2017-01 Oswego

AAUW Oswego Branch Newsletter January 2017
Presidents’ Message
Happy New Year to you all! It really does not seem possible that 2016 is already gone, although in some ways it lasted way
too long! But a new year is upon us and new possibilities, including continuing to support AAUW.
We had a good luncheon at the Church of the Resurrection in December to kick off the holiday season and learn some
things about Mexican American women as well as have some beautiful Mexican music. People made individual donations
of $90 and a gift for the SAF House. SAF House was extremely grateful for the special thoughts.
We look forward to our January program and hope you will be able to attend. Details below.
Several of our members have been or will be taking unusual trips. We anticipate hearing about the adventures that they
have been or will be experiencing.
Again, warm greetings as we begin the new year. We try to be optimistic as the year unfolds.
Take care,
Juanita (and Marilynn)
January Meeting – Saturday, January 21 at Oswego Tea Company, 12:30 p.m. Jean Chambers speaker
Our January 21st meeting will kick off the new calendar year. Oswego Tea Company will again provide a soup/sandwich
luncheon at the cost of $10.00. Following lunch we will have a showing of video clips from the Kanopy videos that Jean
Chambers has arranged with Penfield Library on campus. She is calling her program: “Building Awareness of Gender
Roles through Video Presentations.”
Be sure to let me know no later than Monday, January 16 if you will be coming. We encourage you to bring guests.
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January Highlights in US Women’s History
January 3, 1949 – Margaret Chase Smith (R-Maine) starts her tenure in the Senate, where she stays in office until
1973, became the first woman to serve in both the House and Senate as she previously served in the House (1940-49)
January 5, 1925 – Nellie Tayloe Ross is inaugurated as the first woman Governor in U.S. history (Governor of
Wyoming)
January 7, 1896 – Fanny Farmer’s first cookbook is published in which she standardized cooking measurements
January 7, 1955 – Marian Anderson is the first African American woman to sing at the Metropolitan Opera
January 8, 1977 – Pauli Murray is ordained as the first female African American Episcopal priest
January 11, 1935 – Amelia Earhart makes the first solo flight from Hawaii to North America
January 12, 1932 – Hattie Wyatt Caraway (D-Arkansas) is the first woman elected to the U.S. Senate, becomes the
first woman to chair a Senate Committee and the first to serve as the Senate’s presiding officer
January 25, 1980 – Mary Decker became the first woman to run a mile under 4 1/2 minutes, running it at 4:17.55
January 29, 1926 – Violette Neatly Anderson is the first black woman to practice law before the U.S. Supreme Court
January Birthdays
January 1, 1909 (1993) – Peggy Dennis, Communist activist, first editor of women’s pages of the Communist Paper
USA, became critic and resigned from the Party in 1976
January 1 , 1921 (1999) – Jeanne Chall, her research into reading stressed the importance of phonics in beginning
reading, worked with Sesame Street teaching ABCs, wrote Stages of Reading Development (1983)
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January 2, 1895 (1989) – Sadie Alexander, first black woman to edit the University of Pennsylvania Law Review,
helped craft state civil rights act, desegregated Washington National Airport in late 1940s, worked with the Urban League and
ACLU
January 2, 1895 (1977) – Edith Jackson, pediatrician and psychoanalyst at St. Elizabeth’s Hospital beginning in 1929,
worked on prevention and treatment of child abuse
January 2, 1919 (1979) – Beatrice Hicks, engineer, worked on design, production and testing of quartz crystal
oscillators during World War II, chaired the First International Conference of Women Engineers and Scientists in New York
(1964)
January 3, 1793 (1880 ) – Lucretia Mott, women’s rights pioneer, Quaker minister, pacifist (NWHP co-founder Molly
Murphy MacGregor is honored to share her birthday)
January 3, 1897 (1979) – Dorothy Arzner, the sole woman film director between 1927 and 1943, made “The Wild Party”
starring Clara Bow (1929), “Christopher Strong” with Katherine Hepburn (1933), and “Craig’s Wife” with Rosalind Russell (1936)
January 3, 1916 (1994) – Betty Furness, television reporter for Westinghouse during the 1950s and 60s, consumer
affairs advocate in the Johnson administration, helped to enact regulations on flameproof fabrics and credit card billing
January 3, 1926 (1989) – Maria Sanchez, activist for bilingual education for Puerto Ricans, elected to school board
then the Connecticut General Assembly (1988)
January 4, 1892 (1982) – Helen Hull, director of Henry Street Settlement House, appointed by FDR to Committee on
Economic Security which created Social Security Act of 1935 and Unemployment Compensation
January 4, 1943 – Doris Kearns Goodwin, historian, awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Lincoln, also wrote The
Fitzgeralds and the Kennedys and Lyndon Johnson
January 5, 1893 (1987) – Elizabeth (Libba) Cotton, singer/songwriter, wrote “Freight Train” at age 11, worked as cook
for Ruth Crawford and shared Southern songs, still sang in festivals at 67, named one of 75 influential African Americans in I
Dream a World (1989)
January 5, 1893 (1980) – Sigrid Schultz, war correspondent for the Chicago Tribune, interviewed Hitler, reported on
German-Russian non-aggression pact, wrote articles on German concentration camps
January 5, 1895 (1981) – Rebecca Lancefield, pioneer microbiologist, overcame sexism, published effects of
streptococcal infections in army in Texas (1919), president of Society of American Bacteriologist (1943), elected to the National
Academy of Sciences (1970)
January 5, 1895 (1981) – Jeannette Piccard, first female Episcopal priest, first woman licensed balloon pilot, attained
almost 58,000 feet – the record altitude for women until 1963
January 5, 1901 (1991) – Aryness Wickens, statistician, worked with Federal Reserve Board to refine index of industrial
production, president of the American Statistical Association (1952)
January 7, 1891 (1960) – Zora Neale Hurston, author, pioneering scholar of African-American folklore
January 7, 1905 (1987) – Nella Morton, feminist educator, pushed for full integration for black students at the Biblical
Seminary of New York, worked with retarded children and developed curricular theories from 1956 to 1971
January 8, 1867 (1961) – Emily Greene Balch, economist and sociologist, co-founder of the Women’s International
League for Peace and Freedom with Jane Addams and others (1919), awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1946, shared with
John Mott
January 8, 1911 (1995) – Thelma (Butterfly) McQueen, danced with Katherine Dunham as Butterfly in “A Midsummer’s
Night Dream,” played Prissy in “Gone With the Wind”
January 9, 1859 (1947) – Carrie Chapman Catt, nationally recognized woman suffrage leader, led suffragists to victory
in 1920 as president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association
January 9, 1897 (1994) – Felisa Rincon De Gautier, appointed Mayor of San Juan in 1946 and re-elected until 1969,
created elder-care centers, distributed clothes and food, encouraged women to participate in the economy
January 9, 1941 – Joan Baez, folk singer and songwriter, supported human and civil rights, peace activist, founded the
Humanitas International Human Rights Committee (1979)
January 10, 1863 (1934) – Katharine Gibbs, founded the Katharine Gibbs Schools, which became the most famous
and prestigious secretarial institution in the country, insisted that even though few women worked in business, “Young women
have to be trained beyond the technical to act as a personal representative, to display initiative, and to assume larger
responsibilities.”
January 10, 1898 (1979) – Katharine Blodgett, physicist and inventor, first woman research scientist for General
Electric’s Schenectady, NY laboratory (1920), first woman awarded a Ph.D. in Physics from the University of Cambridge (1926),
received eight U.S. patents, most famously for inventing low-reflectance “invisible” glass
January 11, 1885 (1977) – Alice Paul, suffrage leader and attorney, founded the National Woman’s Party (1916), her
innovative nonviolent strategies and political sophistication helped win passage of the 19th Amendment (1920), initiated the
campaign for the Equal Rights Amendment (1923)
January 11, 1899 (1991) – Eva LeGallienne, actress, toured with Ethel Barrymore, starred with Basil Rathbone in 1923,
first Peter Pan to fly out over the audience, produced and founded the Civic Repertory Theatre (1926-33), last performance was
a 1984 episode of TV’s “St. Elsewhere”
January 12, 1820 (1914) – Caroline Severance, early suffragist and social reformer, women’s clubs pioneer, cofounded the American Woman Suffrage Association (1869), first woman to register to vote in California (1911)
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January 13, 1850 (1911) – Charlotte Ray, first female African-American lawyer and first woman admitted to the bar in
Washington D.C.
January 13, 1917 – Edna Hibel, artist and colorist, first woman to win the Leonardo da Vinci World Award of Arts
January 13, 1926 (1999) – Melba Liston, self-taught jazz trombonist, member of Dizzy Gillespie’s tour of the Middle
East in 1956, recorded, taught, and performed in Women’s Jazz Festivals
January 14, 1900 (1987) – Marion Martin, elected to Maine House of Representatives, (1930-34), Maine Senate (193438), first woman to head Department of Labor and Industry (1947-62), worked for minimum living wage, industrial safety and
child labor laws
January 15, 1892 (1968) – Jane Hoey, director of the Bureau of Public Assistance, Social Security Board (1936-53),
helped states develop programs of assistance, especially mothers’ aid programs, bequeathed millions to Trinity College and
Columbia University School of Social Work
January 15, 1898 (1995) – Irene Kuhn, journalist, scooped the world when a tidal wave hit Honolulu in 1923, worked on
Thomas Dewey’s campaign, penned conservative nationally syndicated column for nearly 25 years
January 16, 1906 (1984) – Ethel Merman, actress, singer, performed “I Got Rhythm” in “Girl Crazy” in 1930, continued
with “Annie Get Your Gun” in 1946 and “Gypsy” and “Hello Dolly “ in the 1970s
January 16, 1927 (1998) – Estela Trambley, teacher, writer, playwright, pioneer in Chicano literature, addressed
challenges of life in the Southwest and explored the cultural demands of gender roles and marriage
January 16, 1932 (1985) – Dian Fossey, primatologist and naturalist who studied, lived amongst, and befriended the
gorillas of Rwanda for 18 years, wrote Gorillas in the Mist (1983) emphasizing the need to protect them from the constant
threat of poachers and neglect
January 16, 1933 (2004) – Susan Sontag, intellectual, critic, filmmaker, and writer, first influential essay “Notes on
‘Camp'” (1964), wrote On Photography, Against Interpretation, and recently released journals and diaries
January 17, 1910 (1987) – Edith Green, elected to Congress in 1954 and served 9 terms, worked on women’s rights,
education, and equal pay
January 17, 1920 (1987) – Nora Kaye, ballerina, choreographer, and film producer, joined George Balanchine’s
American Ballet (1936), collaborated on films with husband Herbert Ross including “Goodbye, Mr. Chips” (1969) and “The
Seven-Per-Cent Solution” (1976), produced “The Turning Point” (1977) and “Pennies from Heaven” (1981)
January 17, 1922 – Betty White, veteran actress, her latter TV roles included “Mama’s Family,” “The Golden Girls,” and
“Hot in Cleveland,” advocate of animal welfare
January 17, 1939 – Martha Cotera, pioneering Chicana feminist, author of two seminal texts Diosa y
Hembra andChicana Feminist, founding member Raza Unida Party in Texas (1969), one of the mothers of Chicana Feminism
January 19, 1905 (1995) – Oveta Culp Hobby, second women in the U.S. Cabinet (20 years after Frances Perkins),
first Secretary of the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (1953), awarded the Distinguished Medal of Service for her
work as Director of the Women’s Army Corps (1945)
January 19, 1905 (1996) – Anne Hummert, producer of popular radio soap operas “Just Plain Bill” (1933-55), “Ma
Perkins,” and “Stella Dallas” (1937-55)
January 19, 1946 – Dolly Parton, singer and songwriter best known for country music, her most famous movie, “Nine to
Five,” dealt with sexism in the workplace
January 21, 1905 (1996) – Agnes Mongan, published material on French artists despite restrictions on her movements
because she was a woman, director at Harvard’s Fogg Art Museum (1969-71), mentored many female scholars
January 22, 1877 (1981) – Rosa Ponselle, soprano, debuted with Enrico Caruso in 1918, sang with Baltimore Civic
Opera after 1950, mentored Beverly Sill
January 23, 1902 (1999) – Lucile Leone, upgraded programs of the U.S. Nurse Corps, which grew to 180,000 by 1948,
chief nurse officer of U.S. Public Health, Assistant Surgeon General (1949-66)
January 23, 1909 (1985) – Tatiana Proskouriakoff, artist for life possibilities, inspired by Mayan hieroglyphs on first visit
in 1936, also traveled to Mexico and Guatemala
January 23, 1910 (1993) – Irene Sharaff, costume designer for 40 movies and 60 Broadway shows, created costumes
for “An American in Paris” (1951) and “West Side Story” (1961), nominated for fifteen Academy Awards
January 23, 1918 (1999) – Gertrude Elion, biochemist, one of only 10 women to win the Nobel Prize in Physiology or
Medicine (1988)
January 23, 1921 (1994) – Merija Gimbutas, author, emigrated to Boston, began with Lithuanian beliefs and rituals,
folklore, and ancient practices, wrote The Prehistory of Modern Europe (1956) and The Civilization of the Goddess (1994)
January 24, 1968 – Mary Lou Retton, first and only American woman to win a gold medal in the All-Around in
gymnastics at the Olympics (1984) and first American woman to win a gold medal in gymnastics, first woman featured on a
Wheaties cereal box
January 25, 1896 (1987) – Helen Heffernan, strong supporter of United Nations’ education of bilingual education,
recognized that children who were interned in World War II needed health and family services
January 26, 1872 (1957) – Julia Morgan, first licensed female architect in California, innovative architect of Hearst
Castle and over 700 other buildings
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January 26, 1892 (1926) – Bessie Coleman, first African-American woman in the world to fly a plane and earn an
international pilot’s license
January 27, 1898 (1995) – Georgia Clark, first female U.S. Treasurer (1949-53), appointed by President Truman
January 27, 1937 (1997) – Nancy Dickerson, producer of “Face the Nation” (1960), first woman on NBC to go on
assignment worldwide (1986-91)
January 27, 1941 (1981) – Beatrice Tinsley, astronomer, studied how light changes as stars age, found that young
galaxies are brighter and bluer
January 28, 1913 (1988) – Hazel Garland, editor-in-chief of The Pittsburgh Courier (1974-77), a pioneer in
communicating with people of diverse backgrounds
January 29, 1941 – Robin Morgan, poet, political theorist, activist, co-founder of the Women’s Media Center, author of
over 20 books, edited trailblazing anthology Sisterhood is Powerful in the 1970s
January 30, 1890 – Angie Debo, spent lifetime examining historical implications of settlements of Native Americans
Indians, wrote And Still the Waters Run in 1940 describing the “criminal conspiracy” that defrauded Oklahoma’s Five Civilized
Tribes of their lands
January 30, 1912 (1989) – Barbara Tuchman, author, historian, awarded thePulitzer Prize in 1958 for The Guns of
August and in 1971 for Stillwell and the American Experience in China
January 31, 1960 (1982) – Betty Parsons, gallery owner and artist, exhibited watercolors in 1935, created the Betty
Parsons Gallery in 1946, showed the work of many avant garde expressionists
Information furnished by National Women’s History Project
NEW YORK STATE CONVENTION
April 21-23 2017
Doubletree by Hilton, Syracuse NY
OSWEGO BRANCH OFFICERS 2016-2017
Co-Presidents
Juanita Tschudy
342-5417
[email protected]
Marilynn Smiley
343-4803
[email protected]
Recording Secretary
Emily Oaks
947-5140
[email protected]
Treasurer/Finance Officer
Helen Engel
343-9678
[email protected]
Public Policy
Jean Chambers
342-6169
[email protected]
Communications Editor
Juanita Tschudy
342-5417
Committee Chairs
Diversity
Marilynn Smiley
AAUW Funds
Helen Engel
Legal Advocacy Fund
Ellie Filburn [email protected]
GEMS
Juanita Tschudy and Emily Oaks
Mission Statement
AAUW advances equity for women and girls through advocacy, education, philanthropy and research.
AAUW Value Promise
By joining AAUW, we belong to a community that breaks through educational and economic barriers so that all women have a fair chance.
Vision Statement
AAUW will be a powerful advocate and visible leader in equity and education through research, philanthropy and measurable change in critical areas
impacting the lives of women and girls.
Diversity Statement
In principle and practice, AAUW values and seeks a diverse membership. There shall be no barriers to full participation in this organization on the basis
of gender, race, creed, age, sexual orientation, national origin, disability or class.
Have general questions about AAUW? Please contact [email protected] or call800/326-2289 between 10 am and 5 pm Eastern,
Monday through Friday.
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