08-28 TABLE of CONTENTS:
DATES, ANNIVERSARIES, and
EVENTS
QUOTE by
Christine Dinsmore and Enloe.
The full-text version of this episode...
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08-28 DATES, ANNIVERSARIES, and
EVENTS
B. 08-28-1774, Elizabeth Seton, first American-born canonized by
the Roman Catholic Church. Educator, religious leader who helped found
the parochial school system in U.S.
B. 08-28-1831, Lucy Ware Webb Hayes, often recognized as the first
American woman to hold a college degree (Wesleyan Female College of
Cincinnati).
B. 08-28-1882, Belle Benchley, known as San Diego's zoo lady,
was the only woman zoo director in the world. At 41, BJB had to go to work
to support herself and son when her husband divorced her to marry a trophy
wife.
BJB became the bookkeeper at the Zoological Garden
of San Diego and in 1927 was appointed head of the zoo staff and quickly
developed a worldwide reputation.
(Some authorities list her birthdate as 8/29.)
B. 08-28-1882, Lucy Jennings Dickinson, president of the General
Federation of Women's Clubs. In keeping with her social position, she
had retired from business when she married. She had taken over her father's
lumber business and was a bank director before her marriage.
Event 08-28-1957, two hundred and sixty five years after the fact,
Massachusetts governor Foster Furcolo signs a bill that reversed the convictions
(and subsequent executions) of six women in the Salem Witchcraft trials
of 1692.
B. 08-28-1971, Janet Evans, extraordinary American swimmer, winner
of four Olympic gold medals and numerous collegiate championships and U.S.
national championships. She was perhaps cheated out of winning more in
the 1996 Olympics when the ruling committee broke its own rules to disqualify
her to qualify another swimmer in her place.
JE set a number of Olympic and world records, primarily
in freestyle, and although small, she achieved times that were often as
fast as those of the male winners of their events. She was awarded the
Sullivan award for outstanding amateur athlete in 1989 and was honored
as the final runner to carry the 1996 Olympic torch to Muhammad Ali who
lit the flame.
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QUOTES DU JOUR
DINSMORE, CHRISTINE:
"What has happened
on the international front replicates what happened on the U.S. front,
we have been robbed of the long history of international feminism. For
instance, in Vietnam there was a feminist movement in the 1920's.
"Enloe in Bananas Beaches and Bases, (University
of California Press, 1989) wrote: "`Coming face to face with a Vietnamese
feminist of the 1920s not only makes it less possible for British or American
women to imagine that their foremothers were the creators of feminist ideas;
it also subverts nervous local men's attempts to write off Third World
feminists in the 1980s as nothing more than dupes of foreign imperialism.'"
-- Submitted to WOA by
Dr. Christine Dinsmore, 1992
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