01-21 TABLE of CONTENTS:
Sex Harassment post-Anita Hill
DATES, ANNIVERSARIES, and
EVENTS
QUOTES from
Boston Globe, and by Golda Meir, Queen Elizabeth I, Jodie
Foster, and Boadicea.
In the December 5, 1994 Time magazine:
"A ghost of Christmas
Past (and Crass) at HUD - Three whole years after the Hill-Thomas hearings,
Washington has learned how to handle sexual harassment cases, right? Maybe,
maybe not. A high-level supervisor at the Department of Housing and Urban
Development who handed out edible candy panties and chocolate penises to
his female employees at a HUD Christmas party last year has been quietly
transferred to a different department and allowed to keep his $69,000-to-$90,000
GS-15 salary. 'I guess they thought that was adequate punishment,' a HUD
spokesman explains."
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01-21 DATES, ANNIVERSARIES, and
EVENTS
B. 01-21-1840, Sophia Louisa Jex-Blake, after
a strenuous campaign SLJ gained legislation permission for women to receive
an M.D. degree and be licensed to practice medicine and surgery in
Britain (1876). She was forced to get her own M.D. at the University of
Bern in Switzerland and be licensed in Ireland to practice medicine in
Great Britain!
B. 01-21-1853, Helen Hamilton Gardener, writer
and lecturer who became prominent with a well-researched article that
disproved the popular masculist claims that women's brains were inferior
to men's brains. Her novel Is This Your Son, My Lord? was a best
seller. She headed the highly effective diplomatic wing of the National
American women's Suffrage Association. She was a freethinker.
B. 01-21-1871, Olga Preobrajenska, Imperial
Russian ballet prima ballerina and teacher who taught the Russian style
from her Paris studio.
B. 01-21-1886, Cora Barbara Hennel, in 1912
received the first Ph. D. in Mathematics awarded by Indiana University
where she would teach for the next 40 years, finally making full professor
in 1936 after 27 years of service. At the time only four women in the entire
state were full professors.
Event 01-21-1908: the Sullivan Ordinance
is passed in New York City making it illegal for women to smoke in public,
punishable by a fine of $5-25 and ten days in jail. And they arrested women!
B. 01-21-1910, Patsy Kelly, a generation of
Americans looked for this character actor's name as a guarantee of
humor and good times in a movie. Returned to the stage in No, No Nanette
(1971) and won a Tony. Spent her last years with Ruby Keeler and lived
with or was close friends with a number of women actors including Tallulah
Bankhead.
B. 01-21-1919, Jinx Falkenburg, model, actor,
swimming champion, and TV and radio entertainer.
B. 01-21-1922, Jade Snow Wong, author
First Chinese Daughter.
B. 01-21-1923, Lola Flores who in 1994 was
honored with a special gold medal from the Spanish government her for
life's work as one of the nation's most popular flamenco dancers and film
actors. Her off-stage life was as glamorous as on with a series of famous
lovers.
Event 01-21-1987, the U.S. Supreme Court
rules a state may determine if a woman's pregnancy makes her eligible for
unemployment insurance. The 1976 Federal Unemployment Tax Act determined
that pregnancy is to be treated the same as any other disability. In the
Missouri case in question, state law stipulates disability must be work-related
to qualify the person for unemployment insurance.
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QUOTES DU JOUR
BOSTON GLOBE:
"What, after all, is
feminism? What makes a truly liberated woman? Is feminism - as a social
movement - no more than a collection of individual women who want to be
equal to men in a women's world? Is the real liberated woman one who does
little more than say yes to careeism, safe sex and 'making it' in America's
overhyped, sensationalistic, commercial culture? Or is feminism about obtaining
equality AND making a difference. Is it about helping the majority of women
improve their lives by transforming that culture?"
--
Boston Globe editorial, 1990
MEIR, GOLDA:
"Women's Liberation
is just a lot of foolishness. It's the men who are discriminated against.
They can't bear children. And no one's likely to do anything about that."
--
Golda Meir, (1898-1978) former Milwaukee school teacher and Prime Minister
of Israel.
ELIZABETH I:
In her famous speech to the troops at Tilbury,
Queen Elizabeth I told them:
"I know I have the
body but of a weak and feeble woman; but I have the heart and stomach of
a king, and of a King of England too, and think foul scorn that Parma or
Spain or any prince of Europe should dare to invade the borders of my realm,
to which, rather than any dishonor should grow by me, I myself will take
up arms; I myself will be your general, judge, and rewarder of every one
of your virtues in the field."
FOSTER, JODIE:
"I'm really sick of
people apologizing for feminism as if it would leave nasty stains. Feminism
is one of the world's great humanisms. It's about making the world more
human."
--
Jodie Foster, actor, director, producer, and head of her own film company.
BOADICEA:
"It will not be the
first time, Britons, that you have been victorious under the conduct of
your queen. For my part, I come not here as one descended of royal blood,
not to fight for empire or riches, but as one of the common people, to
avenge the loss of their liberty, the wrong of myself and children."
--
Boadicea (c 60 BC as quoted in Biography of Distinguished Women
by Sarah Josepha Hale).
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