tagged w/ Eleanor Roosevelt
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What weekend talkshows used to sound like - Today With Mrs. Roosevelt - the topic is Post-War Germany and everyone is frightening civil - even when they don't agree with each other. Imagine.What weekend talkshows used to sound like - Today With Mrs. Roosevelt - the topic is... more
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In honor of the Tax season, Anti-Tax Crusader Vivien Kellems talks to Eleanor Roosevelt on the subject of "Taxes - Are They Fair?" - seriously.In honor of the Tax season, Anti-Tax Crusader Vivien Kellems talks to Eleanor... more
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They groped. They skirt-chased. They lusted in their hearts. And now they will live in infamy
Whether politicians cheat is hardly even a question. Why politicians cheat is a question that will never have a satisfactory answer. But which politicians have had the most spectacular, messiest, craziest affairs? That we can get to the bottom of. Philandering is as old as marriage itself, but the twenty-five instances listed here all have some variation on the theme that makes them notable even in the perpetually randy confines of the Beltway. Obviously the list is not exhaustive; as long as there are politicians, it'll never be complete.
http://www.gq.com/news-politics/politics/201006/the-twenty-five-greatest-philanderers-in-american-political-history#introThey groped. They skirt-chased. They lusted in their hearts. And now they will live in... more
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The New York Times
April 20, 2010
Dorothy Height, Heroine of Civil Rights Era, Is Dead at 98
By MARGALIT FOX
PART ONE...
Dorothy Height, a leader of the African-American and women’s rights movements who was considered both the grande dame of the civil rights era and its unsung heroine, died on Tuesday in Washington. She was 98.
The death, at Howard University Hospital, was confirmed jointly by the hospital and the National Council of Negro Women, which Ms. Height had led for four decades. A longtime Washington resident, Ms. Height was at her death the council’s president emerita.
That the American social landscape looks as it does today owes in no small part to Ms. Height. Originally trained as a social worker, she was president of the National Council of Negro Women from 1957 to 1997, overseeing a range of programs on issues like voting rights, poverty and in later years AIDS. A longtime executive of the Y.W.C.A., she presided over the integration of its facilities nationwide in the 1940s. With Gloria Steinem, Shirley Chisholm, Betty Friedan and others, she helped found the National Women’s Political Caucus in 1971. Over the decades, she advised a string of American presidents on civil-rights matters.
If Ms. Height was less well known than her contemporaries in either movement, it was perhaps because she was doubly marginalized, pushed offstage by women’s groups because of her race and by black groups because of her sex. Throughout her 80-year career, she responded quietly but firmly, working with a characteristic mix of limitless energy and steely gentility to ally the two movements in the fight for social justice.
As a result, Ms. Height is widely credited as the first person in the modern civil-rights era to treat the problems of equality for women and equality for African-Americans as a seamless whole, merging concerns that had been largely historically separate.
The recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom and other prestigious awards, Ms. Height was accorded a place of honor on the dais on Jan. 20, 2009, when Barack Obama took the oath of office as the nation’s 44th president. In a statement on Tuesday, President Obama called Ms. Height “the godmother of the civil rights movement and a hero to so many Americans.”
Over the years, historians have made much of the so-called “Big Six” who led the civil rights movement: the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., James Farmer, John Lewis, A. Philip Randolph, Roy Wilkins and Whitney Young. Ms. Height, the only woman to work regularly alongside them on projects of national significance, was very much the unheralded seventh, the leader who was cropped out, figuratively and often literally, of images of the era.
In 1963, for instance, Ms. Height sat on the platform an arm’s length from Dr. King as he delivered his epochal “I Have a Dream” speech at the March on Washington. Ms. Height was one of the march’s chief organizers and a prizewinning orator herself. She was not asked to speak, although many other black leaders — all men — addressed the crowd that day.
Ms. Height recounted the incident in her memoir, “Open Wide the Freedom Gates” (PublicAffairs, 2003; with a foreword by Maya Angelou). Reviewing the memoir, The New York Times Book Review called it “a poignant short course in a century of African-American history.”
Dorothy Irene Height was born on March 24, 1912, in Richmond, Va. (The family name is pronounced like the word “height.”) Her father, James, was a building contractor; her mother, the former Fannie Burroughs, was a nurse. A severe asthmatic as a child, Dorothy was not expected to live, she later wrote, past the age of 16.
When Dorothy was small, the family moved north to Rankin, Pa., near Pittsburgh, where she attended integrated public schools. She began her civil-rights work as a teenager, volunteering on voting-rights and anti-lynching campaigns.
In high school, Ms. Height entered and an oratory contest, sponsored by the Elks, on the subject of the United States Constitution. An eloquent speaker even in her youth, she soon advanced to the national finals, where she was the only black contestant. She delivered a talk on the 13th, 14th and 15th Amendments — the Reconstruction Amendments — designed to extend constitutional protections to former slaves and their descendants. The jury, all white, awarded her first prize: a four-year college scholarship.
As Ms. Height told The Detroit Free Press in 2008, “I’m still working today to make the promise of the 14th Amendment of equal justice under law a reality.”
A star student, the young Ms. Height applied to Barnard College and was accepted. Then, in the summer of 1929, shortly before classes began, she was summoned to New York by a Barnard dean.
There was a problem, the dean said. That Ms. Height had been admitted to Barnard was certain. But she could not enroll — not then, anyway. Barnard had already meet its quota for Negro students that year.
Too distraught to call home, as she later wrote, Ms. Height did the only thing possible. Clutching her Barnard acceptance letter, she took the subway downtown to New York University. She was admitted at once, earning a bachelor’s degree in education there in 1933 and a master’s in psychology two years later.
CONTINUED...The New York Times
April 20, 2010
Dorothy Height, Heroine of Civil Rights Era, Is... more
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Brett Erlich takes us to the Top Five Movie Parties.
The Rotten Tomatoes Show is a movie review show that airs on Thursday nights at 10:30/9:30c on Current TV. From reviews of the newest releases to commentary on cult favorites and movie trends, each episode of The Rotten Tomatoes Show is a fast-paced, comedic journey through the week in cinema.
For more from the Rotten Tomatoes Show: http://current.com/the-rotten-tomatoes-show
For more about movies from Current: http://current.com/moviesBrett Erlich takes us to the Top Five Movie Parties.
The Rotten Tomatoes Show is a... more
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December 10 marks the 60th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and its Covenant of Economic and Social Rights. Eleanor Roosevelt was a big part of that story and in the 1930s and 1940s encouraged a much broader definition of human rights--one that included social, economic, and political justice. Sixty years later, Blanche Wiesen Cook, Eleanor Roosevelt's biographer, says it is exciting to return to that idea. The public sector has been starved for far too long. Social safety nets have been gutted. And our society is feeling the effects.December 10 marks the 60th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights... more
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GRITtv
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added this
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3 years ago
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Eleanor Roosevelt addresses the United Nations on the ratification of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
SIXTY YEARS ago world leaders met in Paris to set out a new direction for humanity. The world had just emerged from a brutal war in which tens of millions died, the holocaust and other unspeakable acts of atrocity were committed and two atomic bombs were dropped on civilian populations. In 1948 the new Cold War was beginning, Gandhi was assassinated and apartheid laws were introduced in South Africa. Much of the world still laboured under the yoke of colonisation.
Set against this background the vision document which politicians unanimously agreed on December 10, 1948, was a triumph of hope and optimism. Sixty years later, this Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) remains one of the most important documents of the 20th century. It has become the inspiration behind a global movement, and sets the benchmark for the whole world to attain, and against which we all can be judged.
Proclaiming in ringing terms that "All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights," the 30 articles of the UDHR set out in unprecedented detail the standards of dignity, respect and justice to which everyone is entitled, simply because they are human.
http://www.sundayherald.com/news/heraldnews/display.var.2471792.0.60_years_of_human_rights.phpEleanor Roosevelt addresses the United Nations on the ratification of the Universal... more
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"Originally written by Eleanor Roosevelt 60 years ago, it's astonishing that less than five percent of the world even knows that the document exists. The message rings particularly true now and we're proud to be associated with Seth, whose work enhances the Declaration of Human Rights with his motions graphics to spread the word to both the younger and older generations."
via http://www.coolhunting.com/archives/2008/10/the_universal_d.php"Originally written by Eleanor Roosevelt 60 years ago, it's astonishing that... more
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