Thursday, November 29, 2007

Happy Birthday, Louisa May!

Happy Birthday to Louisa May Alcott (1832-1888)! Pennsylvania born Louisa My, is most famous for her books, including Little Women. She also worked as a seamstress and a Civil War nurse before writing. Read her bio here at Fact Monster and here at the National Women's Hall of Fame site. For more info, check out this link to information about her house, quotes, etc.

The Women's History Project
For more information, see our website at www.freewebs.com/uswhp.

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Today's Date in History

Today in history: In 1881, the American Association of University Women was founded. Also founded (in 1858) was the Young Women's Christian Association. In 1919, American-born Lady Astor joined the British Parliment, being the first women to do so.

The Women's History Project
For more information, see our website at www.freewebs.com/uswhp.

Breast Cancer Awareness

Breast Cancer Awareness month was in October, but each year, 211,000 women are diagnosed. You can help by sending an awarness e-card or visitng this click a day site. For the ladder, you click the pink button in the center and then are brought to a page with various on-screen ads. "When you click, we display ads from our site sponsors," the site says. "100% of the money from these advertisers goes to our charity partners, who fund programs to provide mammograms to women in need." Thanks!
The Women's History Project

Equality E-cards

Check out these neat Women's Equality e-cards on Bluemountain.com!
Women's Equality E-cards

The Women's History Project
For more information, visit www.freewebs.com/uswhp.

UN speaks out about violence against women

Sunday was the International Day for the Eradication of Violence Against Women! Ban Ki Moon, current Secretary-General of the UN, has condoned VAW as "one of the most heinous, systematic and prevalent human rights abuses in the world" [and rightly so!]. He has pledged to do something about it, too. Hurrah! Full article here:http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=24786&Cr=women&Cr1=.

The Women's History Project
For more information, see our website: www.freewebs.com/uswhp.

Spatulatta

Another website for girls, by girls! This site, Spatulatta, has cooking video demos and recipes run by two girls (ages 11 and 9, perhaps?). It's pretty big now, and they've even toured the country doing presentations! They also have a blog, too. Spatulatta

The Women's History Project
For more information, see our website at www.freewebs.com/uswhp.

GirlSpeak and GirlStart

Here are two feminist links for girls!
GirlSpeak
Their blurb:"GirlSpeak is a pro-women, web-based literary and visual art magazine seeking to build an accessible, inclusive community for young women artists and writers. We showcase original works by girls 12-22 to an international audience. We hope to enlighten our readers about self-love, healthy lifestyles, activism through art and awareness of the world around them." Annual submissions are due July 5th!

GirlStart
We found this on the kid's search engine, KidsClick. They described it: "Girlstart is a nonprofit organization dedicated to encouraging young women to reach their full potential. Girlstart offers hands-on programming in math, science and technology and is the founder of the first and only Girls' Technology Center in Texas. Girlstart.com offers free online lessons, science experiments, articles, games, and more for girls to discover how exciting math, science and technology can be!"

The Women's History Project
For more information, see our website at www.freewebs.com/uswhp.

Welcome!

Welcome to our blog! Thanks for visiting!

We will post things on current events that have to do with women's activism and historical events that happened on each day.

Check back soon for more information!

The Women's History Project