Wednesday, 8 December 2021

Louis VII Legendary Whoring and Crusading Wife Eleanor of Aquitaine, 1122–1204, Queen of France and England, mother of 11 Children. Stephanie Buck.

Eleanor of Aquitaine, 1122–1204. (The Print Collector/Getty Images)

The most modern woman of Medieval Europe was a queen by birth, a warrior and murderer by legend

Eleanor of Aquitaine was not to be trifled with

Sep 25, 2017 · 5 min read
 

Timeline

News in Context

Stephanie Buck

Written by

Writer, culture/history junkie ➕ founder of Soulbelly, multimedia keepsakes for preserving community history. soulbellystories.com

 

This Chinese American politician busted toilets for women’s equality

Today is International Women’s Day, so let’s celebrate the life and accomplishments of a remarkable California woman.

March Fong Eu started her career as a dental hygienists after achieving 3 advanced degrees from Berkeley, Stanford, and Mills College. Then she began a career in politics serving on the Alameda County School Board, before getting elected to the CA State Assembly in 1966.

There she became known for her campaign to eliminate public pay-toilets, arguing that urinals were free and therefore represented discrimination against women. She’s pictured above smashing a toilet wrapped in chains on the state Capitol steps.

One of 3 women in the legislature, she also blocked the assembly from adjourning early for a golf tournament that excluded women. Her resolution demanded “an end to this crass discrimination.”

Fong Eu became the first Asian American woman elected to a state constitutional office when CA elected her Secretary of State in 1974. She served as acting governor in 1976 when Jerry Brown was out of state.

She was also the first to introduce voter registration by mail and post election results on the internet, making a mark on accessibility.

Fong Eu died in Irvine, CA in 2017, aged 95.

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Honoring the courage and legacy of Fred Korematsu

In 1942, then 23-year-old Fred Korematsu (bottom center) refused to obey the federal government’s order to imprison Japanese-Americans. He was promptly arrested and convicted of defying the government.

The ACLU appealed Korematsu’s case all the way to the Supreme Court where judges ruled for his conviction one final time in 1944. By then Korematsu and his family had been interred at the Central Utah War Relocation Center, where his community both praised and criticized him. Many Japanese-Americans complied with the government’s order in hopes it would prove loyalty to their country.

Korematsu’s legal case was reopened in 1983 when researchers discovered government intelligence documents containing evidence hidden from the Supreme Court during his trial. Korematsu’s conviction was overturned. In 1998, President Clinton awarded Korematsu the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

“If you have the feeling that something is wrong, don’t be afraid to speak up,” Korematsu said.

Today, California celebrates his courage with Fred Korematsu Day on January 30, the first day named for an Asian-American in U.S. history.

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She launched an interior design service, but she hadn’t accounted for treadmills. Or dog beds. Another customer wanted their design to incorporate a cat jungle gym.

“People are very, very unique,” says Shanna Tellerman, CEO of Modsy, a design service that renders a photorealistic digital model of your home and stocks it with shoppable furniture and goods to your taste.

Despite the company’s success, Tellerman says worry is constant for a founder. Are people going to buy this? Am I going to be able to pay the people I’ve hired to continue to build this? “That fear never ever goes away as long as you run a business, as far as I can tell,” she says.

Read my full interview with Shanna Tellerman about founder fear and overcoming the odds of being a woman in a male-dominated tech startup industry, brought to you by Soulbelly’s latest partnership with Preferred Return.

 

 

 

 

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