what era they grew up in. It is from this attitude that I have found that all the other presuppositions stem. However, it is important to take a brief look at how prevalent the negative consequences of promiscuity among teens has increased over the past few decades.

* The teen birthrate in the United States is the highest of any 'industrialized nation, nearly twice as great as that of the United Kingdom and 15 times that of Japan. (Rebecca A. Maynard, Kids Having Kids. Robin Hood Foundation)
* 1 million teenage girls get pregnant each year. Of that, approximately 40% will receive government assistance. (Rebecca A. Maynard, Kids Having Kids. Robin Hood Foundation)
* 33,000 people contract a new STD everyday. Approximately 2/3 are under the age of 25. (CDC)
* 50% of the sexually active single adult population has, or will have, at least 1 STD in their lifetime. (CDC)
* AIDS is the leading killer of Americans between the ages of 25 and 44. (CDC)
* Nearly 40 million surgical abortions have been performed in America since the Roe vs. Wade decision in 1973. (Alan Guttmacher Research Institute)
* Illegitimate births have increased 400% since 1963, the historical date that marks the beginning of the sexual revolution. (Medical Institute for Sexual Health) Without exception every group of teens who hear these facts respond with surprise. Teachers respond similarly and often remark how things have changed since they were students and ask an all too familiar question, "when and how did it all fall apart?" Many adults I come in contact with confessed to have had the same mentality of "it can't happen to me" as an adolescent, and therefore conclude somehow that if we just give them more information about sex and safe sex methods then perhaps the problem will go away.

2. WE JUST NEED TO TEACH THEM HOW TO BE SAFE- I rarely hear this from teens anymore and I'm hearing it less and less from adults. Is the lack of information and the unavailability of contraception the reason for the present state of illegitimacy and rising STD rates among teens'? Not in my experience. Among my visits to homes for unwed mothers and 'pregnant schools' such as Simpson Alternative School in Chicago, Ill, I found some very consistent traits. None of the girls said their pregnancies were due to ignorance of contraception methods. As a matter of fact, only 14% of teens don't use birth control because they lack knowledge of or access to birth control." ( "American Teens Speak: Sex, Myths, TV and Birth Control," The Planned Parenthood Poll, Louis Harris and Associates, Inc. 1986, p.6,28)

Moreover, many admitted that they had intentionally gotten pregnant and when I asked how many of them were using "protection" (condoms, the pill, etc.) when they conceived -- on average, 3 to 4 out of 10 raised their hands. By the way, what were those contraception failure rates again?

Upon witnessing this, I thought it would be interesting to ask them a similar question to that which Eunice Kennedy Shriver asked when she visited a group of teen mothers: "What do you want to know more about?"

Surprisingly every group of teen mothers I spoke with responded the same way they responded to her. The majority asked questions such as, "how do I live an abstinent lifestyle?" Furthermore, I have no recollection of any pregnant girls ever asking me about better contraception devices. Are these isolated cases? Afraid not. Here are but a few more instances that reveal what teens are interested in being taught about sex:

* A study in Family Planning perspectives, published by an affiliate of Planned Parenthood, and cited in the minority dissent bears this out. More than 100 sexually active girls 16 or younger were asked what topic they wanted more information on. A whopping 84% said, "How to say NO without hurting the other person's feelings." Washington Post, April 24, 1992.
* 83% of sexually active juniors and seniors in four inner-city high schools said the best age to initiate intercourse was older than they had been when they started, and about 25% of both sexes who had intercourse said they believed that sex before marriage is wrong. American Journal of Preventive Medicine. Washington Post 4/24/92
* A survey of 1200 young people in a Teen Services Program found 80%, "said they wanted to know more about how to say no," AP, Jan 23, 1984

A picture says a thousand words, and especially moving pictures. ABC's Primetime, with Diane Sawyer, had a revealing segment on school based clinics in the city of Baltimore entitled 'The End of Innocence.' In general, the adults in the segment were strongly in favor of giving Norplant implants to teenage girls at in their school and readily dismissed abstinence as a waist of time. However, when they interviewed the girls who had received a Norplant implant it was a different story. Their words affirm that contraception and "condoms are essentially sex accommodation rather than sex education." "Summary position statement on the condom for disease prevention," Taxpayer Action Committee.

Voice Over -- "We learned in the course of this report something that made us sad, every one of these sexually active girls confided to us, they wish they had said no."

Sawyer-- "If you had to do it all over again, let's say starting right now you'd never been with a boy at all, how long would you wait?" 1st Girl-- "'Til I got married."

2nd Girl -"Yeah."

3rd Girl - "Uh Hmm."

My generation knows more about sex than any other in American history. Yet, .if the mere acquisition of knowledge insured the reduction of illegitimate births and STD's, then we wouldn't be having this discussion. On the contrary, every negative consequence of adolescent sexual involvement has increased in spite of the efforts to give them more education. One of my closest friends' little sister got an A in her sex education class but got pregnant in her Junior year of high school.

Although a lengthy discussion would ensue if we expounded on the evidence that points to the fact that increased comprehensive sex education increases sexual activity among adolescence (Louis Harris and Assoc., The Planned Parenthood Poll, 1986, p.53, Table 5-4). I hear many adults say that we just need to equip them with protection. But learning more about safer sex techniques and contraception is not on the top of their list. After giving an hour presentation in Lafayette, La., a 15 year-old gift asked me the million-dollar question that I'm so often asked. "I want to stop having sex with my boyfriend and instead practice abstinence. Do you know where I can get more information."

3. THEY'RE GONNA DO IT ANYWAY- Is what an assistant vice principle told me before I spoke in her school. In fact this is perhaps the most quoted response I hear adults say when commenting on teen sexuality. I often wonder why that is. We don't seem to have that same attitude towards teens when it comes to other risky behaviors. We communicate that drugs, alcohol, and violence are not acceptable and even make the effort to inform them that these behaviors are not only socially unacceptable but illegal as well. Why haven't we done this in regard to sex? We haven't clearly communicated that teen sexual involvement is an unacceptable behavior because we've sent a mixed message. Granted everyone isn't going to abstain, and provision must be made for those who have deviated from the standard. However, we have made the exception the rule and now the standard, sexual abstinence, has become the exception. We must be just as consist in the messages we communicate to teens in regards to sex as we've been with drugs and violence.

I often point out the schizophrenia in our logic when I'm with the teens and amazingly enough they see it more clearly than most adults I encounter: Drugs are illegal, but since we know you're going to do it anyway, we're going to instruct you on how many ccs's you can safely inject yourself with without overdosing.

Alcohol consumption is illegal for minors, but since we know you're going to do it anyway, were going to teach you how to accurately calculate the amount of alcohol you can ingest (per body weight) and yet still be below the legal blood alcohol limit. Smoking is bad for you and it is illegal for someone to sell cigarettes to minors, but since we know you're going to do it anyway, we're going to provide filters for you at the school based clinic. In addition, we'll even help schedule appointments for you to purchase your cigarettes without your parents consent to protect your privacy. Carrying handguns is illegal for minors, but since we know you're going to do it anyway, we're going to provide a bulletproof vest distribution program. Moreover, we'll show you how to become expert marksmen so when you do your drive-byes you will be responsible enough not to shoot innocent babies and elderly people.

Sex with a minor is illegal and can have negative consequences, but since we know you're going to do it anyway, we're going to have condom distribution programs, demonstrations on how to put them on correctly. In some cases we'll provide you with Depo-Provera shots or Norplant implants without informing your parents to protect your privacy.

Can we honestly say that we have provided a clear and consistent message about the unacceptability of teen sexual involvement? Likewise, can we say we've informed the public that sex with a minor is against the law? Although the age of consent is not consistently 18 years of age across the country, I find very few teens that even know that sex with a minor is a crime. All of the above mentioned activities are illegal -- or illegal for minors to engage in -- because we all know and have seen how such activity has devastated teens and society as a whole. Why is it that we continue to turn our heads and ignore the obvious? I assert that sex education over the past few decades has been a form of entrapment by which we have accommodated, instructed, aided, and abetted teens in committing the crime of statutory rape. How true is this? In the State of California, over half of the births to teen girls are fathered by men over the age of 22! (CA., Office of Family Planning) The vast majority of these crimes go unprosecuted and it's a safe bet that most of them didn't even know that they had committed a crime.

I often share with them, "Impressionable minds live up to the expectations that are placed upon them. The sad thing is that society has so lowered the standard and level of expectation that this generation has had to crawl through a sewer just to get to the other side." Is it any wonder why our nation is producing the kind of youth that we are? The overwhelming majority of students I share this opinion with tend to agree. This attitude of 'they're gonna do it anyway,' tends to foster a sense of betrayal. After speaking to a group of college athletes, a football player from Utah State reiterated a common response I hear among teens across America, "Maybe if people expected more out of us they would get more."

4. SEX IS A NATURAL BODILY FUNCTION THAT CAN'T BE CONTROLLED- Is what a fellow guest on a talk show told me and amazingly enough has been the prevailing attitude when it comes to teaching anything about sex. It can best be summarized by a quote from Dr. Ruth. 'Asking young people to control their libido is asking them too much. Their libido is too strong.' If sex is an uncontrollable bodily function such as breathing, sleeping, eating, or even going to the restroom then it would be safe to assume somehow that if one were prevented from exercising these functions, detrimental side effects would occur, or even death. However, after engaging in some research, I've not yet found a documented case or an obituary that read, "Johnny... 17 years old.., cause of death.., virginity."

I always get a response of laughter when I share this widely held opinion of teens. DuSable High School in Chicago, Ill was no exception.

Principle Mingo told me that his high school was the first Chicago City School to have a school based clinic implemented, it was known as the worst school in America in the early 90's, and is currently one of the 3 poorest high schools in the country. After receiving a standing ovation from the student body after a 75 minute abstinence presentation a young boy from DuSable High School responded to this attitude best with the affirmation of his peers standing by. He said, ' if they can potty train us growing up and expect to use self- control when we're older why can't they have the same expectation when it comes to sex. What do they think we are, animals?" "It is extremely irresponsible and discriminatory to imply to our young people that they can control their passions in the area of violence, drugs, and other abuses but cannot control their sexual urges." (Pat v. Ware, Shepard Smith, "AIDS and HIV Infection in the African American Community," House of Representatives, Sept. 16, 1994, p.4.Subcommittee of Human Resources and Intergovernmental Relations, US). We've resigned ourselves into believing that since teens don't have the capacity to use self-control, then birth control will change everything. However, if this were true, wouldn't we have seen a dramatic decrease in the consequences of adolescent sexual activity? It seems as though "condoms encourage and reinforce the same behavior under different risk conditions rather than encourage change of behavior toward abstinence and faithful monogamy." ("Summary position statement on the condom for disease prevention," Taxpayer Action Committee).

Recently I had a conversation with Hertry, an employee of the Office of Family Planning, who said, "you know we've taught all the plumbing and we've shown them (youth) all the contraceptives. Yet, the statistics are still climbing. It just doesn't work. If you don't get to the emotional and psychological reasons as to why they are getting involved then nothing is going to work." Henry has voiced the same thing hat I've encountered across America, and that's the "emotional and psychological need to love and be loved... Often, the physical enjoyment of sex is not an important motivation, particularly among young adolescence." (Journal of Adolescent Health Care, July 1985, p.267-268.)

5. IT'S TOO LATE TO TEACH THEM ABSTINENCE- is what I heard a Baltimore, Mar. high school principle say on ABC's Primetime with Diane Sawyer. She like many others has come to equate sexual experience with being sexually active. I've often debated officials, who've said, "look, over 50% of high school students are sexually active by the time they graduate (Youth Worker Update, CDC and Prevention, March 1994, p.4.), why are you wasting your time?" This commonly used percentage is misleading. Although over half of teens may have had sex but that does not mean that they currently are sexually active. Many of these young people express how they have had sex a few or several times and then stopped because the experience was not as they say, "all that."

Let's take a deeper look at this line of reasoning. In the sixties many young people engaged in drug experimentation -- you may even know of a few. But did anyone say that it was too late to discourage this addictive and dangerous behavior? No, as a matter of fact most of them not only stopped but became productive members of society--and even politicians. Is it either fair or accurate to say that these individuals are still active drag users because they have used drags in the past? No. Then it is never too late to encourage teens to stop engaging in risky behaviors. Regardless of what many adults say, teens like Zettion believe otherwise. I spoke to her student body when she was a high school junior in Rocky Mount, NC. She was a young black female who had previous sexual experience and had never considered stopping until we met.

"My whole family has been on government assistance and nobody has ever gone to college. But when I heard you it made me rethink some things. Nobody ever told me that I could stop, they always said it was too late for me because I had already had sex.' A year later I returned and found Zettion had joined the Worth Waiting For Program and completely changed. She saw the importance of a lifestyle of selfcontrol, self-discipline, and the delay of self-gratification and joined the ROTC; she stopped having sex and said she was going to wait until she was married. Now after being accepted to college, she has become the first member of her family to do so. Although statistics show that daughters of adolescent morns are 83 % more likely themselves to become mothers before age 18 (Rebecca A. Maynard, Kids Having Kids. Robin Hood Foundation), Zettion broke this cycle, not because she was accommodated with birth control but was empowered with self-control. If you were to ask Zettion she would tell you that deciding to abstain from sex 'was one of the best decisions' she has ever made.

6. WELL, I THINK AS LONG AS YOU LOVE THE PERSON, IT'S PERFECTLY OKAY. That's what Damien Harris told me the father of her son, Gregory, said to her before she got pregnant. Damien was also the statistic that children of adolescent mothers also become adolescent mothers. Three days after Damien was born her mother walked out of the hospital and was never seen again. Although her parents were never married, she was raised with her paternal grandmother in Los Angeles,CA. She was a gifted artist on her way to college until she got pregnant and ended up on government assistance. Soon after her son was born she moved in with me and an abstinent lifestyle was one of the many things I began to encourage her to practice. We lived together for several years during which she got off government assistance, got a full ride scholarship to Long Beach State, moved into her own apartment and got married. While living together she shared many things with me in hopes that no other girl would follow the path she took as a teenager. She has said many times that she knew about and used contraception but still she contracted STD's and got pregnant. She believes that many are quick to push safe sex on inner-city girls but never truly addressed the heart issues of why they are having sex.

Now she is an advocate of abstinence until marriage and regrets not having waited until she got married. Even though the greatest determinant of women leaving the welfare system is marriage, not training programs (Daniel T. Lichter, Felicia B. LeClere, and Diane K, McLaughlin, "Local Marriage Markets and the Marital Behavior of Black and White Women," American Journal of Sociology 96 (1991): 843-8670, still marriage is rarely encouraged in sex ed classes (especially in the inner cities). Fortunately, Damien, like Zettion, has surpassed the low expectations placed upon black females and broken the statistics. I got to participate in her wedding last year and as I saw her son Gregory walk down the isle as the ring bearer I had never remembered seeing him happier. He told me, "Aunt Kita, mommy and I are getting married today!" Now Gregory has something most little boys in the African-American community will never have, a father who lives at home.

7. KIDS WILL NEVER BUY INTO AN ABSTINENCE MESSAGE- was what I was initially told buy a public relations firm in Los Angeles that was contracted by the state of California to promote The Partnership for Responsible Parenting. But they soon began to change their minds when I toured the state with the Office of Family Planning speaking to hundreds of high school students. Eric Curren, Senior Account Executive, for the public relations firm, said he 'had a blast and being back in the office hasn't been the same.' He's received responses from all over the state and the responses were over whelming. 'The claim that students are unwilling to listen to an abstinence message is untrue.., they eagerly participated.. They thought it was cool." He said teen 'surveys showed that students were not only receptive to the abstinence message, but that they were thankful for it: 'I'm glad somebody said what I already thought." "You don't have to do it to be cool." Eric and others on the tour said the message of self-control, self-discipline, and the delay of self-gratification was 'empowering.'

Dadasi Elliott, project coordinator for the community challenge Grant, in Long Beach health department, heard this same message on an abstinent lifestyle at Reid Alternative High School. He said, "I'd like to have these assemblies in all Junior and Senior High Schools in the city of Long Beach every semester."

I have witnessed a major shift in the attitudes of young people in regards to sex over these past few years: - A recent USA Today survey stated "72% of young people agree with the chastity message." (Jeanne Write, "A Push for Chastity," USA Today, March 22, 1994, p.4-9) "Virginity is making a comeback, along with sexual abstinence. The idea that virginity is in some sense hip is spreading through popular culture." (Judith Newman, "Proud to be a Virgin," New York Times, June 19,1994, Section 9)

Even in some unlikely places, were most would write teens of as a lost cause, an abstinence message has had positive responses like at Cook Co. Juvenile Detention Center in Chicago, Ill. This facility is the largest juvenile detention center in the world where, they house everything from truancy to triple-murder. Because of the response they have gotten from their population, they request my presence every time I come to Chicago. "You should know that we have continued to hear from the kids that they were impacted by your presentation (Associate Judges for Circuit Court 19th Judicial Circuit, M. Mullen and D. Hall.). '

8. HEY, IF IT FEELS GOOD, DO IT- was the mantra of the 60's. Just as it is known that marijuana in the 60's is not like marijuana in the 90's, so sex in the 60's is not like sex in the 90's. What was sown to the wind is now reaping the whirlwind. In the 60's sex was questioned by a generation of boomers as an issue of morality. The culture formerly had standards and this generation, knowing what the standards were, challenged them by engaging in what the dictionary calls immorality -- defying a known moral law. These same individuals grew up and became parents to children who are now amoral -- without knowledge of any moral code -- in regards to their sexual behavior. Thus, I am a product of an amoral generation known as X and my counterpart known as the Milliniels. In 1966, the then Executive Director of SIECUS asked, "What is sex for? It's for fun ... We need new values to establish when and how we should have sexual experiences." (Dr. Mary Calderone former medical director of Planned Parenthood and Executive director of SEICUS. Look Magazine. Mar 8, 1966, "Sex Education Comes of Age.")

Well, we got what we asked for, and that's why you're reading this paper. Some, however, are still fighting for a free sex crusade that has proven not to be free at all because everybody is paying - financially, socially, emotionally, physically, and some even with their own lives. Every Revolution has its casualties, and although their have been person victories, can we honestly say that we have won the war? Before answering yes, please remember that it is mine and the subsequent generation that has suffered the greatest amount of casualties. For my peers and I, sex isn't merely a moral question but a question of 'is it worth the hassle?' and today, unlike that carefree frolic in the grass at Woodstock days, it's a matter of life and death. As one high school boy put it, "sex doesn't feel good when you're dead."

Will we continue to subscribe to an "if it feels good, do it" mantra? This mantra inherent in its own words implies that one not need to have any self-control, no disciplining of oneself, and live to gratify your passions. This is totally in opposition to the necessary attributes that young people need to possess to successfully navigate through life. Dr. Daniel Goleman, author of the book Emotional Intelligence, documents a Stanford experiment in the late 60's called the marshmallow test. In summary, 4 and 5-year-old children were measured on their ability to abstain from eating candy in order that they could receiver greater rewards in the future. Over a decade later these same children were followed up to document their progress.

They found that those who had a high EQ, emotional quotient, (ability to abstain) scored an average of 200 points higher on their SAT exams and had lower involvement in risky behaviors (drugs, violence, etc). The amazing thing that was pointed out about this EQ is that your not born with a set one but can change it at any time (Goleman, Emotional Intelligence, Bantam NY, NY, 1995. p80-82, 193).

Rod Flynn, president of Flynn Productions and a close friend, was one of the most creative individuals I have ever met. He not only subscribed to this 60's mantra but lived it as well, until he contracted AIDS. During our last conversation he said he was sorry for mocking me for my work with young people. He confided in me that he could only recall having unprotected sex one time, yet, if he had had the chance to do it all over again, he would have waited until he got married. He also asked me to share his story, graphic details and all, to every young person I possibly could. Lynn Chamberlain, also a friend from Los Angeles, echoes the same sentiments. She says that even if she hadn't contracted AIDS having sex before marriage wasn't worth the emotional and psychological trauma she has suffered.

Times have changed and I think we've seen the effects of a culture that has aggressively hailed the anthem of 'if it feels good do it." Change, however, is in the wind and if we listen closely to the chorus of voices growing louder among the youth, and not dimmer with age, it is obvious that a generation "after Woodstock, a new youth rebellion is afoot. The anthem of this new generation: True Love Waits." (Cheryl Wetstein, "With Groups' Help, Teens Take Pride in Virginity," The Washington Times. July 26, 1994, p. A-I)

9. YOU SHOULD BE ABLE TO DO WHATEVER YOU WANT AS LONG AS YOU DON'T HURT ANYBODY- a Chief District Court Judge for the 5th Judicial District of North Carolina who served on the National Council for juvenile and family court judges doesn't think so. Judge Gilbert H. Burnett told me during a lunch meeting that during his 23 years judging criminals and juveniles he believes that the biggest cause of crime, public health costs, and welfare is adolescent pregnancy. He believes that if teen pregnancies could be cut in half that we would see a decline in crime, public health costs, and welfare within 12 years. Every year: One million teenage girls get pregnant. Out of that million: 1/3 have induced abortions, 14% miscarry, 52% give birth. Out of that 52% (that give birth), 80% are in poverty and end up on public assistance.

The daughters of adolescent mothers are more likely to become adolescent moms themselves, and the sons are more likely to wind up in prison. If a teenage girl gives birth to a male child, the chances are three times as great that he will end up in prison when he is older. Whereas, if the circumstances were identical, but she waited until she was 22 of 23, there is 1/3 less chance he would end up in prison. (Rebecca A. Maynard, Kids Having Kids. Robin Hood Foundation)

An estimated $1 billion is spent annually in the construction and maintenance of criminal facilities. In which close to 70% that are incarcerated come from single parent homes. (Rebecca A. Maynard, Kids Having Kids. Robin Hood Foundation)

Judge Burnette believes that when it comes to crime, people may be looking at the wrong factors such as race and economics. The statistics are beginning to show this, "the poverty rate and racial composition of a community are not good indicators of poverty and poverty but the number of single-parent homes in a neighborhood. (Douglas Smith and G. Roger Jarjours, 'Social Structure and Criminal Victimization," Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency 25, Feb. 1986, p. 27-52.)."

10. WHAT PEOPLE DO BEHIND CLOSED DOORS IS NOBODY ELSES BUSINESS- If this is true then why do these same people come from behind closed doors and expect the rest of society to pay for their 'behind closed door activity." Certainly, we all concede that you can't legislate morality, however, you can legislate moral laws. For every law inherently sets a standard and an expectation of behavior. Recently, Judge Burnette had a conversation with a local pediatrician who told him that 80% of the babies born in his hospital, who are on life support, were born to teenage mothers.

Some of the costs can run as much as $600,000 per infant, which of course is passed on to others who are to stay out of their "business." "We must discourage sexual activity among youth ... The younger teens start having sex, the more partners they will have which automatically means they become more at risk for contracting STD's ("Unmarried teenagers have more partners," CDC, 1991)."

We cannot quickly forget Cushon Williams, who last October 1997, was arrested for attempted murder. This young man, in his 20's, admitted to sleeping with over 28 women in the New York area while knowing that he was infected with the AIDS virus. After tracking down these women, they found that at least 10 were HIV positive, and one was pregnant. But it didn't stop there. Public Health officials had to track down the estimated over 70 men who had had sexual contact with Mr. Williams! In addition, he later confessed to have slept with countless other women in the NYC area while knowing he was infected.

Instances such as this are not as rare and relegated to the urban centers of America as it may seem. Recently, Martha, who works for the Office of Family Planning in the state of California, told me that an affluent high school in one of the wealthiest communities in our nation had a similar incident. After a 19 year-old died from complications of AIDS, it was found out than he had come into contact with, directly and indirectly, with over 60 fellow students while in high school. Many are infected and still others are unaware that they may be HIV positive.

When students are informed that when engaging in sexual activity they are potentially coming into contact with numerous other individuals, they quickly put things in perspective. "Is what people do behind closed doors nobody else's business.'?" Never have I seen a raised hand. One girl responds, "you're joking... aren't you?"

CONCLUSION

After engaging hundreds of thousands of teens across America, I've yet to receive a negative response from a student (the person whom this message directly affects). Abstinence can and should be taught not only as the cornerstone of sex education but as a lifestyle to be mastered. What plausible argument could anyone give for rejecting the priority of teaching self-control, self-discipline, and the delay of self-gratification? Is it possible that we have neglected these necessary life skills?

When I ask teens if perhaps this is true, the overwhelming majority seems to think so. "Oh, abstinence is always mentioned in class but the rest of the period is used to show us how to put condoms on and stuff."..."They say abstinence is the best thing but they don't act like it when they teach it."... "It's not that we don't want to abstain its just that no one is showing us how to do it."... "If they say abstinence is the best thing then why is the majority of class time used to teach us how to have sex without getting caught?" These are but a few comments I hear on a regular basis from the many teens I encounter.

Discouraging sexual activity among teens -- not accommodating it as we have -- should be the priority. Permissiveness and an undisciplined lifestyle has never, and never will, produce sustained excellence or success. Much to my surprise I even found an unlikely advocate of teen abstinence, none other than talk show host, Jerry Springer, who earlier this summer was thunderously applauded by his audience. He has stated several times, 'teenagers have no business having sex at all!' Even Jerry Springer stumbled upon this revelation. When will we?

In conclusion I leave you with this: AFTER BEING ASKED, "ARE YOU REALLY A VIRGIN?" -- THE THREE MOST ASKED QUESTIONS I'M ASKED BY TEENS AS AN ABSTIENCE SPEAKER ARE: 1. WHY HAVEN'T I HEARD THIS BEFORE? 2. WHEN ARE YOU COMING BACK? 3. SO HOW CAN I GET MORE INFORMATION ON AN ABSTINENT LIFESTYLE?

Members of Congress, I only have the answer to the third question. I need you to help me answer this generation on the first two.

'We must remember that intelligence is not enough, intelligence plus character is the true goal of education.' Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr."

  

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DVActivist
Member since Oct 19th 2004
20915 posts
Mon Mar-21-05 09:55 AM

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113. "this is great"
In response to Reply # 111


  

          

as one of the many tools of education

I really think it should be taught to young children. Kids 12 and 13 are having sex, and thats really scary to me as a parent. However at some point education around having safer sex needs to be introduced as well.

**********************************************

When they discover the center of the universe, a lot of people will be disappointed to discover they are not it.
- Bernard Bailey

  

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Trace
Member since Sep 16th 2002
37108 posts
Mon Mar-21-05 09:44 AM

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112. "Today in Women's History - 3/21/05"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

http://womenshistory.about.com/library/cal/bl0321.htm

  

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BooDaah
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Mon Mar-21-05 12:58 PM

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114. "Pat Summitt Ties NCAA Basketball Wins Record"
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Best of the best
Summitt matches Dean Smith 879th career victory
Posted: Sunday March 20, 2005 11:44PM; Updated: Monday March 21, 2005 12:43AM

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -- Pat Summitt thanked her team for helping her tie the NCAA victory record before getting down to what really matters to her.

Tennessee's 94-43 victory over Western Carolina on Sunday night in the first round of the NCAA tournament was win No. 879 for Summitt, tying her with former North Carolina men's coach Dean Smith for the most victories in NCAA history.

Summitt, however, is focused on advancing in the tournament.

After the victory, the Lady Vols asked their coach if she was excited about trying to break Smith's record in the second round.

"I said, 'Yes, I want your help,"' Summitt said. "I want to get this over with only because we will be going to Philadelphia and we all want to go to Philadelphia."

Top-seeded Tennessee (27-4) will face Purdue in the second round Tuesday night, with the winner advancing to the regional semifinals in Philadelphia.

Summitt is 879-171, while Smith was 879-254 in 36 years with the Tar Heels.

Summitt has been at the top of the women's game for years with six national titles and 15 Final Four appearances.

"I have so much respect and admiration for Coach Smith. This is more than just a number," Summitt said immediately after the game.

"The Lady Vols that have played here have been really special. You think about all of them, they made it happen. It says that we've had some of the best players in the history of the game. They're part of my family and my life and for that I say thank you to all of them."

Fittingly, Summitt tied Smith on Tennessee's home court at Thompson-Boling Arena, where the Lady Vols are 252-14 since it opened in 1987. Tennessee has never lost an NCAA game in Knoxville, going 45-0 since the women's tournament began in 1982.

And this is the most appropriate time of year for Summitt, who tops all women's coaches with an 86-17 NCAA tournament record.

The Lady Vols and, in particular, Shanna Zolman made it easy for Summitt to get the victory.

Western Carolina (18-14), the No. 16 seed in the Philadelphia Regional, was undersized and outmatched from the beginning. Catamounts coach Kellie Harper, a point guard on Tennessee's three straight titles from 1996-98, could only watch her team fall behind big early.

The Lady Vols increased the lead to double digits, 19-8, with 13:47 left before halftime, and they had a 19-2 run that pushed it to 29 points with 4 1/2 minutes left in the first half. The margin hit 49 on Brittany Jackson's 3-pointer with 12:36 to go in the game.

Zolman matched her career high of 28 points, going 5-of-8 from beyond the arc. Shyra Ely added 12 points and 10 rebounds, while Alexis Hornbuckle had 11 points and 12 rebounds. And, in one of Summitt's favorite statistics, the Lady Vols outrebounded Western Carolina 57-36.

"Pat Summitt is huge for the women's basketball game," Harper said. "She's been a pioneer, a legacy, a legend -- all of those adjectives. And now, her tying Dean Smith allows her legacy to move over to basketball, not just women's basketball, and I think a person like Pat Summitt needs to be a legend in the game of basketball."

Chevon Keith and Monique Dawson each had nine points to lead the Catamounts, who won the Southern Conference tournament to earn the school's first NCAA bid.

  

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Trace
Member since Sep 16th 2002
37108 posts
Tue Mar-22-05 08:56 AM

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115. "Today in Women's History - 3/22/05"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

http://womenshistory.about.com/library/cal/bl0322.htm

  

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mccool
Member since Mar 22nd 2005
13 posts
Tue Mar-22-05 03:37 PM

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116. "shameless plug"
In response to Reply # 115


          

Verbalisms Magazine - Women's History Month Issue

WWW.VERBALISMS.COM



-mc cool

  

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egotrippin
Member since Feb 11th 2004
724 posts
Thu Mar-24-05 11:45 AM

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117. "March 24, 2002"
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Halle Berry becomes first African-American woman to win best actress Oscar.

  

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DVActivist
Member since Oct 19th 2004
20915 posts
Thu Mar-24-05 02:02 PM

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118. "this is the best we can do, eh"
In response to Reply # 117


  

          

*calls for reinforcements*

**********************************************

When they discover the center of the universe, a lot of people will be disappointed to discover they are not it.
- Bernard Bailey

  

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Trace
Member since Sep 16th 2002
37108 posts
Fri Mar-25-05 11:18 AM

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119. "***for those who know saartjie baartman's story***"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

well if u've been reading up on this post like that then everyone shld know it by now

but for those interested in it like i am, u shld read this poem written and posted by paperdollpoet in freestyle (see? good stuff still comes from there)

http://board.okayplayer.com/okp.php?az=show_topic&forum=7&topic_id=15489&mesg_id=15489&page=#15503

its excellent.
read it!

  

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PlanetInfinite
Charter member
126185 posts
Fri Mar-25-05 11:33 AM

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120. "mary wallace - first chicago bus driver."
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

i had a link.


but here's a recent story.
but it's about this little debacle going on right now.

i'll try to provide another link.
but there's a bit of history about her in here.

http://www.suntimes.com/output/mitchell/cst-nws-mitch17.html

--------------------
"if you gonna suck your thumb, suck your thumb." -gfk

  

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kate404
Member since Mar 28th 2003
14385 posts
Sat Mar-26-05 12:53 AM

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122. "links and resources for victims of domestic violence and sexual assault"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

great site: http://www.womenslaw.org/

national links: http://www.womenslaw.org/natl_links.htm

national center for victims of crime: http://www.ncvc.org/ncvc/main.aspx?dbID=DB_ViolenceAgainstWomen155

rainn: rape, abuse, and incest national network: http://www.rainn.org/index.html

_____________________________________
Facts Lost © David Byrne

Quick & Dead: http://thequickthedead.tumblr.com/

On Social Media
https://twitter.com/#!/decaturkater
decaturkaters on instagram

  

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Ziad
Charter member
10800 posts
Mon Mar-28-05 09:38 PM

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124. "mmmmm ...women slaw."
In response to Reply # 122


  

          


  

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kate404
Member since Mar 28th 2003
14385 posts
Sat Mar-26-05 12:59 AM

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123. "Jane Addams"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

Name: Jane Addams

Date of Birth: 1860

Place of Birth: Cedarville, Illinois

Date of Death: 1935

Place of Death: Chicago, Illinois

Jane Addams is remembered primarily as a founder of the Settlement House Movement. She and her friend Ellen Starr founded Hull House in the slums of Chicago in 1889. She is also remembered as the first American Woman to receive the Nobel Peace Prize.

Jane is portrayed as the selfless giver of ministrations to the poor, but few realize that she was a mover and shaker in the areas of labor reform (laws that governed working conditions for children and women), and was a founder of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). 

Jane grew up in the small community of Cedarville, Illinois. She was the daughter of a very well-to-do gentleman; her mother was a kind and gracious lady. Jane had five brothers and sisters at the time of her mother's death, when Jane was two. Her father remarried and her new stepmother brought two new step-brothers to the already large family.

Jane was especially devoted to her father. He taught her tolerance, philanthropy, and a strong work ethic. He encouraged her to pursue higher education, but not at the expense of losing her femininity and the prospect of marriage and motherhood -- the expectation for all upper-class young ladies at that time. Jane attended the Rockford Seminary for young ladies and excelled in her studies. She also developed strong leadership traits. Her classmates admired her and followed her examples. Jane decided that she wished to pursue a degree in medicine when she completed her studies at Rockford. This choice caused a great stir in the Addams household. Her parents felt that she had had enough education and were concerned that she would never marry. Jane became despondent. She wanted more in life. If her brothers could have careers in medicine and science, why couldn't she? Besides, she disliked household duties and the prospect of raising children held no appeal.

Jane's parents decided that the best course was to take Jane and her friends on a grand tour of Europe for a year or two. Perhaps Jane would settle down and realize that her duty was to marry and have a family. Jane began to show signs of serious illness during this time. Was her health affected by stress? There was the pressure to do her parents' bidding, and inner turmoil over whether or not to disobey them and choose a career. 

Her father died upon her return. This set Jane into a deeper depression and a sense of guilt that somehow she had upset him with her insistence upon a vocation. Her illness grew to the proportion of "invalid." She could barely walk or move without great pain. Jane did have a slight curvature of the spine and for this she sought treatment. Eventually, she had surgery and was strapped into a back harness from which she could not move for about a year. This year gave her time to think.

When she recovered, she headed to Europe, this time just with friends. Jane did a lot of the usual sightseeing. Just by chance, while in England, she was introduced to the founders and the workings of Toynbee Hall, a settlement house in the slums of London. It did not immediately strike her that social work was to be her calling. It took some time after returning to the United States before she and her traveling companion, Ellen Starr, committed themselves to the idea of starting a settlement house in Chicago. Once committed, there was no stopping these young women, especially Jane. Jane was a fireball. She was the creator, the innovator, and the leader. People flocked to her. Most everything she needed she was able to procure with the generosity of patrons. Money poured in. Within a few years, Hull House offered medical care, child care and legal aid. It also provided classes for immigrants to learn English, vocational skills, music, art and drama.

In 1893 a severe depression rocked the country. Hull House was serving over two thousand people a week. As charitable efforts increased, so too did political ones. Jane realized that there would be no end to poverty and need if laws were not changed. She directed her efforts at the root causes of poverty. The workers joined Jane to lobby the state of Illinois to examine laws governing child labor, the factory inspection system, and the juvenile justice system. They worked for legislation to protect immigrants from exploitation, limit the working hours of women, mandate schooling for children, recognize labor unions, and provide for industrial safety.

All this led to the right to vote for women. Addams worked for Chicago municipal suffrage and became first vice-president of the National American Women Suffrage Association in 1911. She campaigned nationwide for Theodore Roosevelt and the Progressive Party in 1912.

She became a very controversial figure while working on behalf of economic reform. When horrible working conditions led to the Haymarket riot, Jane was personally attacked for her support of the workers. It resulted in a great loss of donor support for Hull House. She supplemented Hull House funding with revenue from lecture tours and article writing. She began to enjoy international acclaim. Her first book was published in 1910 and others followed biennially. Her biggest success in writing came with the release of the book, Twenty Years at Hull House. It became her autobiography and brought her wealth.

Addams foresaw World War I. In 1915, in an effort to avert war, she organized the Women's Peace Party and the International Congress of Women. This latter organization met at The Hague and made serious diplomatic attempts to thwart the war. When these efforts failed and the U.S. joined the war in 1917, criticism of Addams rose. She was expelled from the Daughters of the American Revolution, but it did not slow her down. In 1919 she was elected first president of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, a position she held until her death. She was founder of the American Civil Liberties Union and the NAACP. These positions earned her even more criticism than her pacifism. She was accused of being a socialist, an anarchist and a communist.

Hull House, however, continued to be successful. When the depression of the 1930's struck, Addams saw many of the things that she had advocated and fought for become policies under President Franklin Roosevelt. She received numerous awards during this time including, in 1931, the Nobel Peace Prize.

That year her health began to fail but she continued her work until her death in 1935. Thousands of people came to her funeral at Hull House before she was taken to Cedarville to be buried.


QUOTE:

I am not one of those who believe - broadly speaking - that women are better than men. We have not wrecked railroads, nor corrupted legislatures, nor done many unholy things that men have done; but then we must remember that we have not had the chance.

- Jane Addams

Links to the Hull-House: http://wall.aa.uic.edu:62730/artifact/HullHouse.asp
http://www.prairieghosts.com/hull.html

_____________________________________
Facts Lost © David Byrne

Quick & Dead: http://thequickthedead.tumblr.com/

On Social Media
https://twitter.com/#!/decaturkater
decaturkaters on instagram

  

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Trace
Member since Sep 16th 2002
37108 posts
Tue Mar-29-05 09:00 AM

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125. "Roberta Flack"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

no links or nothin. i just think she's really great.

  

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morpheme
Charter member
94867 posts
Tue Mar-29-05 05:02 PM

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126. "the ERA..."
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

it failed by only 3 states

_____________
Kamikaze Genes
____________♌♀
goddess; small g.

  

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kate404
Member since Mar 28th 2003
14385 posts
Wed Mar-30-05 12:37 PM

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127. "LADY PINK"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

You may recognize her from the movie Wild Style.. or not
She is a dope graffiti artist who is well respected and rolled with the best of them. brief bio:

PINK aka LADY PINK is the most committed and enduring female writer of all time and can without question be labeled the most accomplished woman in the history of writing. In 1979 PINK came into prominence in the New York City subway graffiti scene. There had been few female writers of significance since the early 1970s.
During the late 1970s and early 1980s PINK wrote on a variety of subway lines with the top crews in the city. Her artistic ability progressed rapidly; prompting respect and admiration from within the graffiti community. Along with the admiration came jealousy and spite, particularly because she was talented and female. PINK remained unintimidated and continued to break new ground. Her career would excel well beyond those of her critic's, both in quantity and quality. In addition to her accomplishments on the subway system PINK was involved in many important gallery exhibitions of aerosol art during the early 1980s including the Fashion Moda gallery. Her work has also been displayed at the Whitney Museum and the Bronx Museum of the Arts.

She has remained active in graffiti culture on many levels, from formal art venus such as art galleries, museums and commissioned paintings to traditional graffiti street murals and even freight trains. She has style and painting ability that are clearly the results of a powerfully creative mind. PINK has painted all over the world and is still very active.


some links:
freights: http://www.graffiti.org/trains/trains_8.html
murals: http://www.graffiti.org/nyc/newyork_23.html
article about female graf. writers: http://www.tucsonweekly.com/gbase/cityweek/Content?oid=oid:52761

_____________________________________
Facts Lost © David Byrne

Quick & Dead: http://thequickthedead.tumblr.com/

On Social Media
https://twitter.com/#!/decaturkater
decaturkaters on instagram

  

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keyoleo
Member since Dec 03rd 2002
13584 posts
Thu Mar-31-05 12:18 AM

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128. "RE: the Women's History Month post"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

Event: 03-31-1776, Abigail Adams wrote her husband when he was in Philadlphia helping plan the Declaration of Independence:


1776: Abigail Adams writes to her husband, John Adams: "If particular care and attention is not paid to the ladies, we are determined to foment a rebellion, and will not hold ourselves bound by any laws in which we have no voice or representation."

Abigail Adams

In a letter, dated March 31, 1776, Abigail Adams reveals an awareness of sexual inequality and even warns her husband what his course of action will bring about. It is obvious that Abigail is speaking for other women as well as herself as she uses we in her threat, indicating that woman's rights advocates were alive and well in the U.S. at least 200 years before the period of the 1970s that HIStorians erroneously named the second wave of feminism.

Wife of 2nd President John Adams.

Tuff Talk Don't Impress ME!~keyoleo



************SMOOCHES***********

  

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DVActivist
Member since Oct 19th 2004
20915 posts
Thu Mar-31-05 09:47 AM

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129. "today is the last day"
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i'd like to end on a positive note

women are awesome... we have been since the beginning of time
we will continue to give our lives showing the world that we are capable of being powerful beings!

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When they discover the center of the universe, a lot of people will be disappointed to discover they are not it.
- Bernard Bailey

  

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datnawteeone
Member since Jun 26th 2002
1122 posts
Thu Mar-31-05 04:27 PM

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130. "For Next Year"
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Rename it Women's HerStory Month.

I appreciate it on behalf of Douglass College here at Rutgers.

Thanks.

  

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