11-22 TABLE of CONTENTS:
Women's Rights Are Young and Tender...
DATES, ANNIVERSARIES, and
EVENTS
QUOTES by
Marianne Williamson and Mrs. Wolstenholme-Elmy.
Lest we forget:
Event 11-22-1971, the U.S.
Supreme Court ruled in Reed v Reed that it was unconstitutional
to give preference to men as executors of estates. Argued by Ruth Bader
Ginsburg, who herself would become a Supreme Court judge 22 years later,
the decision marked the FIRST*time a high court decision overturned a law
based on sex, according to Justice Ginsburg.
Event 11-20-1961, the Supreme Court upheld the Florida
law which exempted women from jury duty, unless they volunteered. In all,
18 states allowed the jury duty exemption while three states - Alabama,
Mississippi, and South Carolina - outright barred women from jury duty.
However, on 02-07-1966, a federal court ruled that such laws should end
on June 1, 1967, because such laws "deny to women the equal protection
of the laws in violation of the 14th amendment."
In January of 1975, the Supreme Court ruled that a
Louisiana law forbidding women serving on juries was unconstitutional.
(Louisiana continued its Napoleonic Code "Lord and Master" laws
for another five years. It was not until 1981 that married women were legally
permitted to manage their own marital property.)
As President, Bill
Clinton nominated more women and minorities to federal positions in his
first two years in office than Presidents Bush and Reagan did in all their
TWELVE years combined.
Clinton nominated 58%
minorities and women, Bush 13% and Reagan 8% in the first two years of
their administrations.
The American Bar Association
ranked a full 63% of Clinton's judiciary nominees "well qualified,"
while Bush's ABA "well qualified" went to only 52% and Reagan
53%. Carter had 57%.
Clinton nominees were
31% female as opposed to 10% female for Bush, and 5% female for Reagan.
Twenty-two percent of Clinton's judiciary nominations were black and 8%
Hispanic as opposed to 2.5% for Bush and 1% for Reagan in both divisions.
-- source,
U.S. Department of Justice.
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11-22 DATES, ANNIVERSARIES, and
EVENTS
B. 11-22-1819, George Eliot, one of England's
foremost novelists of the 19th century, Mary Ann (Marian) Evans, wrote
under the masculine penname of George Eliot. She wrote realistically of
English country and village life in her novels Silas Marner and
The Mill on the Floss. Her Middlemarch explored new ideas
that were changing the English lifestyle. Raised mostly in boarding schools,
she took charge of her home, the Griff House. Relations with her family
were never good and when she began to openly live with G. H. Lewes (who
could not get a divorce), her family stopped all contact and many of her
friends were alienated. After Lewes' death, she married a man 20 years
her junior.
Died 11-22-1825, Ann Bailey, (1742-1825). Legend
has it that after her husband was killed, this former indentured servant
changed to male dress and became a noted frontier scout, messenger, spy,
and Indian fighter. Known as the White squaw of the Kreanawha, her exploits
became the stuff of legends. In 1791 she broke through a siege of Fort
Lee by Indians, rode 100 miles, and returned on the third day with gun
powder. Widowed a second time, she retired to live with her son.
B. 11-22-1844, Abigail Adams - She was born
11-11 under the old calendar and 11-22 under the new. See 11-11-95
Women of Achievement.
B. 11-22-1857, Marian Griswold Nevins MacDowell,
patron, musician who spent a great deal of her inheritance in supporting
her husband composer Edward MacDowell. After MacDowell's death from syphilis,
she created the MacDowell Colony in New Hampshire, where artists could
live and work inexpensively. Among those using the facilities were Willa
Cather, DuBose Heyward, Thornton Wilder, and Elinor Wylie. Her close companion
Nina Maud Richardson (1885-1969) served as her assistant and was her heir.
B. 11-22-1883, Ruby Claudia Davy, the first
Australian woman to receive the degree of Ph.D. in Music, pianist,
conductor, and composer.
B. 11-22-1889, Dorothy Tuckerman Draper won
the largest decorating contract ever awarded a woman before the feminist
movement of the 1970's, that of New York's Hampshire House.
B. 11-22-1898, Sarah Gibson Blanding. After
85 years, Vassar, the all- female college, got its first women president.
She served 1946-64.
B. 11-22-1924, Geraldine Page, actor, won
a long-deserved Academy Award for her performance in A Trip to Bountiful
(1985.)
B. 11-22-1943, Billie Jean Moffitt King, American
tennis player. The first woman professional athlete to be paid more
than 100,000 dollars in a single year (1971). A feminist, she helped to
organize the Women's Tennis Association and to establish a women's pro
tour in the early 1970s in which women insisted on equal prizes to those
paid men. Gained personal notoriety when a female lover sued her for palimony.
Event 11-22-1963, Federal Judge Sarah Tilghman
Hughes swears in Lyndon Banes Johnson as President of the United States
following the assassination of John F. Kennedy.
Event 11-22-1971, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled
in Reed v Reed that it was unconstitutional to give preference to
men as executors of estates. Argued by Ruth Bader Ginsburg who herself
would become a Supreme Court judge 22 years later, the decision marked
the first time a high court decision overturned a law based on sex.
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QUOTES DU JOUR
WILLIAMSON, MARIANNE:
"If [women] knew how to moan, they would hear us on the moon."
-- Williamson, Marianne. A Woman's Worth. New York: Random House,
1993.
MRS. WOLSTENHOLME-ELMY:
"When
you have enthusiasm for a great cause you know you have discovered eternal
youth. I have been fighting for this cause half my life, and yet I am as
enthusiastic as when I started."
-- Mrs. Wolstenholme-Elmy, VERY elderly and frail in 1906, reaffirming
her devotion to woman's suffrage in Britain when faced with prison and
police violence when she allied herself with the Pankhursts.
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