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    • Mar
      20th
      2009
    • COME TO MY EVENT- MEET & GREET WITH GOTHAM NETWORKING GROUP

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    SECTION: Did you know that....?,Discuss,Must See!!!!,What I Love,What is your purpose in life?Gotham Networking Group, Hosts, Kimberly Butler, New York, Studios

     

    We, the Gotham Networking Group, will be holding our first networking event, an exclusive “Meet & Greet” on Tuesday, April 28th from 6p-8p at Kimberly Butler Studios at 28 West 38th Street New York, NY! We invite you to join us in an evening of serious networking, cocktails and conversation, and a very special introduction to our founding members! Here is a brief background of Gotham’s founders, a truly fabulous cast of characters:

    Kimberly Butler- award winning photographer and filmmaker

    Lisa Parrish – Director and Media Marketing Specialist

    Dianne Farley – Consultant & President of the New York City Chapter of American Women in Radio and Television

    Barbara De Laleu- Radio Personality, member of Board of Directors for New York City Chapter of American Women in Radio and Television, and entrepreneur

    If there are any questions or ideas that you may have, please feel free to contact us at the email address below. We are looking forward to meeting with you, but most importantly helping you to effectively NETWORK establishing long lasting professional relationships!

    Let’s “Link In” at a “New Space” and show our “Faces” through the power of NETWORKING!

    To learn more about our founders, please visit their individual websites:

    www.kimberlybutler.com – Kimberly Butler
    www.msdelaleu.com – Barbara C. De Laleu
    www.awrtnyc.org- Dianne Farley
    www.faithpopcorn.com- Lisa Parrish

    Posted by Beautiful Stranger at 10:42 pm 0 Comments
    • Mar
      19th
      2009
    • WOMEN’S HISTORY MONTH PROFILE: MOTHER THERESA

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    SECTION: Did you know that....?,Discuss,In a Woman's World/Women's History,What I Love,What do you think?,What is your purpose in life?,Words of WisdomAgnes, History, Macedonia, Month, Mother Theresa, poverty, Women

     

    “It is a poverty to decide that a child must die so that you may live as you wish.”
    -Mother Theresa

    Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu was born in 1910 in Skopje, now the capital of Macedonia. When she was 18, she became part of Ireland’s Order of the Sisters of Our Lady of Loreto. She trained in Dublin, Ireland and Darjiling, India.

    Agnes took her vows to become a nun in 1937, the vows of poverty, chastity, obedience, and service to the poor. She also decided that her name would be Theresa after the patron saint of foreign missionaries, Saint Theresa of Lisieux.

    Mother Theresa worked as a principal at a high school in Kolkota, but the sight of the sick and dying in the streets made her change her mind of what to do. In 1948, she was allowed to leave her office to help the sick. In 1950, she and her helpers formed the Missionaries of Charity and Mother Theresa was the leader.

    In 1952, Mother Theresa established in Kolkota the Pure Heart (Nirmal Hriday) Home for Dying Desititutes and in 1979, she received the Nobel Peace Prize for her accomplishments.

    In 1990, Mother Theresa’s health was declining and she had to cut back on her activities. However, a book of her quotations and anecdotes Mother Theresa: In My Own Words was published. A year later, she chose Sister Nirmala to be the next leader of the Missionaries of Charity. She died on September 5, 1997.

    Posted by Beautiful Stranger at 9:34 pm 0 Comments
    • Mar
      19th
      2009
    • WOMEN’S HISTORY MONTH PROFILE: CLEOPATRA

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    SECTION: Did you know that....?,Discuss,In a Woman's World/Women's History,What I Love,What do you think?,What is your purpose in life?,Words of Wisdom, Cleopatra, Egypt, History, Month, Women

     

    Cleopatra, actually known as Cleopatra VII, was born in Egypt in 69 B.C. In 58 B.C., her father Ptolemy XII was expelled from power, so Cleopatra helped him regain his power. However, her father died in 51 B.C., and Cleopatra and her brother Ptolemy XIII took the throne. In 48 B.C., Cleopatra was exiled by her brother, who had taken control as supreme Pharoah. So, Cleopatra created an army in Syria and joined forces with Roman Julius Caesar, who became her lover and supported her cause. With his help, Ptolemy XIII was killed in 47 B.C. and Caesar pronounced Cleopatra as queen of Egypt.

    As it was a custom, Cleopatra married her younger brother, 11 year old Ptolemy XIV. Cleopatra also had a child whom she named Caesarian and later became Ptolemy XV. He was thought to be Caesar’s child, not Ptolemy XIV’s. Then, Caesar was assassinated and her husband, Ptolemy XIV, was poisoned and died. Although Cleopatra has been implicated with possible having poisoned him, we are unsure if she really did poison him or not.

    After knowing him for a few years, Cleopatra married Mark Antony around 35 B.C., even though he was also married to a woman named Octavia. Together, they had a pair of twins who they named Cleopatra Selene and Alexander Helios, and also another child who was named Ptolemy XVI. In 32 B.C., war was declared upon Egypt from Octavius, the brother of Mark Antony’s other wife, because Antony had left Octavia for Cleopatra. Antony and Octavia soon divorced, but Cleopatra still was forced into war.

    Sadly, Cleopatra’s army was defeated in the Battle of Actium, and many sorrowful events followed. Mark Antony heard that Cleopatra had died, so he fell on his own sword in 31 B.C., effectively committing suicide. Cleopatra built a temple in Antony’s honor called the Caesarium, which had the two small obelisks called “Cleopatra’s Needles” in it. These obelisks were later given to America and Britain as gift in the 1800′s. One is now in the Embankment in London, and the other is in Central Park in New York City.

    Saddened by Antony’s death, Cleopatra killed herself in 31 B.C., although it is much disputed over whether she simply poisoned herself or let her asp (a type of snake) complete her death. Although her life has ended, her fame continues. She has been the basis for many works of literature, including Shakespeare’s Anthony and Cleopatra, John Dryden’s All for Love, and George Bernard Shaw’s Caesar and Cleopatra. She has also had many movies titled and made about her, including ones in 1914, 1934, and 1963, among others.

    Posted by Beautiful Stranger at 7:51 pm 0 Comments
    • Mar
      19th
      2009
    • WOMEN’S HISTORY MONTH PROFILE: DISNEY’S PRINCESS TIANA ?!?!

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    SECTION: Congratulations!!,Did you know that....?,Discuss,Must See!!!!,What I Love,What do you think?,What is your purpose in life?Black, Disney, Prince Naveen, Princess Tiana, White

     Princess Tiana and Prince Naveen

    Disney’s first black princess, Princess Tiana – and the ‘white’ Prince Naveen

    Move over Snow White. Make room for Disney’s first black princess.

    With America’s first African-American president in the White House, Disney is counting on an African-American princess to be a big hit in Hollywood.

    But even though The Princess and the Frog isn’t released until later this year, it is already stirring up controversy.

    For while Princess Tiana and many in the cartoon cast are black – the prince is not.

    Which has led some critics to complain that Disney has ducked the opportunity for a fairytale ending for a black prince and princess.

    While some have hailed Disney’s decision as a reflection of melting pot America, others say the company is sending out a mixed message.

    Although the black princess’s love interest in the new animated musical is called Prince Naveen of Maldonia and is voiced by a Brazilian actor, he looks more white than black in photographs from the film that Disney have released.

    Posted by Beautiful Stranger at 2:12 am 0 Comments
    • Mar
      19th
      2009
    • WOMEN’S HISTORY MONTH PROFILE: AMELIA EARHART

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    SECTION: Did you know that....?,Discuss,In a Woman's World/Women's History,What I Love,What do you think?,What is your purpose in life?,Words of WisdomAmelia Earhart, Flight, History, Month, Wings, Women, World War I

    “Courage is the price that life exacts for granting peace with yourself.”
    -Amelia Earhart

    Amelia Earhart was born on July 24, 1897 in Atchison, Kansas. She planned to go to college, but after encountering four wounded World War I soldiers on the street, she decided to go into nursing. Hence, during World War I, Amelia worked in Canada as a military nurse, and after the war was over, returned to her family, where she became a social worker at the Denison House in Boston, Massachusetts. There, Amelia started to teach immigrant children the English language.

    In 1920, Amelia took a ten minute plane ride that changed her life. After that flight, she knew she was meant to fly. So, she earned $1,000 to use as a fee for flying lessons by working many different jobs. After ten hours of instruction, Amelia was ready to fly alone.

    Amelia took her first solo flight in 1921 and bought her own plane a year after. Still, flying was only a hobby at hers; she still taught English at the Denison House. However, from June 17 to 18, 1928, Amelia was a passenger on a plane called Friendship that flew from America to England. She became the first woman to cross the Atlantic Ocean. Her story of the flight was covered by publisher George Putnam, whom Amelia later married in 1931.

    From May 20 to 21, 1932, Amelia crossed the Atlantic solo and also established a new time record for the flight: 13.5 hours. For this feat, she received a medal from president Herbert Hoover.

    A few years after 1932, Amelia became the first woman to fly successfully from Hawaii to California. Then, in June 1937, Amelia and navigator Fred Noonan set out to fly around the world. They left Miami, Florida, and passed South America, Africa, Thailand, Singapore, Java, and Australia. But when they left New Guinea for Howland Island, they disappeared. The only thing left was a frantic message to the US Coast Guard at 8:45 p.m. on July 2, 1937.

    Amelia Earhart, Fred Noonan, and Amelia’s plane were never found. In 1939, Amelia’s husband, George Putnam, wrote a book in tribute to her titled Soaring Wings

    Posted by Beautiful Stranger at 1:51 am 0 Comments
    • Mar
      19th
      2009
    • WOMEN’S HISTORY MONTH PROFILE: EMILY DICKINSON

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    SECTION: Did you know that....?,Discuss,In a Woman's World/Women's History,What I Love,What do you think?,What is your purpose in life?,Words of WisdomEmily Dickinson, Literature, Women's HISTORY Month

    “If fame belonged to me, I could not escape her; if she did not, the longest day would pass me on the chase, and the approbation of my dog would forsake me.”
    -Emily Dickinson

    Emily Dickinson was born on December 10, 1830 in Amherst, Massachusetts. She attended Amherst Academy for two years and Holyoke Female Seminary for one year. At Amherst Academy, Emily met the principal named Leonard Humphrey, and he gave her her interest in books. But it also seems as if a law student, Benjamin F. Newton, gave her her love of literature as well.

    For most of her life, Emily was a recluse, staying in her house by herself and never really coming out or seeing anybody. Her one true acquaintance was Thomas Wentworth Higginson, who published her poetry after her death. It was in the 1850′s that Emily is thought to have begun her poetry, but it wasn’t till 1858 that she began writing her poems in ink and put them in little booklets (meaning they were worthy enough for her to keep forever).

    In May 1855, it is thought that Emily met a man named Charles Wadsworth who touched off an explosion of her creative poems in the early 1860′s. A number of letters to Wadsworth were found among her poems.

    Although Emily was considered a recluse most of her life, her last years were even more reclusive. She spent her days baking bread, tending her garden, and staring out the window. She grew obsessed with death, almost as if she knew that her time would come soon. Legends were even begun about her: the woman in white and the eccentric recluse.

    Emily Dickinson died on May 15, 1886 of Bright’s disease, leaving behind over 2,000 poems that were published by Higginson after her death. Many of her poems are compared today to those of to Henry David Thoreau, for her writing seems to echo how he wanted to live. “close to the bone, concentrating on the very essence of what she saw and felt in phrases that strike and penetrate like bullets, and with an originality of thought unsurpassed in American poetry.”

    Posted by Beautiful Stranger at 1:39 am 0 Comments
    • Mar
      18th
      2009
    • WOMEN’S HISTORY MONTH PROFILE: CLARA BARTON

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    SECTION: Did you know that....?,Discuss,In a Woman's World/Women's History,What I Love,What is your purpose in life?,Words of WisdomClara Barton, Nurse, Women's HISTORY Month

     

    Clara Barton was born on December 25, 1821 in Oxford, Massachusetts. From early childhood she had a great interest in the military, because her father would tell her stories of when he was a soldier.

    When Clara was eleven years old, her brother David was injured and she had to take care of him for two years straight. This gave her further practice for her occupation in the future.

    When she was 15, she began teaching, and taught until she was 33 years old in 1854. Then she moved to Washington D.C. In April 1861, the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment arrived in Washington D.C. and Clara rushed for supplies with which to care for them.

    At the Battle of Bull Run in the Civil War, Clara ran out of supplies and put an ad in a newspaper asking for donations. Needless to say, she received a lot of supplies and was very well off from that point forward.

    In 1862, Clara’s permission was granted to travel where the ill soldiers were taken so she could further take care of them, and she did for the rest of the war.

    For four years after the war had ended, Clara participated in many groups. She first supervised a missing soldier search, and then for a while helped Susan B. Anthony with the suffrage movement. She also became a black rights activist.

    In 1869, Clara went vacationing in Europe, but instead found herself helping the International Red Cross. When she returned home in 1873, she returned with the Iron Cross of Merit from the German Emperor.

    The US didn’t have a Red Cross like she had participated in while in Europe, so she decided to create it in the United States. In 1881, the National Society of the Red Cross was organized and she was able to build the headquarters a block from the White House in Washington D.C. with donated money from John D. Rockefeller. Since she founded it, she became its first president, and directed the Red Cross’ activities for 23 years.

    In 1898, she traveled to Cuba with supplies and even spent six weeks in Galveston, Texas, helping with the flood control. However, in 1904, she resigned at 82 years old.

    Clara died in Glen Echo, Maryland, in 1912. Her body was shipped back and buried in Oxford, Massachusetts. She is now known as the “Angel of the Battlefield.”

    Posted by Beautiful Stranger at 11:01 pm 0 Comments
    • Mar
      18th
      2009
    • WOMEN’S HISTORY MONTH PROFILE: DONNA BRAZILE

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    SECTION: Did you know that....?,Discuss,In a Woman's World/Women's History,What I Love,What is your purpose in life?,Words of WisdomD.C., Democratic National Committee, Donna Brazile, Lousiana, New Orleans, Washington, Women's History

    Donna Brazile is Chair of the Democratic National Committee’s Voting Rights Institute (VRI) and an Adjunct Professor at Georgetown University in Washington, DC. The VRI was established in 2001 to help protect and promote the rights of all Americans to participate in the political process.

    Brazile, a veteran Democratic political strategist, is the former Campaign Manager for Gore-Lieberman 2000 – the first African American to lead a major presidential campaign.

    Prior to joining the Gore campaign, Brazile was Chief of Staff and Press Secretary to Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton of the District of Columbia where she helped guide the District’s budget and local legislation on Capitol Hill.

    Brazile is a weekly contributor and political commentator on CNN’s Inside Politics and American Morning. In addition, she is a columnist for Roll Call Newspaper and appears regularly on MSNBC’s Hardball and Fox’s Hannity and Colmes.

    During the 2002 mid-term election, Brazile traveled to over 29 states and 53 congressional districts to help train Democratic activists. At the conclusion of the 2002 mid-term elections, Brazile served as a media consultant and grassroots organizer for Senator Mary Landrieu (D-LA).

    A veteran of numerous national and statewide campaigns, Brazile worked on several presidential campaigns for Democratic candidates, including Carter-Mondale in 1976 and 1980, Rev. Jesse Jackson’s first historic bid for the presidency in 1984, Mondale-Ferraro in 1984, U.S. Representative Dick Gephardt in 1988, Dukakis-Bentsen in 1988, and Clinton-Gore in 1992 and 1996.

    In addition to working on political campaigns, Brazile has served as a senior lecturer and adjunct professor at the University of Maryland and a fellow at Harvard’s Institute of Politics.

    Brazile is the recipient of numerous awards and honors, including Washingtonian Magazine’s 100 Most Powerful Women in Washington, D.C., Essence Magazine’s 50 Most Powerful Women in America and the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation’s Award for Political Achievement.

    Brazile, a native of New Orleans, Louisiana earned her undergraduate degree from Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge. She is currently the Founder and Managing Director of Brazile and Associates, a political consulting and grassroots advocacy firm based in the District of Columbia.

    Posted by Beautiful Stranger at 10:49 pm 0 Comments
    • Mar
      18th
      2009
    • WOMEN’S HISTORY MONTH PROFILE : MICHELLE OBAMA

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    SECTION: Barack Obama,Believe It Or Not!!!,Did you know that....?,Discuss,In a Woman's World/Women's History,What I Love,What is your purpose in life?,Words of WisdomComic Book, Michelle Obama, Women's History

    michelle-obama-female-force

    After gracing the covers of Vogue, People, the New Yorker and New York, First Lady Michelle Obama is about to become a comic book superhero – in a sleeveless dress, of course. Obama’s 22-page bio-comic is the third in Bluewater’s new “Female Force” series, following “Hillary Clinton” and “Sarah Palin.” Both debuted this week and sold out before they hit stores. “Caroline Kennedy” and “Princess Diana” are up next.

    “Strong, independent women is what we’re known for,” said Darren Davis, president of Bluewater. “So doing the ‘Female Force’ series was organic for us – we try to show women in a positive light and tone down the ‘T and A’ angles. They’re no different from a Wonder Woman type of comic.”

    Davis hopes the comics are a teaching tool for children who have trouble reading and an inspiration for young women across the country. The Michelle Obama comic, which will be released April 25, and available for $3.99 at Amazon.com, traces the First Lady from her beginnings on the South Side of Chicago to her time at Princeton and her life on the campaign trail.

     

    WELL DESERVED…THE EPITOME OF WOMEN’S HISTORY!

    TO FIND OUT MORE ABOUT MRS. OBAMA…JUST GOOGLE HER! lol

    Posted by Beautiful Stranger at 2:19 pm 0 Comments
    • Mar
      13th
      2009
    • WOMEN’S HISTORY MONTH PROFILE: MAYA ANGELOU

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    SECTION: Did you know that....?,Discuss,In a Woman's World/Women's History,What I Love,What is your purpose in life?,Words of Wisdomauthor, Maya Angelou, profile, Women in History

     

    Maya Angelou is an accomplished poet, an award-winning writer, a journalist, an activist, a performer, a dancer, an actress, a director, and a teacher. She is also a three-time Grammy Award winner for her autobiographical spoken-word recordings. Born in St. Louis, she was raised in Stamps, Arkansas, and then went to San Francisco. She lives in Harlem, NY, and Winston-Salem, NC. In addition to her bestselling autobiographies, beginning with I Know Why the Caged Bird Signs, she is the author of Letter to my Daughter; several poetry collections, including Shall Not Be Moved and Shaker, Why Don’t You Sing?; and a number of books for young readers, including Kofi and His Magic; My Painted House, My Friendly Chicken and Me; and the Maya’s World series.

    At age seven, while visiting her mother in Chicago, she was sexually molested by her mother’s boyfriend. Too ashamed to tell any of the adults in her life, she confided in her brother. When she later heard the news that an uncle had killed her attacker, she felt that her words had killed the man. She fell silent and did not speak for five years.

    Maya began to speak again at 13, when she and her brother rejoined their mother in San Francisco. Maya attended Mission High School and won a scholarship to study dance and drama at San Francisco’s Labor School, where she was exposed to the progressive ideals that animated her later political activism. She dropped out of school in her teens to become San Francisco’s first African American female cable car conductor. She later returned to high school, but became pregnant in her senior year and graduated a few weeks before giving birth to her son, Guy. She left home at 16 and took on the difficult life of a single mother, supporting herself and her son by working as a waitress and cook, but she had not given up on her talents for music, dance, performance and poetry.

    Angelou has been invited by successive Presidents of the United States to serve in various capacities. President Ford appointed her to the American Revolution Bicentennial Commission and President Carter invited her to serve on the Presidential Commission for the International Year of the Woman. President Clinton requested that she compose a poem to read at his inauguration in 1993. Angelou’s reading of her poem “On the Pulse of the Morning” was broadcast live around the world.

    Since 1981, Angelou has served as Reynolds Professor of American Studies at Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. She has continued to appear on television and in films including Poetic Justice (1993) and the landmark television adaptation of Roots (1977). She has directed numerous dramatic and documentary programs on television and directed her first feature film, Down in the Delta, in 1996.

    Posted by Beautiful Stranger at 3:03 am 0 Comments
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