T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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147.1 | A woman I admire....... | PEACHS::WOOD | | Mon Dec 22 1986 16:11 | 17 |
|
Mary Kay Ash.
Basically because of her belief in women and
their abilities; that they deserve more than they have
received in the past; her philosophy of living life by
the Golden Rule; and her priorities:
1. God first
2. Family second
3. Job third
She's a woman who has really made her own way
in this world.
|
147.2 | for starters | YAZOO::B_REINKE | Down with bench Biology | Mon Dec 22 1986 16:25 | 3 |
| A number of the senior professors that I had in college. They
were the first truely intellectual women I had encountered.
|
147.3 | Ordinary Women . | TONTO::EARLY | Winter is for Hiking/Backpacking -Bob | Mon Dec 22 1986 19:01 | 17 |
| Several whom I admire, for the follwoing reasons:
Tenacity, endurance, courage.
One went from a battered woman status to being a "First" in her
chosen career, in her state.
Another, with 3 children in tow, went from a high school diploma
to a 4 year college degree "summa cum laud".
Another went from "2nd generation welfare mother" to "Dec techie
status" and is now a manager at a large company.
Ordinary women all.
Bob
|
147.4 | Yeah, we got one here... | RANCHO::RAH | Robert Holt WSE UC0-2 | Mon Dec 22 1986 22:20 | 5 |
| A certain technical manager here ...
Accomplished mom and engineer,
always BTU (big thumb up),
small in stature, with a big heart.
A real Silicon Hero...
|
147.5 | | ADVAX::ENO | Bright Eyes | Tue Dec 23 1986 09:03 | 6 |
| A female psychotherapist and Dr. of Education, never married, who
lives alone with her dog in a beautiful old house, has scads of
friends, travels whenever and whereever she wants, and KNOWS she
has it good!
Gloria
|
147.6 | Grace Hopper | SWORD::SHARP | Don Sharp, Digital Telecommunications | Tue Dec 23 1986 09:22 | 4 |
| She inspires me to plan how to continue to be creative and productive long
after the rest of my peers have quit.
Don.
|
147.7 | "You Can't Keep A Good Woman Down" | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | | Mon Dec 29 1986 12:06 | 10 |
|
One woman I admire is Alice Walker. In a country where it has
certainly always helped to be born male, white and rich, she was
born female, black and poor, but has gone on to win a pulitzer prize
for "The Color Purple" which was, of course, then made into a movie.
She also, I believe, achieved this success without compromising
her ideals.
Lorna
|
147.8 | There must be so many "unsung" heroines | NETCOM::HANDEL | | Fri Jan 09 1987 15:46 | 7 |
| There is a similar topic in Soapbox about heros.
To me: Grace Hopper is definitely inspirational.
Cory Aquino, for her courage both prior to the "election" and now,
for all the hard work it will take her to run her country.
Sally Ride - being an astronaut cannot be easy.
|
147.9 | Another vote for the Admiral! | JUNIOR::TASSONE | Cat, s'up? | Fri Jan 09 1987 16:12 | 6 |
| Just last night I asked my boyfriend if he took my picture into
work and where did he put it. He told me, right about the picture
I have of Grace Hopper. Now, I don't think I "top" her but it was
nice to know that I was near a very inspirational woman.
|
147.11 | Mother Theresa | CELICA::QUIRIY | Christine | Wed Jan 14 1987 09:46 | 3 |
|
I have no words to adequately express my admiration for this woman.
|
147.12 | Partial List | VAXUUM::DYER | Spot the Difference | Mon Jan 19 1987 03:20 | 9 |
| Mother Theresa, Molly Rush, Emma Goldman, Harriet Tubman, Rosa Parks, Shirley
Chisolm, and of course Dr. Ruth.
Grace Hopper's good for epigrams, but how can anybody admire somebody who
had a part in inflicting COBOL on the world? (-:)
As for people I actually know, there's Jackie Fidler, who teaches at ULowell,
and Nancy Bodwell, formerly of Rape Crisis Services of Greater Lowell.
<_Jym_>
|
147.13 | | TOPDOC::STANTON | I got a gal in Kalamazoo | Mon Jan 19 1987 19:20 | 8 |
| Madame Curie & her daughters, Djuna Barnes, Viginia Woolf,
Lisa Meitner, Grace Hopper, Eleanor Roosevelt, Diana Arbus,
Margaret Atwood, & Sally Ride. Topping my list: Mom, who
saw to it her 3 daughters got a college education & support
for their careers, who studied art at 60 & beyond, and who
mercifully listened to me ramble on & on about physics &
literature & politics in my stormy teens...
|
147.14 | not just another mom! | SQUEKE::MICHAUD | | Fri Jan 23 1987 13:39 | 12 |
| my one and only... my mother..
not for only raising me and making me see things that i could never have
seen without her, but for being a friend. She is the most unique,
honest, considerate, intelligent, interesting person i have ever
known and to think that i missed all that for 10 years!!!
She is an accomplished woman, going on her fourth business venture
and doing very well in all of them. If i can attain all the qualities
that she has, then i will be able to admire myself as much...
toni
|
147.15 | Ferarro | GIGI::TRACY | | Wed Mar 11 1987 15:34 | 9 |
| Geraldine Ferraro
She's a brave woman who has open a new door--maybe not as widely
as she and we had had hoped--for women at the cost
of her own career, privacy and family harmony. And despite obstacles
and criticisms that a man with the same experience never would have
encountered, she remains loyal to the dreams she has for this country
and for this country's women.
|
147.17 | A thought... | MARCIE::JLAMOTTE | the best is yet to be | Wed Mar 11 1987 16:49 | 12 |
| Many men have suffered similiar invasions of their privacy. I don't
have the names on the tip of my tongue but I do recall men declining
nominations for vice-president based on events in their past which
would have influenced voter decisions.
Geraldine Ferraro was a brave woman...but she had situations in
her past that did not meet the standards of a good vice-presidential
candidate (male or female).
As a feminist I do not want to see any woman achieve goals because
she is a women...I want to see women achieve because they deserve
and/or can handle the role they are seeking.
|
147.18 | Ayn Rand | CACHE::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Wed Mar 11 1987 19:08 | 10 |
| I have a feeling that feminists do not like her, and I don't enter
her name to offend, I do admire her for her honesty and conviction
and her philosophy.
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
147.19 | I don't know her name | STUBBI::B_REINKE | the fire and the rose are one | Wed Mar 11 1987 20:51 | 8 |
| The other night All Things Considered profiled a Black woman
who had just died at the age of 105. She had been a major
contributor to the unionization of the pullman porters. Apparently
the only way they were able to organize a union was for their
wives to do the work so that their husbands could not be fired.
They interviewed many of the members of her church all of whom
had much praise for her. I did not hear her name but she was
definitely a woman to admire.
|
147.20 | When lilacs last in the dooryard bloomed.... | DANUBE::M_PERKINS | | Mon Mar 28 1988 16:06 | 14 |
| She was the most incredible woman I have ever known. She was married
with one child while putting herself through undergrad as well as
law school in Boston college. Originally, she had quit high school
to support her intensely poor family. She adopted me when I was
13 and.....
she was terminally ill with breast cancer
She died three years ago this Easter at 36 years old. Upon request
she was cremated and her ashes were sprinkled on a lilac bush. Her
final kind gesture to survivors was the beauty of life renewed instead
of the remembrance a tombstone can bring.
If I live to be half the woman she is I know there is a God.
|
147.21 | -.1 prompted this remembrence... | ASD::LOW | High on stress | Mon Mar 28 1988 16:30 | 36 |
| She was born the during WWII, while her father was serving in the
Pacific. At age 15, she was diagnosed as having Lupus, a disease
that still knows no cure. She had to stay in the dark for 9 months,
because the sun caused her to break out in a purple rash. The doctors
said she wouldn't see 20. They were wrong. She went on to nursing school
after high school. She was plauged by constant bouts with a disease that
brought on complications of pnuemonia, severe arthritis, and poor vision.
She married at age 23. The doctors said that the disease had made her
infertile. They were wrong. Several months later, she was pregnant.
The doctors said theat the baby would never be carried full term. They
were wrong. The baby was born, healthy, on April 12, 1965, after a full
9 month term. She quit nursing school to spend more time with her child.
She joined the local volunteer Ambulance squad, and began training local
police and fire staff in First Aid, and advanced life support. 2 years
later, she was pregnant again. The doctors told her that this pregancy
could threaten her life. She chose to have the child. My sister Catherine
was born, healthy, on September 9, 1967.
Every year, she would have bouts with her disease. She would be hospitalized,
often for weeks, but each time she fought back, and won. She raised 2 children,
gave thousands of hours to the community as a Red Cross volunteer, EMT
instructor, and ambulance attendant. She spent as much time with her family
as any other "housewife" did, and still managed to have a career that helped
more people than our engineering careers ever will. All this while living on
borrowed time.
At the age of 42, she was diagnosed as having Cancer. She fought the disease
as she had fought before, never believing that she would lose the struggle.
This time, the doctors were right. She died on June 28, 1985. Her ashes
were scattered over a lake near our home. She had so much love to give, and
she made the world richer by her passage through this world. I can only
hope to do the same.
Dave
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