T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
920.1 | | BSS::BLAZEK | look away back to myself | Fri Dec 29 1989 13:43 | 15 |
|
Oh without a doubt, Dian Fossey. Her work with mountain gorillas
and her quest to preserve animal rights in a world so annihilated
by human destruction of the Earth and nearly everything on it has
always been an inspiration to me.
She made a difference to this planet. A true difference.
Somehow, sitting in front of a terminal in a fluorescently-lit,
forced-air ultra-conservative building is not what this life is
about for me, and I hope someday I have what it takes to really
contribute to this world.
Carla
|
920.2 | | SSDEVO::GALLUP | as I go along my way, I say hey hey... | Fri Dec 29 1989 14:13 | 9 |
|
Phyllicia (sp?!?!?) Rashad
(And not just her Cosby portrayal....) ;-)
kath
|
920.3 | Helen Keller | CADSYS::PSMITH | foop-shootin', flip city! | Fri Dec 29 1989 14:15 | 17 |
| Helen Keller, 1880-1968.
I read nothing but biographies one year (think I was 11), and hers
stood out sharply. Blind and deaf and a total terror to her family by
age 7, she was painstakingly taught sign language, Braille, and even --
by feeling people's mouths and throats as they spoke -- vocal speech.
As a child, I was in awe that someone could go from living like an
animal, frustrated and unable to communicate, to a full life.
She and Ann Sullivan (her teacher) represent intelligence,
perseverence, compassion, integrity, and creativity to me.
Pam
P.S. In a wider sense, it also taught me that people who are
unpleasant or strange (like Helen before she knew how to communicate)
may have amazing resources inside that we just don't know how to reach.
|
920.4 | Kate! | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Dec 29 1989 14:22 | 12 |
| I've never really had heroes, in the sense of people who I idolized from youth
and wanted to emulate.
But if I had to choose one person whom I respect and admire unconditionally,
male or female, it would be Katherine Hepburn. Her approach to life, both
on screen and in real life, is one I try to follow.
If my child had been born a girl, she would have been named Katherine in
Hepburn's honor.
Steve
|
920.10 | S U P E R W O M E N ! ! | MJOFS::BRUMBAUGH | | Fri Dec 29 1989 14:23 | 24 |
| I'd have to agree with Carla. After watching Gorillas in the Mist I
too felt moved for Dian. She had such strength. I cried during that
movie! There are many women that can be admired in this world. How
about Barbara Bush, Nancy Reagan, Jackie Onassis, Mother Thereasa,
Margaret Thatcher, Sally Ride, Sandra Day O'Conner??? How about women
in the media; Oprah Winfrey (poor child, sexually molested to become
one of today's top superstars), Dolly Parton, poor childhood, survived
anerexia, poor health but still hanging in there, contraversal Cher and
Madonna - sure they are offbeat but they are shrewd business women,
know what they want and go for it! Loretta Swit and Lindsay Wagner
both work for animal rights. There are many, many women who have made
a definate difference in the world and in our lives. I think society
was just slack at recognizing them. -- but I believe that is changing.
Take a look at yourself, you probably have very admirable qualties
yourself!! My stepmother is one of the people I admire. She was
married at 18 had two babies when her husband was killed. She then
married my dad (dad had custody my sister and I) and had another baby
to my dad. That's five small kids with 9 years from the oldest to the
youngest. So along with taking care of all of us, she finished college
got a teaching degree, took extra courses in reading/teaching sign
language, did community work, church work, went thru some MAJOR health
problems which could have claimed her life and has been happily married
to my dad for over 20 years. -- when I look at my life, I find that
amazing!
|
920.5 | | WR2FOR::OLSON_DO | | Fri Dec 29 1989 14:27 | 3 |
| See also note 350.*, Women of Note. (mine! mine! mine! ;-)
DougO
|
920.6 | A few of mine... | ACESMK::POIRIER | | Fri Dec 29 1989 14:38 | 12 |
| Sally Ride - as a child I always wanted to be the "first woman"
astronaut.
Christa McCauliffe (sp?) - for having the courage to dream
Helen Keller
Katherine Hepburn
Glenn Close
Just to name a few.
|
920.7 | they're not _that_ hard to find | SELL3::JOHNSTON | bord failte | Fri Dec 29 1989 14:46 | 21 |
| Margaret Sanger
Elisabeth Seton
OK, so they're both dead and aren't a matched set to the casual
observer; but both were strong and effective despite a few set-backs.
They're still my top two [of any sex or persuasion].
More contemporary [and probably popular] heros of mine include:
Jane Alexander
Joan Benoit
Maire & Eithne [aka Enya] Brennan
Barbara Jordan
Jessica Tandy
Which is not to say that I love and admire everything each of them
does. But I admire these women, again for their strength of conviction
and their determination to accomplish their goals...not to mention
their gifts and abilities.
Ann
|
920.8 | all I want for Xmas is a V.W. T-shirt... | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Fri Dec 29 1989 14:56 | 12 |
|
Virginia Woolf.
A wonderful feminist writer, keenly aware of women's oppression.
Despite childhood sexual abuse from her two half-brothers, and
(probably as a result) recurrent bouts of madness, she wrote numerous
novels, essays, letters, diaries, etc. Very witty and sensitive
and often very funny (especially her novel Orlando). My favorite
work of hers is A Room of One's Own, where she shows up the British
patriarchy, especially in academia, for what it is, and suggests
how women can exist in it...
|
920.9 | a few... | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | Keep on rockin in the free world | Fri Dec 29 1989 14:59 | 10 |
| I admire Alice Walker and Toni Morrison, both black American women
who have recently received Pulitzer prizes. I love their books.
I admire Marge Piercy, Margaret Atwood, and Fay Weldon also for their books.
I also admire Stevie Nicks for her music, her concerts, and her
beauty (including her clothes & hair).
Lorna
|
920.11 | | DELNI::P_LEEDBERG | Memory is the second | Fri Dec 29 1989 16:03 | 27 |
|
I think that anyone who tries a little can come up with at
least one female they admire - so if your friend said he
could not then I would think that we was pulling your leg.
For me I admire Amelia Erhart, Margaret Fuller and Emily
Dickenson - I also have a heros - Greta Garbo, Georgia
O'Keefe and Dian Fosse - then there is Charlotte Perkins
Gilman, Pat Schoder(sp?) (from Colorado) and many many more.
Pick an area and there is most likely a woman who has excelled
in it who deserves our admiration.
The real question should be not how many outstanding women
are there (have there been) but how many so-so women have
been successful to the same degree as so-so men?
_peggy
(-)
|
There was a woman on WCVB news last night
who was doing a rebutal to a previous editorial
I don't remember her name but I really admired
her - she spoke the truth of her experience
which was not white middleclass wonderfulness.
|
920.12 | Strong Women | CSC32::DUBOIS | Love makes a family | Fri Dec 29 1989 16:18 | 8 |
| Susan B Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Martha Adams, Amelia Earhart (sp?),
Beryl xxxx of "West With the Night", Geraldine Ferraro, xxx Bhutto,
Natalie Barney, Harriet Tubman, Holly Near, Joan Baez, Sojourner Truth.
These women are/were not afraid to work for what they wished, without allowing
others to control them.
Carol
|
920.13 | there are, of course, many more | DECWET::JWHITE | ohio sons of the revolution | Fri Dec 29 1989 17:06 | 6 |
|
i'm not into 'heros' either, but one 'high-profile' woman i certainly
admire is Faye Wattleton of planned parenthood.
p.s. i believe it's beryl markham and benazir bhutto
|
920.14 | So many of them! | CSC32::K_KINNEY | | Fri Dec 29 1989 19:48 | 8 |
|
Amelia Erhardt, Jackie Cochran, Beryl Markham, Kathryn Hepburn,
Agatha Christie, Hellen Keller, Mother Theresa, Harriet Tubman,
and I can't even possibly list all the women I admire cause
there are so many of them.
kim *8^}
|
920.15 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | a life doused in question marks | Sat Dec 30 1989 11:03 | 16 |
| Who was the woman who lived with the chimpanzees for so very long (made
a few national geographic documentaries...too...darn, it's on the tip
of my tongue, too...) - or was it orangutangs.... (I know it wasn't
gorillas).
Celia Thaxter, who lived on windswept rock tending lighthouses and
writing poetry....
Women like Geneen Roth and Carol Gilligan who have looked into their
own and other women's souls and helped build bridges for all who need
them....
Women like Mae West who broke the mold.
-Jody
|
920.16 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | if you are a dreamer, come in.. | Sat Dec 30 1989 13:16 | 5 |
| in re .15
Jane Goodall
one of mine also :-)
|
920.17 | from early childhood | TINCUP::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Sat Dec 30 1989 13:32 | 10 |
| Queen Elizabeth the first has always been my hero. She rode horses
with the best of them and fought political battles BETTER than the
rest of them.
Mae West took charge of her career and wrote her own movie scripts
and lived as she wanted in an age when censors were strangling the
industry.
I agree with _peggy. It's when so-so women can be as successful as
so-so men that we will have really arrived. liesl
|
920.18 | Ayn Rand | AITG::DERAMO | Daniel V. {AITG,ZFC}:: D'Eramo | Sat Dec 30 1989 21:42 | 3 |
| Ayn Rand
Dan
|
920.19 | And one that is a DEC employee | VAXWRK::SKALTSIS | Deb | Sun Dec 31 1989 17:37 | 3 |
| Let's not forget Adm. Grace Hopper.
Deb
|
920.20 | Jane | ELRIC::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Tue Jan 02 1990 01:44 | 14 |
| re .15,.16:
Gee, and I was going to say that with all this talk of Diane Fosse, no
had mentioned Jane Goodall, who I believe was Diane's "hero".
(and btw, it was (and is still) chimpanzees).
Madame Curie.
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
920.21 | a few more | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | somewhere somebody's having fun | Tue Jan 02 1990 08:44 | 14 |
| I also admire the woman who wrote all the Born Free books and was
also murdered in Africa. I can't think of her name, even though
I read all of her books a long time ago. She devoted her life to
trying to help animals survive the greed of humans.
I also admire Emma Goldman, Angela Davis, Golda Mier (sp?) and Rosa
Parks, all women who definitely had the courage of their convictions.
Eleanor Roosevelt would be the first lady I admire the most.
She did more than just redecorate, wear designer clothes and raise
dogs.
Lorna
|
920.22 | "Larger than life..." | DEMING::FOSTER | | Tue Jan 02 1990 09:04 | 9 |
| I wonder if superheroes count?
When all the guys had Batman, Superman, etc, I used to dream of being
like Jeannie or Samantha of Bewitched. I wanted to be able to fly
through the air.
Later, when Wonder Woman finally came on, I started researching the
Amazons, and this was something I really wanted to be like. Missing
breast and all.
|
920.23 | | RAINBO::LARUE | An easy day for a lady. | Tue Jan 02 1990 09:21 | 9 |
| Babe Didrickson Zaharias
Amelia Erhart
Dickie Chappelle
Joan d' Arc
Annie Oakley
and, like so many others, so many others!
Dondi
|
920.24 | can you tell I'm a writer? | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Tue Jan 02 1990 09:27 | 12 |
| Just a few from when I was growing up:
Billie Jean King
Georgette Heyer
Victoria Holt
Mary Stewart
Josephine Tey
Helen MacInnes
Helen Pinkerton
George Eliot
--bonnie
|
920.25 | She ain't no Twinky | 2EASY::CONLIFFE | Cthulhu Barata Nikto | Tue Jan 02 1990 09:45 | 4 |
| Linda Ellerbee: journalist, reporter and author. I happened to catch
(on C-SPAN) a speech which she gave at a presentation called "Women,
Men and Media", and was deeply moved (amused, appalled, enlightened,
angered) by it.
|
920.26 | | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | Secure Systems for Insecure People | Tue Jan 02 1990 11:26 | 7 |
| RE: .21 I believe her name is Joy Adamson (I think her husband,
George, was a co-author on the early books about Elsa).
I might add Barbara McClintock, and my two best high school math
teachers, Mrs. Koelsh, and Dr. Savavge.
--David
|
920.27 | Ladies, roll up your sleeves | JURAN::TEASDALE | | Tue Jan 02 1990 12:46 | 11 |
| My tenth grade English teacher asked the same question. Assuming
heroes were only images (unless I knew the person), I said Rosie
the Riveter.
I have always admired Margaret Sanger for her work and her dedication
to it.
re: .15
Birute Galdekas (sp?) is the orangutan woman in Indonesia.
Nancy
|
920.28 | A Woman's Place Is On Top | ULTRA::GUGEL | Adrenaline: my drug of choice | Tue Jan 02 1990 14:03 | 14 |
| Arlene Blum, Himalayan mountaineer, organizer of the 1976 American
Women's Expedition to Annapurna in the Himalayas - at a time when
many male mountaineers still questioned whether women should be
climbing big mountains...the team who coined the phrase
"A Woman's Place Is On Top". :-)
One already mentioned from politics: Eleanor Roosevelt! How could
one forget *her* when compiling a list of heroines?! She was terrific!
I don't think these women were yet mentioned: Margaret Mead,
Ada Lovelace, Lucille Ball, Gloria Steinem, Betty Freidan,
Elizabeth Dole.
|
920.29 | | MANIC::THIBAULT | While I breathe, I hope | Tue Jan 02 1990 15:13 | 4 |
| Don't know if I'd call her my hero, but I've always admired Bonnie Raitt.
Jenna
|
920.30 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Can you feel the heat? | Tue Jan 02 1990 16:03 | 13 |
| Susan Butcher of Iditarod fame.
Jeanne Kirkpatrick
Molly Yard
The Doctah
ps- I wonder why most women that are "heroes" seem to be admired for having
"an iron will" or other strong character feature. I wonder why no heroines
seem to be admired simply for being wonderfully nurturing (or at least
it seems this way.) Perhaps because "nurturing" women rarely become famous
for that characteristic?
|
920.31 | Shirley Chisholm | LEZAH::QUIRIY | Christine | Tue Jan 02 1990 22:03 | 10 |
|
Previous replies have named most of the women I admire, but I do
remember looking up to Shirley Chisholm when I was young -- maybe when
I was a young teen. She was very active -- or maybe just very much in
the press -- for some period of time and then she seemed fade out.
I think I even remember talk of her possibly being the first black,
female president, a pretty exciting idea, then and now. (Does anyone
know anything about her? I only have fuzzy memories.)
CQ
|
920.32 | not heros, but admired | IAMOK::ALFORD | I'd rather be fishing | Wed Jan 03 1990 08:50 | 14 |
|
the comments on Holly Near and Bonnie Raitt made me immediately
think of :
Joan Baez, who has always sung her convictions...I really do admire
her.
also Lillian Carter...Jimmy's mother, who joined the Peace Corps when
she was 60 (70?)
and Mary Cassatt for her magnificent artistic ability.
and lots of others!
deb
|
920.33 | More | USEM::DONOVAN | | Wed Jan 03 1990 12:18 | 11 |
| * Barbara Jordan (surprized no one mentioned
* Molly Hatch (president of NOW)
* Barbara Bush
* ??? (founder of Boston Coalition Against Drugs who lives alone
and has a $5000 bounty on her head from the inner-city gangs.)
Please someone tell me her name. I forgot it. She deserves mention.
* Mother Theresa most of all because she gives from the heart. I'm
going to do an oil painting of her. Her facial lines are incredible.
They show a lifetime of kindness.
Kate
|
920.34 | | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Wed Jan 03 1990 12:32 | 2 |
| Helen Caldicott (sp?) - the anti-nuclear activist/physician from
Australia I think
|
920.35 | Other Heroines | CSC32::DUBOIS | Love makes a family | Wed Jan 03 1990 13:12 | 4 |
| Florence Nightingale
Dr Shirley Strum, studies baboons (some of you may have heard of the
Pumphouse Gang?)
|
920.36 | I keep adding more | SSDEVO::RICHARD | Defender of Moral Turpitude | Wed Jan 03 1990 14:28 | 20 |
| I grew up in a rather sexist and racist environment, and so didn't really have
any heroes who weren't white/male, but one of my favorite people was a black
maid my parents employed, named Dora Brown, who never let my father's racism
prevent her from speaking her mind. She taught me a lot about dignity and
respect.
Some female heroes of my adulthood -
My mother
Mother Theresa
Benazir Bhutto
Reanne Eisler
Merlin Stone
And the latest and one of the greatest -
Ida B. Wells
/Mike
|
920.37 | "Saltpeter, Abigail" -- "Pins, John" | ELRIC::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Thu Jan 04 1990 00:31 | 11 |
| No one has mentioned Abigail Adams. I don't know very much about her,
only the characterization in the musical "1776" and little bits of "The
Adams Chronicles" on PBS. There is also a biography of her published
recently that I would like to read if it ever comes out in paperback.
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
920.38 | | SHARE::DHURLEY | | Thu Jan 04 1990 14:26 | 10 |
| My heros are local. Channel Five in Boston have many anchors and
reporters that I find to be very inspirational. Susan Warnick is a
wonderful woman with a great sense of humor. Natalie Jacobson is
definitely someone to admire.
The woman who runs Rosie's place is also someone who I think is a hero
(Sorry I've forgotten her name) Also, Ann McGuire who is on the
commission for the homeless.
Denise
|
920.39 | | ICESK8::KLEINBERGER | misery IS optional | Thu Jan 04 1990 14:31 | 1 |
| I personally like Lauren Stratford - author of Satan's Underground
|
920.40 | Women I admire | RAMPNT::HALVORSON | | Fri Jan 05 1990 09:57 | 14 |
|
Jean Redpath - Scottish singer and preserver of folk songs
Madeline L'Engle - I especially admire her fiction series about the Austins
writer (Spirituality and family love seem so rare nowadays
in coming-of-age novels...)
Anna LaBastille - I admire her work to save the Attitlan Grebe (an
writer/ endangered bird that lives in only one lake in
naturalist Guatemala) despite cultural differences and
threats by several groups of people.
|
920.41 | Evert, Hepburn and Ball | TOOK::TWARREN | Let the day begin, let the day start | Fri Jan 05 1990 12:28 | 12 |
| Chris Evert- always been my hero!
Katherine Hepburn- do you know that in her early movies,
she got a lot of grief from Hollywood
for wearing pants, but she wouldn't
do the movie if she wasn't allowed
to wear pants!
Lucille Ball- She was one of the first to get Hollywood
to produce a show with a minority actor
(Desi Arnez- cuban), as the star
|
920.42 | | LEZAH::QUIRIY | Christine | Fri Jan 05 1990 12:50 | 5 |
|
re: .33 Kate
Do you mean Georgette Watson, the founder of Drop-a-Dime?
|
920.43 | | ULTRA::GUGEL | Adrenaline: my drug of choice | Fri Jan 05 1990 14:16 | 20 |
|
re .33:
> * Molly Hatch (president of NOW)
You mean Molly Yard.
re .40:
> Anna LaBastille - I admire her work to save the Attitlan Grebe (an
> writer/ endangered bird that lives in only one lake in
> naturalist Guatemala) despite cultural differences and
> threats by several groups of people.
It's Anne LaBastille. And I love her too! I'm currently reading
her most recent book, *Beyond Black Bear Lake*. It's just as
delightful as her other books, especially *Woodswoman*, and also
*Women and Wilderness*.
|
920.44 | | MOSAIC::TARBET | | Fri Jan 05 1990 16:12 | 6 |
| <--(.40)
Yeah, Jane! Jeannie Redpath, hasn't she got a *beautiful* voice!?!
I could listen to that woman all day long. [*sigh*]
=maggie
|
920.45 | Ursula LeGuin | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Sun Jan 07 1990 00:01 | 8 |
| Ursula LeGuin
I met her in one of my honey's classes in UCSD. She wears pants, smokes
a pipe, probably drives a truck, and is (happily?) married with at
least a daughter. Wonderful woman, smart, articulate, strange, and a great
writer.
-- Charles
|
920.46 | | SNOC01::MYNOTT | Hugs to all Kevin Costner lookalikes | Sun Jan 07 1990 23:51 | 9 |
| Three Aussie women, Kay Cottee (sailed around the world singlehanded),
Gabby Kennard (flew around the world singlehanded) and Maggie Tabberer
who despite being dumped on most of her life has made it to the top as
one of the most respected women in Oz and one of the most beautiful.
The other is Kate Hepburn because she just 'is' .
...dale
|
920.47 | My mother | BRADOR::HATASHITA | | Mon Jan 08 1990 10:47 | 8 |
| My mother. She managed to raise five children, become a CA, started
up, owned and operated a successful clothing store. All at the same
time and all after she turned thirty. And she was always home when
we arrived after school.
Amazing.
Kris
|
920.48 | Annie Lennox | TLE::D_CARROLL | Who am I to disagree? | Tue Jan 09 1990 10:09 | 13 |
| Lead singer of Eurythmics. She's strong, her lyrics speaks worlds of strength
and compassion and persistence. She's noncomformist, not for the sake of
noncomformity but because she wants to do what she wants to do without regard
for whether it is "socially unacceptable." She isn't afraid to discuss
(in her lyrics) *any* subject honestly and forthrightly, she isn't at all
politically correct. She's extremely sensual, and not afraid to show it,
and (I think) she is also incredibly beautiful, and she emphasizes her
beuaty in nontraditional ways. She is about as far from the typical female
pop star as one can get. (You should see her dance!)
I saw her in concert and she just radiated strength and sensuality.
D!
|
920.49 | An Unsung Hero | LANDO::OLIVER_B | | Fri Jan 12 1990 11:18 | 11 |
| Pam Cushner, who died last weekend. In the early '60's, when a
complete masectomy was perceived by the medical establishment to
be the ONLY answer to breast cancer.
She took the medical establishment on, fighting for what she believed
to be a viable alternative...the lumpectomy. She petitioned, cajoled,
and finally convinced people that yes, indeed, many women did not
require a total masectomy when they found themselves in trouble with
cancer.
Because of her, many women today are offered a very important choice.
|
920.50 | A few, probably mentioned but worth another mention! | HPSCAD::TWEXLER | | Fri Jan 12 1990 17:05 | 40 |
|
>>> Madame Curie.
That's Marie Curie, no? It is all very well to call oneself Mrs. Curie
(assuming the necessary prerequisites), but when one is being recalled for
one's outstanding scientific achievements, a more appropriate rememberance
would be *her* name, would it not?
My absolute heroine has always been Harriet Tubman who led hundreds of people
from slavery to freedom. Who was resourceful and daring (one time the slavers
were looking for her on a train, she grabbed a newspaper and held it up to her
face because it was known she couldn't read, though as she said, I was just
praying I was holding that paper right side up!) and who traveled those
hundreds of miles again and again to rescue people at risk of her own life and
limb.
Of course, second in line would have to be Sojourner Truth, who was an
*outstanding* orator. Many of her speeches were undoubtedly lost... but one
made it into history, at the first women's rights convention in the US (1848?),
the second day or so was open to both sexes, and one preacher (male, o'course),
pointed out that if God had wanted women to be equal, wouldn't He have given
some sign through His son? And, Ms. Truth stood up and gave an improptu
speech called _Ain't_I_A_Woman?_ What I remember...
"...that man over there says that women need to be lifted into carriages
and helped over puddles...
But, ain't I a woman?
I have plowed, and sowed and gathered into barns, and no man could head me.
And, ain't I a woman?
I've had my children sold off into slavery and none but Jesus heard me.
And, ain't I a woman?
If my cup won't hold but half a pint though yours will hold a full measure,
wouldn't it be cruel not to give me my half pint full?
Now, that man over there says that if God had wanted women to be equal he would
have given some sign through Jesus his son.
Well, where did Jesus come from?
From God and a woman! --Man had nothing to do with it!"
|