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1930s Eleanor Roosevelt
Political force for Human Rights and Social Responsibility.
RELATED ARTICLES
Explain
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Women Inventors & Innovators – Map
Women Inventors & Innovators – Map☜A map & database supporting Visual Insights & NextNow Collaboratorys Timeline Mural of Women Inventors & Innovators. To open the mural at any time, click on the Women Inventors & Innovators logo.☜F1CEB7
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PEOPLE
PEOPLE☜☜D3ABAB
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1930s Eleanor Roosevelt
1930s Eleanor Roosevelt ☜Political force for Human Rights and Social Responsibility.☜D3ABAB
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COURAGEOUS LEADERSHIP
COURAGEOUS LEADERSHIP☜☜FFFACD
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1930's to 1950's - World War II Era
1930's to 1950's - World War II Era ☜☜FFFACD
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1778- Molly Pitcher
1778- Molly Pitcher☜Battle of Monmouth, Revolutionary War. Although Molly Pitcher is a composite of two women, Margaret Cochran Corbin and Mary Ludwig Hayes McCauley, and the stuff of legend, she was inspired by the actions of several real women who contributed to the Revolutionary War effort with patriotism and courage.☜D3ABAB
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1781- Mum Bett
1781- Mum Bett☜Freedom Suit, slavery ruled illegal.☜D3ABAB
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1793 - Catharine Greene
1793 - Catharine Greene☜Cotton gin☜D3ABAB
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1804 to 1806- Sacagawea
1804 to 1806- Sacagawea ☜A Lemhi Shoshone woman who guided and interpreted for Lewis and Clark on their Expedition.☜D3ABAB
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1811- Sophie Germain
1811- Sophie Germain☜Pioneer of elasticity theory. Because of prejudice against her gender, she was unable to make a career out of mathematics, but she worked independently throughout her life.☜D3ABAB
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1814- Dolley Madison
1814- Dolley Madison☜COURAGEOUS LEADERSHIP 1st first lady, saved trunks of important documents during the White House burn, including an original copy of the Declaration of Independence☜D3ABAB
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1830s- Sarah & Angelina Grimke (Sisters)
1830s- Sarah & Angelina Grimke (Sisters)☜writing and lecture series on abolition and feminism☜D3ABAB
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1842- Ada Lovelace
1842- Ada Lovelace☜First computer programmer☜D3ABAB
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1849 - Harriet Tubman
1849 - Harriet Tubman☜Abolitionist☜D3ABAB
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1849- Elizabeth Blackwell
1849- Elizabeth Blackwell☜Starts infirmary for Indigent Women and Children☜D3ABAB
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1853- Sojourner Truth
1853- Sojourner Truth☜You may hiss as much as you please, but women will get their rights anyway. You cant stop us, neither GENDER EQUALITY☜D3ABAB
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1868- Susan B. Anthony
1868- Susan B. Anthony☜Co-founded the National Woman Suffrage Association with Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Championed equal rights for women. In 1878, Anthony and Stanton arranged for Congress to be presented with an amendment giving women the right to vote. Popularly known as the Anthony Amendment, it became the Nineteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution in 1920. [1]☜D3ABAB
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1880s- Clara Barton
1880s- Clara Barton☜Founded the American Red Cross☜D3ABAB
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1880s- Nellie Bly
1880s- Nellie Bly☜Investigative journalism☜D3ABAB
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1890s - Marie Curie
1890s - Marie Curie☜Conducted pioneering studies on Radioactivity, a term she coined. Discovered two elements, founded two medical research centers, won two Nobel Prizes, and invented mobile x-ray units, saving countless lives during WW1.☜D3ABAB
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1893- Henrietta Swan Leavitt
1893- Henrietta Swan Leavitt☜Expansion of the Universe☜D3ABAB
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1900s- Isadora Duncan
1900s- Isadora Duncan☜The mother of modern dance chafed under what she saw as the rigid restrictions of classical forms and replaced them with free, expansive, expressive movement. She influenced a generation of dancers — and loosened us all up. She paralleled humanistic psychology by representing a break from Victoria constriction into personal expression and freedom.☜D3ABAB
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1904 - Ida Tarbell
1904 - Ida Tarbell☜Muckraker☜D3ABAB
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1905- Bertha von Suttner
1905- Bertha von Suttner☜Nobel Peace Prize. Inspired Alfred Nobel to include a Peace Prize. Author of pacifist novel, Die Waffen nieder! (Lay Down Your Arms!)☜D3ABAB
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1905- Nettie Stevens
1905- Nettie Stevens☜Chromosomal basis of sex☜D3ABAB
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1907- Julia Morgan
1907- Julia Morgan☜Functionality of architecture☜D3ABAB
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1915- Hellen Keller
1915- Hellen Keller☜Activist for vision, health and nutrition.☜D3ABAB
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1916- Margaret Sanger
1916- Margaret Sanger☜BIRTH-CONTROL ADVOCATESanger founded the American Birth Control League, which became Planned Parenthood. The sixth of 11 children — she felt that frequent pregnancies hastened her mothers early death — Sanger worked to give us control over the means of reproduction.☜D3ABAB
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1919- Alice Hamilton, M.D.
1919- Alice Hamilton, M.D. ☜FOUNDER OF INDUSTRIAL TOXICOLOGYYouve benefited from her research and crusading. The first woman professor at Harvard, she identified poisons in the workplace and brought attention to lead poisoning as a health hazard.☜D3ABAB
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1920- Carrie Chapman Catt
1920- Carrie Chapman Catt☜Her husband agreed she should devote four months a year to securing the vote for women. She packed a lot in: As president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association (a merger of Anthonys organization and a more moderate one), she led the strategic push to pass the 19th Amendment, which was ratified in August 1920.☜D3ABAB
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1920- Emmy Noether
1920- Emmy Noether☜Influential German mathematician known for her groundbreaking contributions to abstract algebra and theoretical physics. Physicists appreciate her best for her famous theorem because of its far-ranging consequences for theoretical physics and dynamic systems. She showed an acute propensity for abstract thought, which allowed her to approach problems of mathematics in fresh and original ways.☜D3ABAB
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1920's- Lillian Moller Gilbreth
1920's- Lillian Moller Gilbreth☜INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERShe boosted workplace efficiency, advanced the field of motion study, and designed equipment to make housework easier for the disabled. And she did all that while caring for her 12 kids: Shes the mom in Cheaper by the Dozen.☜D3ABAB
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1926 - Mary Parker Follett
1926 - Mary Parker Follett☜Mother of Modern Management☜D3ABAB
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1926- Grete Hermann
1926- Grete Hermann☜Computerized Algerbra☜D3ABAB
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1928- Mother Teresa
1928- Mother Teresa☜Devotion to the poor☜D3ABAB
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1930s- Billie Holiday
1930s- Billie Holiday☜Blues☜D3ABAB
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1931- Jane Addams Hull
1931- Jane Addams Hull☜Nobel Peace Prize as founder of social work profession in the US.☜D3ABAB
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1935- Irene Joliot-Curie
1935- Irene Joliot-Curie ☜Nobel Prize in Chemistry for Artificial Radioactivity.☜D3ABAB
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1936 - Inge Lehmann
1936 - Inge Lehmann☜Discovered Earths Core☜D3ABAB
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1937- Amelia Earhart
1937- Amelia Earhart☜The first woman to fly across the Atlantic Ocean, she opened the skies to other women. In 1937 while attempting to become the first person to fly around the world, Earhart’s plane disappeared over the Pacific Ocean. ☜D3ABAB
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1939- Lise Meitner
1939- Lise Meitner☜Meitner was part of the team that discovered nuclear fission, an achievement for which her colleague Otto Hahn was awarded the Nobel Prize. Meitner is often mentioned as one of the most glaring examples of womens scientific achievement overlooked by the Nobel committee.☜D3ABAB
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1942- Hedy Lamarr
1942- Hedy Lamarr☜ENGINEER Co-inventor of spread spectrum frequency hopping, the technology important to control torpedoes.☜D3ABAB
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1942- Margaret Mead
1942- Margaret Mead☜Cofounded theMacy Conferences (1946-1953) which were the most important meetings of minds for the purpose of understanding control of human behavior. They are also considered as the breeding ground for Cybernetics and breakthroughs in Systems Theory. In essence, they brought “systems thinking” to the awareness of a cross-disciplinary group of intellectuals.http://emcsr.net/looking-back-in-history-the-macy-conferences/☜D3ABAB
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1943- Gertrude Blanch
1943- Gertrude Blanch☜Pioneering work in Computation☜D3ABAB
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1943- Rosa Parks
1943- Rosa Parks☜First Lady of Civil Rights☜D3ABAB
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1944- Bletchley Park Women's Team
1944- Bletchley Park Women's Team☜WWII Code Breakers, Collossus Mark I.☜D3ABAB
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1946 - ENIAC Programmers
1946 - ENIAC Programmers☜Electronic General Purpose Computer☜D3ABAB
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1947 - Indra Devi
1947 - Indra Devi☜First Lady of Yoga☜D3ABAB
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1947 - Mária Telkes
1947 - Mária Telkes☜Thermoelectricity and Solar Energy☜D3ABAB
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1947- Gerty Cori
1947- Gerty Cori☜first woman to receive Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for her work with the fate of sugar and its effects of insulin and epinephrine. Catalytic conversion of glycogen.☜D3ABAB
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1950s- Barbara McClintock
1950s- Barbara McClintock☜Discovered transposition, The Jumping Gene☜D3ABAB
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1950s- Chien-Shiung Wu
1950s- Chien-Shiung Wu☜Disprove Law of Parity☜D3ABAB
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1950s- Esther Lederberg
1950s- Esther Lederberg☜Antibiotic Resistance☜D3ABAB
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1950s- Jane Goodall
1950s- Jane Goodall☜PRIMATOLOGIST AND CONSERVATIONISTFifty years ago she began studying chimpanzee families at the Gombe Stream National Park in Tanzania — and in the process taught us much about our own. Roots & Shoots, her environmental organization for kids, has tens of thousands of participants — a new generation ready to protect wild things and their habitats.☜D3ABAB
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1952- Grace Murray Hopper
1952- Grace Murray Hopper ☜COMPUTER-LANGUAGE CREATOROne of the first women in the Navy to attain the rank of rear admiral, Hopper was a math whiz and a founding mother of computer languages; her focus was on making them more accessible to programmers. Your swift, snazzy software exists because of her. She coined the term debugging (1947) after removing an actual moth from the circuitry of a malfunctioning Havard Mark II computer. ☜D3ABAB
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1952- Mary G. Ross
1952- Mary G. Ross☜Space engineer, advocate for women and Native Americans☜D3ABAB
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1953- Rosalind Franklin
1953- Rosalind Franklin☜BIOPHYSICISTShe discovered proof of the double-helix structure of DNA before the men credited with doing so, Francis Crick, James Watson, and Maurice Wilkins; their work was based in part on her data. They won a Nobel Prize; she died in obscurity at 37. Her full contribution wasnt acknowledged until years later.☜D3ABAB
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1955- Ann Landers & Abigail Van Buren
1955- Ann Landers & Abigail Van Buren ☜ADVICE COLUMNISTSTwins Esther Pauline Friedman Lederer and Pauline Esther Friedman Phillips wrote the most popular newspaper advice columns in America — Ann Landers, which Lederer took over in 1955, and Dear Abby (launched by Phillips in 1956). The competing counselors, estranged for a time, spoke frankly about issues such as alcoholism and AIDS, and stressed tolerance and acceptance.☜D3ABAB
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1955- Del Martin & Phyllis Lyon
1955- Del Martin & Phyllis Lyon☜Founded first lesbian organization☜D3ABAB
□
1957- Gertrude Belle Elion
1957- Gertrude Belle Elion☜MEDICAL RESEARCHER Thousands of people have been given a second chance because of her: This Nobel Prize-winning research scientist codeveloped two drugs that fought leukemia and, in 1957, developed the first immunosuppressant agent, a development that made it possible to transplant organs.☜D3ABAB
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1960s- Grace Slick
1960s- Grace Slick☜Rock n Roll☜D3ABAB
□
1960s- Joni Mitchell
1960s- Joni Mitchell☜Philosophical Folk Music☜D3ABAB
□
1960s- Mildred Dresselhaus
1960s- Mildred Dresselhaus☜Carbon Nanotubes☜D3ABAB
□
1960s- Ursula Franklin
1960s- Ursula Franklin☜Peace Activist: peace is not the absence of war—peace is the absence of fear.In the early 1960s, Franklin investigated levels of strontium-90—a radioactive isotope in fallout from nuclear weapons testing—in childrens teeth. Her research contributed to the cessation of atmospheric weapons testing.☜D3ABAB
□
1962- Malvina Reynolds
1962- Malvina Reynolds☜Little Boxes a protest song. The song is a political satire about the development of suburbia and associated conformist middle-class attitudes. Reynolds was a folk singer-songwriter and political activist in the 1960s and 1970s.☜D3ABAB
□
1962- Rachel Carson
1962- Rachel Carson☜Her book Silent Spring, which warned of the perils of pesticide use, sparked a grassroots green movement and spurred the overhauling of our national policy on pesticides. Her work has saved countless lives — furred, feathered, finned, and human.☜D3ABAB
□
1962- Virginia Satir
1962- Virginia Satir ☜1962, Began her research of Family Systems therapy. In 1970, she organized Beautiful People, which later became known as the International Human Learning Resources Network. She is also known for creating the Virginia Satir Change Process Model, a psychological model developed through clinical studies. Change management and organizational gurus of the 1990s and 2000s embrace this model to define how change impacts organizations.☜D3ABAB
□
1963- Betty Friedan
1963- Betty Friedan☜FEMINIST AUTHORHer 1963 best seller, The Feminine Mystique — parts of which first appeared in GH — chronicled the unspoken unhappiness of women forced into restrictive roles, and helped change ideas about what women are capable of and entitled to. She cofounded the National Organization for Women (NOW) and the National Womens Political Caucus.☜D3ABAB
□
1963- Maria Goeppert Mayer
1963- Maria Goeppert Mayer ☜Nobel Prize in Physics. Nuclear shell structure.☜D3ABAB
□
1964 - Stephanie Kwolek
1964 - Stephanie Kwolek☜Kevlar☜D3ABAB
□
1964- Dorothy “Crowfoot” Hodgkin
1964- Dorothy “Crowfoot” Hodgkin☜Nobel Prize- Chemistry. X-ray Crystallography.☜D3ABAB
□
1965- Lilli Vincenz
1965- Lilli Vincenz☜Launched gay and lesbian civil rights movement☜D3ABAB
□
1966 - Mary Douglas
1966 - Mary Douglas☜Anthropologist, Purity and Danger☜D3ABAB
□
1967- Erna Schneider Hoover
1967- Erna Schneider Hoover ☜Pioneer in computer technology. Invented computerized telephone switching method.☜D3ABAB
□
1967- Jocelyn Bell Burnell
1967- Jocelyn Bell Burnell☜As a postgraduate student, she discovered the first radio pulsars while studying and advised by her thesis supervisor Antony Hewish, for which Hewish shared the Nobel Prize in Physics with Martin Ryle, while Bell Burnell was excluded, despite having been the first to observe and precisely analyse the pulsars.☜D3ABAB
□
1969- Katherine Johnson
1969- Katherine Johnson ☜ASTRONOMY calculate trajectory of Apollo II to the moon.☜D3ABAB
□
1970s- Anna Halprin
1970s- Anna Halprin☜Expressive Arts/ Healing helps us celebrate bringing the physical and gestural expression into our understanding of communication and wholeness. ☜D3ABAB
□
1971 - Margaret Hamilton
1971 - Margaret Hamilton☜Apollo flight software☜D3ABAB
□
1972- Barbara Gittings
1972- Barbara Gittings☜Homosexuality removed from APAs mental disorders☜D3ABAB
□
1972- Gloria Steinem
1972- Gloria Steinem☜Ms. Magazine☜D3ABAB
□
1972- Yvonne Brill
1972- Yvonne Brill☜propulsion system to stabilize communication satellites☜D3ABAB
□
1973- Adele Goldberg
1973- Adele Goldberg☜Smalltalk-80, Object oriented programming☜D3ABAB
□
1973- Billie Jean King
1973- Billie Jean King☜TENNIS CHAMPIONWinner of 39 Grand Slams (singles, doubles, and mixed doubles), founder of the Womens Sports Foundation — and trouncer of Bobby Riggs in 1973s Battle of the Sexes.☜D3ABAB
□
1973- Judith Estrin
1973- Judith Estrin ☜Developed Internet Protocols☜D3ABAB
□
1974 - Betty Ford
1974 - Betty Ford☜Breast cancer awareness, substance abuse☜D3ABAB
□
1979 - Lenore Walker
1979 - Lenore Walker☜Domestic violence advocate☜D3ABAB
□
1980s - Joanna Macy
1980s - Joanna Macy ☜HUMAN POTENTIAL - spiritual ecology http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joanna_Macy☜D3ABAB
□
1980s- Angeles Arrien
1980s- Angeles Arrien☜reviving ancient ritual traditions - http://marilynschlitz.com/a-tribute-to-angeles-arrien/She was the founder and president of the Angeles Arrien Foundation for Cross-Cultural Education and Research, which focuses on the preservation of indigenous wisdoms, environmental sustainability, multi-cultural bridging and effective intergenerational leadership demonstrated by both elders and youth. http://www.spiritualityandpractice.com/teachers/teachers.php?id=291☜D3ABAB
□
1980s- Gopika Kannan
1980s- Gopika Kannan☜Networked Improvement Communities, Global Collaboration☜D3ABAB
□
1981- Dianne Pennica
1981- Dianne Pennica ☜Being a woman helped Diane Pennica to make the greatest breakthrough of her career, but not in a way one might expect. She cloned TPA, Genetech. http://www.the-scientist.com/?articles.view/articleNo/16829/title/Diane-Pennica/☜D3ABAB
□
1982- Nancy Margulies
1982- Nancy Margulies☜Visual Communication☜D3ABAB
□
1983- Françoise Barré-Sinoussi
1983- Françoise Barré-Sinoussi☜Discovery of HIV Virus☜D3ABAB
□
1984- Virginia Uribe
1984- Virginia Uribe☜Drop-out prevention for LGBT youth☜D3ABAB
□
1985- Christa McAuliffe
1985- Christa McAuliffe☜NASA Teacher in Space Project☜D3ABAB
□
1986- Oprah Winfrey
1986- Oprah Winfrey☜Queen of All Media☜D3ABAB
□
1986- Susan Solomon
1986- Susan Solomon☜Leader in Climate Science☜D3ABAB
□
1987- Lucy Suchman
1987- Lucy Suchman☜Human-Computer Interaction☜D3ABAB
□
1990s- Rita Colwell
1990s- Rita Colwell☜Ecological Epidemiologist. Tackled water-borne diseases.☜D3ABAB
□
1991- Joy Mountford
1991- Joy Mountford☜Seminal thinker in Human-Computer Interface; Developer of QuickTime at Apple; early visionary (1980s) for what would later become Apple Stores, Apple watch, Multi-Media displays☜D3ABAB
□
1994- Susan McGee Bailey
1994- Susan McGee Bailey☜Project director of the AAUW’s Study, “Shortchanging Girls, Shortchanging America”☜D3ABAB
□
1996- Eve Ensler
1996- Eve Ensler☜ PLAYWRIGHT, PERFORMER, AND ACTIVIST The creator of The Vagina Monologues has raised consciousness — and, through her V-Day organization, more than $75 million for global programs working to end violence against women and girls. A current focus: the Democratic Republic of Congo, the most dangerous place in the world to be female.☜D3ABAB
□
2000 - Jennifer Lopez
2000 - Jennifer Lopez☜Breaking racial barriers in entertainment☜D3ABAB
□
2001- Lene Hau
2001- Lene Hau☜PHYSICISTStopped light completely, which holds important implications for quantum computing and quantum cryptography.☜D3ABAB
□
2001- Sally Ride
2001- Sally Ride☜ASTRONAUT AND ASTROPHYSICIST Woman Empowerment, Courageous Leadership Sally Ride, the first American woman in space (1983), started Sally Ride Science in 2001 to inspire young people—especially girls—to stick with their interest in science and to consider pursuing careers in science and engineering. ☜D3ABAB
□
2005 - Arianna Huffington
2005 - Arianna Huffington☜Huffington Post☜D3ABAB
□
2006- Amy Jussel
2006- Amy Jussel☜Shaping Youth, power of media for change☜D3ABAB
□
2007- Claudia Welss
2007- Claudia Welss☜Casual coherence, evomimicry, inner synergy☜D3ABAB
□
2007- Taylor Swift
2007- Taylor Swift☜Inspiring others through action☜D3ABAB
□
2009- Margarita Quihuis
2009- Margarita Quihuis ☜She is the co-director of Stanford University’s Peace Innovation Lab, a research initiative that develops “quantitative, predictive, computational systems and methods to sense engagement levels and interaction quality across group boundaries. Technology for peace and justice.☜D3ABAB
□
2010 - Beyoncé
2010 - Beyoncé☜Music for Female and Racial Empowerment☜D3ABAB
□
2011- Jane McGonigal
2011- Jane McGonigal ☜Gamification for human resilience☜D3ABAB
□
2013 Sheryl Sandberg
2013 Sheryl Sandberg☜ Women’s Empowerment. Lean-In Circles: The book Lean In is focused on encouraging women to pursue their ambitions, and changing the conversation from what we can’t do to what we can do. LeanIn.Org is the next chapter.☜D3ABAB
□
2014- Malala Yousafzai
2014- Malala Yousafzai☜Youngest Nobel Lauriate, education activist☜D3ABAB
□
c. 370- Hypatia
c. 370- Hypatia☜Greek mathematician, astronomer, and philosopher in Egypt, then a part of the Byzantine Empire. She was the head of the Neoplatonic school at Alexandria, where she taught philosophy and astronomy☜D3ABAB
□
Graph of this discussion
Graph of this discussion☜Click this to see the whole debate, excluding comments, in graphical form☜dcdcdc
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