Showing posts with label college. Show all posts
Showing posts with label college. Show all posts

Monday, August 10, 2015

The Pioneering Woman You've Never Heard Of

Meet The Most Pioneering Woman You've Never Heard Of
 
 
When you hear the name Clare Boothe Luce, I bet it does not register in your mind. You have never heard about Clare Boothe Luce in your history books, your government classes, or your women’s studies classes. Nevertheless, she is an important part of history, had a large role in our government, and was a very influential woman.
Fear not. If your teachers won’t teach you about Clare Boothe Luce, I will.
Clare Boothe Luce was born in 1903, sixteen years before women had the right to vote nationally in the United States. At the age of 30, she became the managing editor of Vanity Fair. This was a massive accomplishment, especially when you consider that Time Magazine, which started only ten years after Vanity Fair, did not have its first female Managing Editor until 2013.
Clare was also an accomplished playwright. Her most popular play, The Women, ran on Broadway for 657 performances and was made into a movie twice, once in 1939 and again in 2008. The 2008 version starred Meg Ryan (Top Gun, When Harry Met Sally), Jada Pinkett Smith (wife of Will), Eva Mendes (Ryan Gosling’s baby mama), and Debra Messing (Will & Grace).
Clare was also an accomplish war journalist for Life magazine, doing interviews with such people as General Douglas MacArthur, Chiang Kai-Shek, and Jawaharlal Nehru, the first prime minister of India. Her interview with General Douglas MacArthur was on the cover of Life on December 8, 1941, the day after Pearl Harbor.
Clare Booth Luce was elected to Congress from Connecticut’s fourth district in 1943. While in Congress, she became the first woman to sit on the Military Affairs Committee and was instrumental in the creation of the Atomic Energy Commission.
In 1953, Clare Boothe Luce did something no woman had ever done before. She was appointed to be the US Ambassador to Italy, becoming the first woman to hold a major ambassadorial post. At the time, Italy was dealing with a land dispute with Yugoslavia and combating its communist constituency.
Italy was not receptive to Clare at first, but she soon proved them wrong. Within two years, the Trieste crisis with Yugoslavia was solved, and the port was returned to Italy. She also completed seventeen other diplomatic assignments during her time in Italy.
A story you’ll never hear is the story of how Clare Boothe Luce survived arsenic poisoning.
While serving in Italy, Clare became increasingly ill. Blood tests revealed that arsenic was to blame. Because Clare was so outspoken against communism, foul play was feared. A CIA investigation revealed the true cause of the poisoning. Clare’s bedroom ceiling was painted with ornate roses, and that paint contained arsenate of lead. The particles from the paint (triggered by the vibration of the washing machine above) were falling down onto Clare while she slept, relaxed, or worked in bed.
After serving as Ambassador to Italy, and briefly to Brazil, Clare served on the President’s Foreign Intelligence Advisory Broad for Nixon and Reagan.
In 1983, President Reagan presented Clare with the Presidential Medal of Freedom, making her the first female member of Congress to receive the award.
Clare Boothe Luce blazed trails not only for women, but for Americans, and yet she is left out of history books as if she never mattered at all.
I challenge you to remember Clare Boothe Luce and investigate other important people in our nation’s history who have been seemingly forgotten.
If you are interested in learning more about Clare Boothe Luce, check out the Clare Boothe Luce Policy Institute, named after this amazing woman, at cblpi.org
Several biographies have been written about Clare Boothe Luce, by authors such as Wilfred Sheed and Stephen Shadegg, and Daniel Alf.
 
Read this original post from The Odyssey Online

Sunday, July 19, 2015

12 Things I Did NOT Need to Bring to College



It is almost time to move back in, and many students are currently panicking over their packing lists for the upcoming school year. I was one of those kids just a year ago, and as I moved home back in May, I realized that I had over-packed to the extreme, and many of the "must have items" I packed for a waste for space and money. Below is a list of the things I certainly DID NOT need to bring to college, and I recommend you think twice before purchasing these "essentials" for your dorm room

A Mattress Pad
It was too big for my bed, and did not make me feel like I was sleeping on a cloud. Upon further investigation, I learned that my regular mattress was just fine. This is college, not prison. 

Binders
This is college in the 21st century, where everything goes on a computer. What was I going to put in that binder? Notes? Worksheets? No. They were useless. 

My Entire Wardrobe
It took up waaaayyy too much space, and I probably only wore a third of what I brought. Pack the clothes you love and the clothes you know you'll wear. 

A Yoga Mat
I hadn't done yoga in years, why did I think college was going to be the time I started doing it again? It stayed rolled up in my closet all year, and I ended up selling it for $5 during finals week. 

A Real Wall Clock
There was no where to stick it on the wall, and I always used my computer or my phone. I also forgot to adjust it for Daylight Savings Time and the sound of the ticking was SOOO annoying.

Real, wooden #2 pencils
Again, really? This isn't elementary school, and no one has used wooden pencils for years. The pencil sharpener you brought with them is useful for eyeliner pencils though. 

5 Northface Jackets
One was definitely enough. What was I planning to do? Wear them all at once? 

Jelly
With approximately fourteen dining halls accessible to me, did I really think I was going to be using this jelly? I never bought bread or peanut butter, for the record. I had no kitchen, and no need for any groceries, but especially not JELLY!

25 Bottles of Nail Polish
You know how many times I painted my nails? Maybe 5 times, and always the same color. 

Ramen Noodles
If you buy them, you will eat them. However, it has been ingrained in our minds for so long that college students survive only on ramen that the very smell of ramen noodles will make you nauseous. 

Extra Clothes Storage
This only allowed me to continue my addictive shopping and store my already too extensive wardrobe. I brought extra storage for my clothes, and still did not have enough room for all the T-shirts I acquired as a freshman. 

A DVD Player
We never set up the TV we brought, and my Mac has a disk drive. You know how many times my DVD player was used? Zero

Actual glassware
I failed to realize I was moving into a dorm room and not my first home. Water bottles and red solo cups will suffice, you do not need a sixteen cup set of nice glassware from Macy's taking up space..


Stay tuned for more of what I learned my freshman year of college