06-07 TABLE of CONTENTS:
Apgar Develops Diagnosis of Newborns
DATES, ANNIVERSARIES, and
EVENTS
QUOTE by Arthur J.
Goldberg.
Apgar Developed One Minute Diagnosis System for New Borns
Born 06-07-1909, Virginia Apgar, U.S. physician,
anesthesiologist, and administrator. She is most noted for developing the
Apgar System that easily diagnoses the health of a newborns with one minute
of birth and predicted special needs and medical attention in the critical
fem minutes or hours of life.
VA was the first woman to hold a full professorship
on Columbia's University's medical faculty.
A talented musician with an overriding interest in
science, VA worked her way through Mount Holyoke College (1929) before
entering Columbia University as a rarity: a woman medical student, graduating
in 1933. Then she went further into no woman's land by becoming a surgeon.
After several hundred operations she turned to anesthesiology
because she realized no matter what, a women of that time could not earn
a living doing surgery. She was appointed director of anesthesiology at
Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center (1938), the first woman department
head at the center.
She was appointed full professor of anesthesiology
at Columbia in 1949, again being the first women to hold such a post.
She became senior vice-president for medical affairs
of the National Foundation March of Dimes 1959-1974 and led it to its greatest
advancements.
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06-07 DATES, ANNIVERSARIES, and EVENTS
B. 06-07-1662, Celia Fiennes - British social historian and cultural
recorder. CF was an individualist who visited every county in England
from 1685-1712, usually riding on horseback.
She made a meticulous
record of her many trips, the only one made for that era. A extremely valuable
resource but her journals were not published until 1982. Had she been a
man, would not her record of her exploits and what she saw been taken serious
- and recognized for its importance?
She took pride in experiencing
all the local customs and food. She never married.
B. 06-07-1843, Susan Elizabeth Blow - U.S. educator. SEB is called
the mother of the kindergarten system in the public schools of the United
States.
B. 06-07-1861, Alice Hubbard - U.S.free thinker writer who wrote
An American Bible (1911). She died in the sinking of the Lusitania
05-07-1915 in what many have said was a preventable torpedoing by a German
U-boat.
Event 06-07-1876: Anna Oliver became the first U.S. woman to receive
a B.D. degree. She reeived it from the Boston University School of
Theology.
B. 06-07-1876, Alice Nelsen - U.S. opera and operetta star who
was the favorite singer of composer Victor Herbert. She went on to form
own opera company.
B. 06-07-1896, Vivien Kellems - U.S. industrialist who was prosecuted
because she refused to withhold federal taxes from her employees without
being her being appointed an agent of IRS, being paid a salary, and being
reimbursed for her expenses in collecting the taxes.
B. 06-07-1899, Elizabeth Bowen - Irish writer. EB wrote realistically
of the lack of fulfillment or emotional satisfactions in the upper middle
class women of England and Ireland who are never quite ready for what life
has to offer, i.e., "a checked, puzzled woman's
life."
B. 06-07-1895, Elizabeth Frazier Kee filled the unexpired term of
her husband in the U.S. House of Representative from West Virginia. She
was reelected. http://clerkweb.house.gov/womenbio/
B. 06-07-1909, Jessica Tandy, British-born U.S. actor. Much honored
and loved, JT was a star of stage, screen and TV. She won the Kennedy Center
Honors Award in 1986; won an Academy Award for the lead in Driving Miss
Daisy (1989).
She won her second Tony
award for the Gin Game (1978). Most remember her in her old age
and are amazed that her first Tony award was for her creation of Blanche
DuBois in Tennesse Williams' A Streetcar Named Desire (1947) - opposite
Marlon Brando, Kim Hunter, and Karl Malden. Tandy beat out the riveting
performance of Judith Anderson as Medea.
She was raised by a working,
widowed mother. Her first professional stage role was in 1927.
B. 06-07-1917, Gwendolyn Brooks - Afro-American poet and novelist.
In 1950 she became the first Black woman to win the Pulitzer Prize for
Annie Allen.
GB won the 1994 National
Book Award for her lifetime contributions.
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QUOTES DU JOUR
GOLDBERG, ARTHUR J.:
"The
Ninth Amendment simply shows the intent of the Constitution's authors that
other fundamental personal rights should not be denied such protection
or disparaged in any way simply because they are not specifically listed
in the first eight constitutional amendments."
-- U.S. Supreme Court Justice Arthur J. Goldberg writing in Griswald
v. State of Connecticut (1965) when the high court ruled a law passed
in 1879 that banned contraceptives to married couples was unconstitutional.
The court said the ban violated the First, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Ninth,
and Fourteenth Amendments. In general the court declared that "the
right to privacy" guaranteed access to birth control for married couples.
The right to privacy
became the basis for striking down laws restricting abortions in the Roe
v Wade decision in 1973.
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