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Conference turris::womannotes-v2

Title:ARCHIVE-- Topics of Interest to Women, Volume 2 --ARCHIVE
Notice:V2 is closed. TURRIS::WOMANNOTES-V5 is open.
Moderator:REGENT::BROOMHEAD
Created:Thu Jan 30 1986
Last Modified:Fri Jun 30 1995
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1105
Total number of notes:36379

876.0. "TIME Magazine Article" by ASABET::STRIFE () Thu Nov 30 1989 07:45

    TIME Magazine's Deceber 4th issue's feature story is on women.  I
    meant to bring it in today so I could give you the title and gist of
    the article but my brain doesn't seem to work all that well at 6 a.m.
    Anyway, it's a thought provoking article that my be worth your while
    to read.
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
876.1Looking for VolunteersSYSENG::BITTLEhymn to herMon Dec 04 1989 12:149
          If you would be willing to type in a portion of the December 4
          Time cover story "Women Face the '90s", please send me mail.
          
          The article discusses some key issues that have been debated
          very recently in several topics here.  It would be useful to have
          the article here either as a reference or for discussion after it
          has been entered in its entirety.
                                                       nancy b.
          
876.2It's a startSQLRUS::NALEMon Dec 04 1989 23:438

    The following reply consists of the first few pages of the Time
    article.  It was as much as my fingers could tolerate in one
    sitting...

    Enjoy,
    Sue
876.3Hidden because of copyright problems. =mSQLRUS::NALEMon Dec 04 1989 23:45177
876.4Hidden because of copyright problems. =mSQLRUS::NALETue Dec 05 1989 12:3499
876.5Hidden because of copyright problems. =mACESMK::CHELSEAMostly harmless.Tue Dec 05 1989 22:00179
876.6another myth shatteredULTRA::ZURKOWe're more paranoid than you are.Wed Dec 06 1989 12:025
You mean, no one burned bra? No one?!?!?!

Next time I've got on to throw away, maybe I'll try it. Maybe I'll have a
party.
	Mez
876.7Bras dont burn, they melt!FOOZLE::WHITEWed Dec 06 1989 12:4215
    re: .6
    My bras contain a lot of latex or other stretchy material.
    They melt and smoke emitting noxious odors, rather than 
    burning.
    
    I know because I had a clothes dryer that charred a load
    of laundry.  The burned jeans and socks were covered with 
    greyish smelly beads of former-bra.  The chemical smells
    first attracted my attention, and were gagging when I 
    opened the door.
    
    I agree with the article.  Women threw away bras, not 
    burned them
    
    Pat
876.8STC::AAGESENWed Dec 06 1989 13:365
    re .6 mez
    
    now that's a party i might make the trip for (-;
    
    ~robin
876.9reminiscent of Vivian Sparrow's 996.184 and some replies in 178.*SYSENG::BITTLEthe promise of springSat Mar 03 1990 03:0840
[from a local NOW newsletter the Time article]

			   Onward, Women!

	Time magazine recently surveyed the public on its attitudes 
towards "feminism".  The result?  While most women don't identify 
with the label feminist, feminism isn't totally dead; it has just 
taken a new form in the last three decades.  

	Today's young women have grown up with the assumption that they 
"can have it all".  The ERA means nothing to these women who already 
assume they will be treated as equals.  Many women don't see sexism 
as an obstacle until they are will along in their careers and angling 
for a promotion or until they have their first child and their 
juggling acts begins.  They are then shocked to learn that women 
still earn only 66 cents to the man's dollar, a difference that has 
narrowed by less than a dime over the best two decades.  Among 
Fortune 500 companies, less than 2% of top executives are female.  A 
1987 U.S. Chamber of Commerce report found that the corporate women 
at the vice-presidential level and above earn 42% less than their 
male counterparts.

	Progress has been made by using education as the first step in 
women's ability to compete in a "man's world".  In the 50's, women 
made up only 20% of college undergraduates (in contrast to 54% today) 
and two-thirds did not complete their degrees.  Compared to 1960, the 
number of female lawyers and judges has climbed from 7,500 to 180,000 
today, female doctors from 15,672 to 108,200, and female engineers 
from 7,404 to 174,000.  The number of women in elected office has 
more than tripled since 1975 at the local level, though their 
presence has barely changed in the U.S. Congress.  

Asked to select the most important goal for the women's movement 
today, participants in the TIME/CNN poll rated "helping women balance 
work and family" as #1.  Even men seem to feel the pressure to 
reevaluate their attitudes and values.  One survey showed that 56% of 
men polled would give up as much as a quarter of their salary to have 
more family or personal time.  About 45% said they would probably 
refuse a promotion that involved sacrificing hours with their family.