Although there was no clear winner for "most admired woman" the front runner is Hillary Clinton in this MSNBC poll.
http://www.msnbc.com/news/852547.asp
Hillary Clinton...........baaaaaaaaaa
what a crock.....
OK .........WHOS ON YOUR LIST?
heres my list.....
Arundhati Roy
Eleanor Roosevelt
Elizabeth Dole
Katherine Hepburn
Diana
Bella Abzug ..an attorney, author, lecturer, news commentator, and former US Representative from New York. She has been a lifelong activist in support of civil rights, equal rights for women and disarmament, and in 1970 she became the first woman elected to Congress on a women's rights/peace platform. As a lawmaker, Ms. Abzug co-authored the Freedom of Information and Privacy Acts. She was the first to call for President Nixon's impeachment in the 1970s and cast one of the first votes for the Equal Rights Amendment.
She is currently co-chair of the Women's Environmental Development Organization (WEDO). In this capacity, she served as senior advisor to UNCED Secretary General Maurice Strong and successfully campaigned to incorporate key issues of the women's agenda into official statements approved at the Earth Summit. In 1991, she presided over the Women's Congress for a Healthy Planet. While giving most of her time to environmental work, Bella Abzug continues to devote her energies to women's rights and reproductive freedom. She played a major role in the UN Decade for Women. She is chair of New York city's Commission on the Status of Women and is directing a National Parity Campaign to increase the number of women in elective office.
some prob no ones ever heard of...........
Aletta Jacobs (1854-1929) opened the first birth control clinic in the world in Holland.
Dorothea Dix (1802-1887) as a child took care of her invalid mother and younger brothers. She started her first school at age 14 and published a science texbook in 1824. Her career helping the mentally ill began when she agreed to teach Sunday School in the East Cambridge jail. She discovered some mentally ill women who were denied heat in their cells. The jailor claimed the insane could not feel the cold. Dix took the jail into court and the rest is herstory. In 1840, the mentally ill were caged, chained, beaten, unclothed, and jailed on a routine basis. Dix championed their cause.
Valerie Edmee Andre (born 1922) studied medicine during the Nazi occupation of France. Perhaps that accounts for her bravery and daring-do in later life. Between 1945 and 1954, France fought the Indo-chinese for control of Viet Nam, Laos, and Cambodia. Andre joined the French Army and flew her own helicopter to pick up wounded soldiers. On one mission, she parachuted into the jungle to treat soldiers with typhus. She was awarded the Croix de guerre three times. In the 1970's, she became France's first woman general.
Mae Jamison (born 1956)This physician and chemical engineer is the first Afro-American to fly in space on the Endeavour. trained as a chemical engineer at Stanford University, then went on to medical school at Cornell. She also served in the Peace Corps for two years as a medical officer. In 1987, she was ready to tackle NASA where women and minorities had been excluded from the space program before Sally Ride. In 1992, she flew on the maiden voyage of the space shuttle Endeavour.
Alice Hamilton (1869-1970) - This doctor led the effort to stop lead poisoning and established the field of "industrial medicine."she began her career at Jane Addams Hull House and wound up as an assistant professor of industrial medicine at Harvard University. She researched and documented cases of morbidity in lead industries, and later the rubber and munitions industries. Although she looked very fragile, she was very persistant in getting private industry to clean up its act. She wrote the first textbook in America on industrial medicine in 1925.
Dr. Mary Walker... This dress reformer won the Medal of Honor as a spy and surgeon in the U.S. Army.was not only a woman who adopted bloomers and pants worn under a skirt; she also got herslef into the Union Army as a woman surgeon during the Civil War. She was captured as a spy and imprisoned. In the Confederate prison, she made so much trouble for her captors practicing passive resistance, they traded her for another officer of equal rank. She was awarded the Medal of Honor for her Civil War service. Nevertheless, she died broke.
http://www.msnbc.com/news/852547.asp
Hillary Clinton...........baaaaaaaaaa
what a crock.....
OK .........WHOS ON YOUR LIST?
heres my list.....
Arundhati Roy
Eleanor Roosevelt
Elizabeth Dole
Katherine Hepburn
Diana
Bella Abzug ..an attorney, author, lecturer, news commentator, and former US Representative from New York. She has been a lifelong activist in support of civil rights, equal rights for women and disarmament, and in 1970 she became the first woman elected to Congress on a women's rights/peace platform. As a lawmaker, Ms. Abzug co-authored the Freedom of Information and Privacy Acts. She was the first to call for President Nixon's impeachment in the 1970s and cast one of the first votes for the Equal Rights Amendment.
She is currently co-chair of the Women's Environmental Development Organization (WEDO). In this capacity, she served as senior advisor to UNCED Secretary General Maurice Strong and successfully campaigned to incorporate key issues of the women's agenda into official statements approved at the Earth Summit. In 1991, she presided over the Women's Congress for a Healthy Planet. While giving most of her time to environmental work, Bella Abzug continues to devote her energies to women's rights and reproductive freedom. She played a major role in the UN Decade for Women. She is chair of New York city's Commission on the Status of Women and is directing a National Parity Campaign to increase the number of women in elective office.
some prob no ones ever heard of...........
Aletta Jacobs (1854-1929) opened the first birth control clinic in the world in Holland.
Dorothea Dix (1802-1887) as a child took care of her invalid mother and younger brothers. She started her first school at age 14 and published a science texbook in 1824. Her career helping the mentally ill began when she agreed to teach Sunday School in the East Cambridge jail. She discovered some mentally ill women who were denied heat in their cells. The jailor claimed the insane could not feel the cold. Dix took the jail into court and the rest is herstory. In 1840, the mentally ill were caged, chained, beaten, unclothed, and jailed on a routine basis. Dix championed their cause.
Valerie Edmee Andre (born 1922) studied medicine during the Nazi occupation of France. Perhaps that accounts for her bravery and daring-do in later life. Between 1945 and 1954, France fought the Indo-chinese for control of Viet Nam, Laos, and Cambodia. Andre joined the French Army and flew her own helicopter to pick up wounded soldiers. On one mission, she parachuted into the jungle to treat soldiers with typhus. She was awarded the Croix de guerre three times. In the 1970's, she became France's first woman general.
Mae Jamison (born 1956)This physician and chemical engineer is the first Afro-American to fly in space on the Endeavour. trained as a chemical engineer at Stanford University, then went on to medical school at Cornell. She also served in the Peace Corps for two years as a medical officer. In 1987, she was ready to tackle NASA where women and minorities had been excluded from the space program before Sally Ride. In 1992, she flew on the maiden voyage of the space shuttle Endeavour.
Alice Hamilton (1869-1970) - This doctor led the effort to stop lead poisoning and established the field of "industrial medicine."she began her career at Jane Addams Hull House and wound up as an assistant professor of industrial medicine at Harvard University. She researched and documented cases of morbidity in lead industries, and later the rubber and munitions industries. Although she looked very fragile, she was very persistant in getting private industry to clean up its act. She wrote the first textbook in America on industrial medicine in 1925.
Dr. Mary Walker... This dress reformer won the Medal of Honor as a spy and surgeon in the U.S. Army.was not only a woman who adopted bloomers and pants worn under a skirt; she also got herslef into the Union Army as a woman surgeon during the Civil War. She was captured as a spy and imprisoned. In the Confederate prison, she made so much trouble for her captors practicing passive resistance, they traded her for another officer of equal rank. She was awarded the Medal of Honor for her Civil War service. Nevertheless, she died broke.