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Conference turris::womannotes-v3

Title:Topics of Interest to Women
Notice:V3 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:1078
Total number of notes:52352

328.0. "Women in the News (clips only, no discussion)" by GNUVAX::QUIRIY (Christine) Sat Aug 25 1990 00:55

    
    This note is devoted to news articles about women.  No discussion,
    please, just clips (or entire articles if you are loath to clip 
    them as I am!).
    
    CQ
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
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328.1Marianne Straub, fabric designerGNUVAX::QUIRIYChristineSat Aug 25 1990 00:56149
    From the Tuesday, August 7, 1990 edition of The Christian Science 
    Monitor.

    Interview

    Creating Artwork to Sit Upon

    Marianne Straub has devoted much of her career to quietly designing 
    fabric for public places.

    By Christipher Andreae
    Special to The Christian Science Monitor

    Cambridge, England

    [A picture of Marianne Straub is in the center of the page.  She 
    stands outside her home in Cambridge, England, holding a piece of 
    the fabric she designed which is used to cover the seats in the 
    London Underground.  She is wearing a striped cotton shift, with the
    sleeves folded up to the elbows, exposing arms that are finely 
    wrinkled and tanned.  Her fingers are slightly mishapen by 
    arthritis.  She appears to be in mid-sentence -- her eyes are 
    narrowed to slits and her mouth curves slightly upwards into her 
    cheeks.  Her hair is thin and light brown, parted on the side and 
    combed back; perhaps it is in a bun at her neck.  A sidebar contains
    pictures of some of her fabrics.]

    
    "It may be safe to say," wrote Mary Schoeser, in her book about 
    textile designer Marianne Straub, "that most people have sat or 
    looked at a Marianne Straub fabric (or copy), yet few. . . .could 
    name the designer."
        Many people, indeed, have sat and still sit on Straub-designed 
    fabrics in London Underground trains, on Trident aircraft, in public
    buildings, or in ordinary British homes where the owner has an eye 
    for fine-quality woven material.
        The largest part of Ms. Straub's career has been devoted to 
    textile designs that have quietly made themselves apparent in public
    awareness without ever shouting "Marianne Straub!"
        Yet Linda Parry, curator for modern textiles at the Victoria and
    Albert Museum, rates her as "extremely important in the history of 
    modern textiles in British textiles."  Straub is one of two or three
    British artists who have used their "great ability" in textile 
    design to serve industry, she says.
        The great thing about her work, say observers, is that it has 
    extraordinary balance between, for example, color and texture, 
    durability and appearance.
        "Surrey," one of her more famous designs, is currently featured 
    in a travelling exhibit with the Muse� des Arts D�coratifs de 
    Montreal.  Based on the crystalline structure of the mineral 
    afwillite, the design was used at the Festival of Britain in 1951.
        "It's made a terrific name for itself. . . .selected as an 
    example of that period," says the 80-year-old Straub, who has 
    produced innovative, abstract textile designs in industry for over 
    40 years, but is now retired.
        She willingly spoke about her career, and voiced her thoughts, 
    during an interview in her garden at her home in Cambridge -- though
    we had to break off briefly to be introduced to the local robin.  
    All strangers have to be inspected.
        Straub feels strongly -- she feels and speaks strongly about 
    most things -- that, like architecture, textile design is "a matter 
    of collaboration."  For her, "it is neither here nor there" whether 
    the word "art" has a capital or a small "a."  But actually she 
    prefers it small.  "I put it on a 'design' level, you know," she 
    says.
        "Her total modesty -- in being quite happy just to be part of a 
    design team. . . .I mean, it bowls you over," says Ms. Parry.
        No cult of the individual for Straub.  She has believed 
    throughout her long career, working for several manufacturers in 
    Britain, in "loyalty to the firm.  I enjoyed that very much. . . .
    I've never worked freelance."
        None of this is due to shyness or false modesty.  Michael Chase,
    a longtime London Gallery director, says "There's nothing indefinite
    about Marianne Straub."
        Working in industry, though first trained as a handweaver, was 
    deliberate -- an early decision, stuck to for a lifetime, "to design
    things which people could afford. . . .To remain a handweaver did 
    not seem satisfactory in this age of mass production," she says.
        Born in Switzerland, Straub still owns a dual passport.  But her
    career developed in Britain at a time when, in 1932, she attended 
    Bradford Technical College (in the center of the Yorkshire wool 
    industry) to extend her experience of powerloom weaving.  Her mother
    had vetoed Germany as a place for further training because Straub 
    was "very outspoken," and she didn't want to have to rescue her from
    prison.
        Being a woman, she was a rare commodity in a technical college 
    set up to train [sic] people for industry.  After the initial 
    surprise response, Straub believes she got "preferential treatment."
    But as a workaholic, she is more likely to have earned simple 
    respect.
        Her fascination with sheep and their wool -- which she has long 
    since collected samples of -- was prompted by one of the teachers.  
        But above all, her determination to understand the machinery of 
    the industry must have recommended her to the teachers.  This was 
    also to stand her in good stead later when weavers on the shop floor
    were unwilling to try new designs.
        "I know the machines," says Straub, "and can talk to the 
    technicians."  She almost always designed on the handloom, 
    developing her ideas as she worked.  As a handweaver in the 
    industry, it gave her special clout.
        "Then I could present the manufacturer with the finished 
    article," she explains, and he could never say "I can't do that."  
    Even if he did, she would stand at the big loom and demonstrate how 
    he could.  "The work people respected you -- it made an enormous 
    difference."
        Straub says that if more designers tried out the things they 
    were designing, fewer bad designs would result.  It's often apparent
    when a man designs an object a woman uses every day, she points out.
        But the main reason she preferred to work with a company, rather
    than to sell her designs as a freelancer, was to be in control.
        "If you sell your designs, and the manufacturer hasn't got the 
    right yarn or the right color. . . .then in the end you see 
    something that isn't at all what you meant it to be," Straub says.
        Employed by a Lancashire company called Helios (a subsidiary of 
    Barlow and Jones), and then by Warner and Sons, she most frequently 
    designed domestic fabrics -- upholstery, curtains, bedspreads.  But 
    she was never much interested in designing material for fashion.
        "I'm much more interested in architecture than ladies' fashion,"
    she says with a chuckle.  "If you work in fashion you've got to be 
    absolutely sold onto the whole thing."
        Clearly, Straub is not.  Fabric design is like architecture in 
    being structural and "also built out of units.  You've got to know 
    your raw materials," she says.
        Though never against using synthetic fibers when necessary (when
    cost dictated, for example), Straub says "the most durable fabric is
    still wool or worsted (closely woven wool yarn).  And wool takes the
    colors very clearly.  It also has the great advantage over man-made 
    fibers in that it doesn't look dirty so quickly.  All man-made 
    fibers, you see, are very strong."
        If synthetic fibers get rubbed, they don't wear away like wool 
    -- revealing a cleaner layer underneath, she explains.
        Her London Underground upholstry fabric is a case in point.  It 
    is moquette -- a fabric with a thick, soft, napped surface similar 
    to velvet.  If you look at the surface, it's part cut (or tufted) 
    and part uncut.  The tufting makes it wear better.
        "The chap at London Transport told me that it is by far the best
    they've had for wear -- it lasts about 8 years," she says.
        How does she protect against vandalism?  "Nothing you can do, 
    unless you weave it of sheet metal."
        Straub, who has taught at most of the major art colleges in 
    London, speaks strongly against the tendency today for designers "to
    borrow too much.
        "I've never used ethnic designs because I would feel dishonest.
    That is not our [European] handwriting.  We must keep our own 
    culture going with our own designs.
        "But I am very interested in techniques.  I will always look at 
    what is done anywhere -- how it is done.  Or at old fabrics -- how 
    I can learn from them.  But then I develop my own ideas."
328.2Edith Smith, educatorGNUVAX::QUIRIYChristineSat Aug 25 1990 00:57160
    Reprinted without permission from the Friday, August 24, 1990 
    edition of the Christian Science Monitor.

    Urban Principal Holds the Line

    Edith Smith prods students, teachers, and parents to excel at 
    Washington elementary school.

   By Clara Germani, Staff Writer of The Christian Science Monitor

    The article is accompanied by a photo of Edith Smith, sitting on a 
    desk.  "Edith Smith: During the past 13 years, she has promoted high
    educational standards at the Shepherd Park Elementary School in 
    northern Washington, D.C.  Under Mrs. Smith's leadership, test 
    scores have improved, teachers have been nationally recognized, and 
    strong parental support has been fostered."

    At a time when urban schools have the reputation of war zones, 
    Shepherd Park Elementary School is an educational demilitarized 
    zone.  Much of the credit for that goes to principal Edith Smith, 
    who has the no-nonsense air of a woman who wouldn't stand for it any
    other way.
        In the northernmost corner of the District of Columbia, where 
    urban blight begins to give way to the clipped lawns of the black 
    middle class, Mrs. Smith is known for prodding and inspiring the 
    best from students as well as from teachers and parents.
        The school's distinctions under her guidance, say school-system 
    officials and parents, include: Improving test scores where 
    district-wide scores are dropping; faculty nationally recognized for
    their innovative teaching, including one of the first winners of the
    United States Department of Education's prestigious Christa 
    McAuliffe fellowships; unusually strong parent support; and no known
    incidents of drug abuse among students whose school is close to the 
    Georgia Avenue strip where drug pushers have begun to pioneer a 
    middle-class market.
        "This is one of the few schools here that do not adhere to the 
    stereotype of the inner-city school," says Priscilla Gay, who was 
    Shepherd's Parent Teacher Association president for the past two 
    years and has had children in D.C. schools for 11 years.  "That can 
    only come from leadership like Smith's."
        Smith's role at Shepherd began with a three-month appointment as
    substitute principal, but grew to a 13-year assignment.
        Mrs. Gay attributes much of the school's success to Smith's 
    persistence in trying to involve the community and points out that 
    the principal was a key player in getting the city to build a new 
    branch library in the spot where a Burger King was planned.
        As able to respond with hugs to the tug of a tiny hand on her 
    billowy skirt as she is to react sharply to what needs correcting in
    the classroom or the community, Smith is like a "grandmother to the 
    kids and a coach to the teachers," observes Marion Thomas, president
    of a Washington-based engineering company and the father of a former
    Shepherd student.
        Impressed with Smith's efforts at creating educational activity 
    beyond the basics, Mr. Thomas says he decided to award annual 
    college scholarship funds to graduating sixth graders who excel in 
    math and science.  And this year, he rewarded Smith's efforts with 
    free round-trip air fare to any place she chooses.
        Preparing to leave Shepherd's hallways of musty Crayola smell 
    and thunderous little feet for retirement this month, Smith 
    distilled some of her perspectives from 24 years on the educational 
    front lines.
        Much of the diverse curricula -- from Arabic language classes to
    Socratic seminars -- that Smith has promoted at Shepherd seems to 
    stem from her own cultured and dignified manner.
       A Washington native who revered teachers, skated to the library 
    for all the books she could carry home, started early with her 
    25-cent piano lessons, and attended every musical event she could, 
    Smith's expectations come from an older, richer school of 
    educational thought.
        At times wheeling her desk chair forward to get that riveting 
    nose-to-nose stare schoolteachers perfect, Smith drove home the 
    lessons she's learned:
        o Don't flunk students
        o Test for success, not failure.
        o Make sure students know how to use what they learn
        o Beware of television.
        o Parents should be aware that they are models -- good or bad --
    for their children.
        Grading should only be a measure of a child's learning, not a 
    scarlet letter, Smith says.
        "Once you tell a child he has failed and you take an action 
    based on that, the child believes he's a failure...not just on tests
    but in grade [levels]," she says, noting that she prefers non-graded
    groupings for young children until they develop age-appropriate 
    skills.
        "Failure makes you feel badly about yourself, it makes you 
    doubt, and it influences the way you feel about school.  Anything 
    that makes a child turn off to school is a losing situation," she 
    says, asking why students would opt to go to school if they didn't 
    feel comfortable there.  "I don't see children dropping out who are 
    happy in school."

    If a child isn't doing well on tests, it may be more a function of 
    the teacher's style or a child's style of learning, Smith says.
        "What interests the child?  What turns him on?  If tests gave 
    that kind of gauge, if they measured how it is that learning would 
    most likely occur in a child, you'd be measuring for success and not
    for failure."
        Smith doesn't look to test scores or to adherence to teaching 
    theory as a gauge of a teacher's success.
        "I value knowledge and comprehension, but analysis and synthesis
    and evaluation are the higher-level thinking skills...I want to know
    what the students can do as a result of what they have been taught."
    That means students present projects to show what they can do as a 
    result of the teacher's work.
        Smith says that her own professional successes have been rooted 
    in the fact that she was an "activist parent" before she started 
    working in the D.C. school system in 1966.
        She knows firsthand the difficulties today's working and 
    single-parent families experience in trying to keep a hand in their 
    children's education.
        Because black women were not admitted to universities in 
    Maryland, where she lived with her physician husband and young 
    daughters in 1949, Smith had to leave them for a year in order to 
    get her teaching degree at Columbia University Teacher's College in 
    New York City.  During her 21-year marriage to a Baltimore doctor, 
    she was the first black woman in that city to become a stockbroker's
    representative, selling mutual funds to the black community.  After 
    her divorce, she returned to Washington and faced the problems of
    single-parent families.  She sent all her daughters to college.  One
    was the first black woman to earn a PhD in science at the University
    of North Carolina.
        She places the burden of a child's success squarely on the 
    parent's shoulders.
        "You don't have to have a formal education to recognize what 
    children need, or to subsidize it," she asserts.  Though her own 
    parents were not educated beyond the sixth grade, they squeezed a 
    decent lifestyle from their lunch-counter business, and she says, 
    "I cannot say I was a poor child either in money or in quality of 
    lifestyle because of where my parent's values were.
        "Modeling is important.  And I don't mean SAYING what is 
    important, but the MODELING of what is important," she says.  
    "Children are being held to task for a set of priorities based on 
    what they see [their parents do]...and that's the bottom line as to 
    why there is a diminishing of the quality of education in America."
        Smith targets television as one of the prime problems in 
    parents' relationships with their children, although she 
    acknowledges her own weakness for the game show "Jeopardy."
        "You would be surprised at the many little ones who come in who 
    are just not ready to function as a learner.  The reason a five year
    old is not ready for school is television...It dumbs down a person, 
    it stupefies.  We are getting a television child rather than a child
    who has been involved in outdoor playing and socializing.
        "Many children we're getting are different and to the degree 
    that television is more and more the babysitter, the child is 
    different when he comes to school.
        "The pre-television child came to school with more knowledge of 
    self.  He was tuned into himself more than what was happening on 
    television...Discussions with his parents made him aware of his 
    value."
        She asks how often anyone sees a child playing on the street 
    anymore and follows with the assertion that if youngsters aren't 
    watching television they're more than likely with their parents, 
    shopping at a mall.
        Among her suggestions for making children better students is for
    parents to read to them -- or at least read near them as a model -- 
    and go back to the pre-television family togetherness, where a 
    parent and child talk while they prepare the dinner "stringing the 
    beans, popping them, and throwing them in the pot."
328.3Pizza Hut worker foils a robberyICS::WALKERTue Aug 28 1990 10:0411
    ELLSWORTH, Maine - Police searched yesterday for a would-be robber who
    escaped from a pizza parlor with his life, but no money, after a female
    employee stabbed him in the stomach with his own knife.  The man
    entered a Pizza Hut restaurant at 12:55 a.m. wearing a pillowcase over
    his head and wielding a knife, said Ellsworth Police Office Leigh
    Guildford.  But the man's demand for money went unfulfilled:  Instead,
    he ended up trying to fend off an angry Debbie Saunders, the assistant
    manager.  Saunders grabbed the man by his hand and forced him to his
    knees, Guildford said.  Then she wrestled the knife away and stabbed
    him in the stomach before he ran away, he added.  (AP)  Boston Globe
    8/28/90.
328.4and the crowd went wild ... ;-)GEMVAX::KOTTLERMon Oct 08 1990 09:1114
From last Friday's Boston Globe:

	"A Maryknoll Roman Catholic priest has been disciplined for
concelebrating Mass with women at St. Joan of Arc parish in Minneapolis. 

	"Rev. Roy Bourgeois defended his action, saying church policies
unjustly exclude women from ordination. After the service, in which three
women joined in consecrating the bread and wine, the congregation cheered. 

	"Archbishop John. R Roach barred Rev. Bourgeois from further priestly
duties in the diocese, ordered an inquiry and reported the matter to the US
papal representative."

328.5Recent News on the Thompson/Kowalski CaseLJOHUB::MAXHAMSnort when you note!Tue Apr 30 1991 16:38108
From the New York Times, National Edition (without permission), 4/26/91

	"2 Sides are Bypassed in Lesbian Case", by Nadine Brozan
	
	After a five-year legal battle in Minn. between the parents of a 
paralyzed, brain-damaged woman and her lesbian lover, a judge has chosen a 3rd 
party to act as the disabled woman's guardian.

	In his ruling in the case, Judge Robert Campbell of the St. Louis 
County District Court in Duluth likened the paralyzed women, Sharon Kowalski, 
now 34, to a child over whom divoring parents do battle.

	"The two wings of ther family were unable to reach agreement on her 
care and visitation, matters which will serve her best interests", he wrote in 
an opinion issued Wednesday.  "She must enhoy the love and comfort of both 
wings of her family for her complete wellbeing and her longterm 
rehabilitation."  Those goals can be accomplished, he said, only through the 
appointment of a "neutral third party."

	Closeted before the accident, the couple became a cause celebre, the 
subject of parades and vigils.  They came to symbolize the struggle for equal 
rights of homosexuals and disable people.

	The woman's lover, Karen Thompson, 43, denounced the ruling, accusing 
the judge of appointing a guardian who was just a "stand-in" for Ms. 
Kowalski's parents.

	And a leading spokesman for lesbian and gay groups called the ruling 
"deeply offensive" and predicted it would "resonate throughout the law."

	The case began in 1983 after Ms. Kowalski, a high school gym teacher, 
was severly injured in a car collision with a drunken driver.  Until then she 
and Ms. Thompson, with whom she had exchanged wedding bands, lived in a house 
they had bought.

	Shortly after Mx. Thompson informed the parents about her relationship 
with their daughter -- they have continued to deny that she is a lesbian -- 
they took steps to sever the connection. 

	Ms. Kowalski's father, Donald, a retired mining foreman, obtained sole 
guardianship in July 1985.  He moved his daughter to a nursing home in 
Hibbing, a five-hour drive from Ms. Thompson's home, and had her barred from 
visiting the younger woman.

	Over the next 3 years, Ms. Thompson filed numerous appeals in local, 
state, and Federal courts, trying to have the guardianship revoked and 
contending that Ms. Kowalski was being denied access to therapy intended to 
advance her physical and mental capacity.

	Last summer Mr. Kowalski resigned his guardianship, citing two heart 
attacks that he said had been provoked by the strain of repeated court 
challenges.

	And now Judge Campbell has appointed Karen Tomberlin, a teacher and 
coach at Greenway High School in Coleraine, which is...near Nashwauk, where 
the Kowalskis live.

	In his court order Judge Campbell, who is on vacation and 
unreachable..., described Ms. Tomberlin as "a close friend of Sharon and 
Sharon's parents," who has known the patient since 1973.

	...
	Speaking from Atlanta, where she is attending a national lesbian 
rights conference, Ms. Thompson, an associated professor of physical education 
and sports science at ST. Cloud State University, said she would appeal.

	"Karen Tomberlin is just a stand-in for the parents", Ms. Thompson 
said.  "She took up their cause when they became too tired and sickly."

	Ms. Thompson said she had briefly told Ms. Kowalski about the latest 
decision before leaving for Atlanta.  "Sharon was clearly upset, moved and 
concerned," she said.

	Ms. Tomberlin could not be reached for comment yesterday.

	In 1988 Judge Campbell ordered that a comprehensive evaluation be 
conducted in Duluth, and she was moved there.  He also ruled that Ms. Thompson
be permitted to visit.  After Mr. Kowalski resigned his guardianship new 
hearings on guardianship were held.

	In his order, Judge Campbell wrote that Ms. Thompson "has demonstrated 
commitment and devotion to the welfare of Sharon Kowalski."  He also wrote, 
"In the past two years, when asked where she would like to live, Sharon has 
consistently said, "St. Cloud with Karen."

	But in a section of his decision subtitled "outing", the judge said 
Ms. Thompson had violated Ms. Kowalski's privacy by disclosing her sexual 
orientation.  He also cited as a consideration the fact that Ms Thompson now 
has "other domestic partnerships".

	Ms. Thompson does not deny that.  "I said on the stand that two and a 
half years after being away from Sharon, I decided to leave myself open to 
other relationships.  Sharon comes home with me all the time.  She really 
likes the person I am with, and has never asked."

	"The system separated us, and we became strangers," Ms. Thompson 
comtinued.  "For Sharon i will always be what I was years ago.  She can never 
know me as I am today, but I will love her for the rest of my life."

	Thomas B. Stoddard, exec. director of the Lambda Legal Defense Fund, a 
gay rights org, called Judge Campbell's decision "a deep offense not only to 
all lesbians and nay men, but to all Americans who choose their partners and 
households by their own terms and not the legal rules imposed by society."

	He added: "The idea of neutrality does not apply in any other area of 
family law.  Sharon chose her family.  But the judge doesn't agree, so he 
imposed his own vision on her."